Posted on 07/15/2007 12:13:56 PM PDT by bnelson44
General Dynamics Land Systems, a business unit of General Dynamics, has delivered its first Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles to the U.S. Marine Corps from Anniston, Ala., less than 120 days after the company received its first production order for the new product.
The vehicle's unique, V-shaped hull is designed to deflect the force of an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) blast away from the vehicle, keeping soldiers inside safe and alive. General Dynamics and its our partners, Force Protection, Anniston Army Depot and local subcontractors, are engaged in building these vehicles while increasing its combined production capacity to deliver 1000 vehicles per month.
The 80,000-square foot main General Dynamics assembly site for MRAP vehicles will eventually employ 220 new workers in Oxford, Ala. A supporting production site at the Anniston Army Depot will employ 50 new workers. General Dynamics Land Systems currently employs 240 workers at the depot building Fox and Stryker combat vehicles and the Abrams tank gunner's primary sight. Anniston Army Depot will partner with General Dynamics and perform a share of the MRAP work. General Dynamics also contracted with BR Williams to operate a warehouse in Oxford to support the new production operations.
General Dynamics currently employs approximately 700 workers throughout Alabama. These new positions will increase total General Dynamics' employment in the state to nearly 1000. Force Protection is a ballistics research and manufacturing enterprise, specializing in the development and production of highly-reinforced armored personnel carriers.
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*I know, I know, this is FPI's Buffalo, not the GD vehicle...
Well DUH! We'll have 'em built in China...
I hope that the acronym “MRAP” won’t be used by some L.A.-based rap singer who goes on to join Snoop Dogg in concert: “Snoop Dog and MRAP”
Yes and no.
That is how they are fought on the battlefield.
They are won(?) and lost in Congress, though...
I don’t know when Aimpoints, or their equivalents were issued commonly, say around 1990. Maybe some knows. Anyhow, that simple, cheap, factor increasing technology took the Army 20 years. Pathetic.
By the way, the Son Tay raid failed because the planning was too long and the raiders showed up too late. Slowness again was the motto.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RG-31
this is the same link I posted earlier.
You mean every commander is not Stonewall jackson? ;-)
RG-31 Charger - US Army version of the Mk3 and Mk5 with a Detroit Diesel engine
So the marine version is called a cougar, and has a foreign made engine? What is it? Mercedes benz? Isuzu?
This looks to be a terrific vehicle!
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