

Of the 43 units, 41 were in a new stretched armoured personnel carrier configuration, which will be outfitted to carry 10 people and armed with a roof-mounted 7.62 mm or 12.7 mm machine gun. Subsequently additional orders were placed which brought the total Iraqi order up to a total of 43 units, all of which have been delivered. Work on this contract started in July and the first vehicles were delivered in November 2004, with all vehicles delivered by July 2005.

In July 2004 the US Project and Contracting Organization (PCO), acting on behalf of the Iraqi Minister of the Interior, awarded Textron Marine & Land Systems a contract worth USD50 million for the supply of 43 ASVs for the recently formed Iraqi Civil Intervention Force. Textron Marine & Land Systems has also studied a stretched vehicle with a longer wheelbase and wider doors to be used as a medical evacuation vehicle or a command and control vehicle. This includes law enforcement, area security, battlefield circulation and enemy prisoner of war operations over the entire continuum of war and operations other than war. The M1117 ASV is replacing the current up-armoured HMMWV (High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle) and provides a significant increase in armour protection, firepower and mobility for the Military Police mission. Of the 13 vehicles delivered by early 2001, six were deployed to Kosovo with another six in Germany, with one vehicle still undergoing trials at the Cold Regions Test Center at Fort Greenley, Alaska. Eventually each MP Company will have 12 ASVs. Three vehicles were issued to the 615th MP Company with the other three to the 527th MP Company. The first production vehicles were completed on schedule in April 2000, with the first six M1117 ASVs being sent to the US Army's 18th MP Brigade in Germany for training in two phases, first vehicle familiarisation and operation and second tactical employment and firing. The major change is the replacement of the old solid axles, semi-elliptical leaf springs and double-acting hydraulic shock-absorbers by a new fully independent coil spring suspension, which gives an improved ride on road and cross-country. The ASV 150 builds on the latest production LAV-150ST (4 × 4) LAV with the S in the designation meaning stretched and the T turbocharged. The weapons are aimed and fired using a roof-mounted M36E2 day/night sight. Turret improvements over the standard UGWS are also claimed to provide significant benefits to the gunner and include superior survivability, reduced silhouette and greater compliance with human factors design. This turret is called the Up Gunned Weapon Station (UGWS) and is also referred to as the 40/50 turret. This turret is the latest version of that originally designed for installation on US Marine Corps now BAE Systems, Ground Systems AAV7A1 amphibious assault vehicles. A bank of four electrically operated smoke grenade launchers is mounted either side of the turret, firing forwards. 50 (12.7 mm) M2 HB machine gun and a 40 mm MK 19 automatic grenade launcher. The US Army ASV 150 vehicles that are used by the military police with standard equipment including protection against 14.5 mm small arms fire, independent suspension and the installation of a one-man turret armed with a. In early 1999 Textron Marine & Land Systems was awarded a contract by the US Army Tank-automotive & Armaments Command valued at USD50 million for the supply of 94 ASV 150 (4 × 4) vehicles to the US Army over a five year period.įirst vehicles were delivered in the second quarter of the year 2000 and the contract also included additional production options, which, if exercised, would have increased the total buy to 250 vehicles. Under Phase One, the US Army Tank Automotive Command awarded the company a contract worth USD3.2 million to build four prototypes of the ASV 150 (4 × 4) vehicle, which were completed early in 1997. Additionally, the ASV offers defense from 155mm artillery shell fragments overhead and 12-pound mine blasts under each wheel.įollowing an international competition for an Armored Security Vehicle (ASV) in which the two finalists were the Textron Marine & Land Systems, Cadillac Gage ASV 150 (4 × 4) and the AV Technology, Limited Liability Company, with a modified version of its Dragoon (4 × 4) light armoured vehicle, the ASV 150 was selected by the US Army in December 1995. The ASV's modular expandable armor provides front, rear and side crew protection from. The Armored Security Vehicle (ASV) is a highly mobile, survivable and C-130 transportable 4X4 wheeled vehicle currently in production for the U.S.
