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India Signs Up For JLTV

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India Signs Up For JLTV

In a surprise announcement, Joint Light Tactical Vehicle officials said India has signed a letter of intent to participate in the next phase of the program.

Kevin Fahey, program executive officer for ground combat systems, told reporters about the Indian agreement Tuesday at the annual conference of the Association of the US Army.

That means India joins Australia as a basic partner in the program, giving them lower costs in the EMD portion of the program if they stick with it. Canada, Israel and Britain had all expressed interest in the program and are receiving data about its performance but they have committed so far to their own national programs.

In addition to India signing up with JLTV, the U.S. is sending 17 Stryker vehicles and related forces to India later this month for two weeks of exercises, Lt. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, Army Pacific Commander told reporters here at AUSA. These truly joint operations will see Indian troops fighting from Strykers and enable to two sides to refine tactics, techniques and procedures, Mixon said.

Meanwhile, Marine Lt. Col. Ben Garza, the Marines program manager for JLTV, said the program has weight under control, regardless of other reports to the contrary. He said the smallest version, Category A, weighs in at an average of 10,600 pounds; Category B comes in 15,000 pounds; Category C weighs in at an average of 14,500 pounds.

“That’s meeting the Marine Corps requirement for transportability,” said Bill Taylor, the Marines PEO for land systems.

I asked the three JLTV officials if the fractious debate about the future of Army modernization was imperiling their program, especially given the Marines earlier concerns about weight and their warm reception for M-ATVs in Afghanistan.

“I think there is room for both programs. In fact, I think there is a need for both programs,” Taylor said. M-ATV and JLTV share 320 requirements, he noted, but JLTV has an additional 580 requirements above and beyond M-ATV for such things as internal and external power sources and ISR plug and play capabilities.

DoD Buzz | India Signs Up For JLTV
 
Joint Light Tactical Vehicle

The Joint Light Tactical Vehicle is a U.S. Army, USSOCOM, and U.S. Marine Corps program to replace the current HMMWV with a family of more survivable vehicles and greater payload. In particular, the HMMWV was not designed to be an armored combat and scout vehicle but has been employed as one, whereas the JLTV will be designed from the ground up for this role.

The JLTV program is related to, but not the same as, the FTTS (Future Tactical Truck System) program. Lessons learned from the FTTS have been fed into the JLTV requirements.

The future family of vehicles will comprise five armored versions, ranging from infantry combat vehicles, command vehicles, reconnaissance vehicles, and armored utility vehicles.

There will probably also be an armoured personnel carrier and a number of other non-armoured versions for other purposes such as ambulances, utility vehicles and general purpose mobility.

Such a design could also be used in place of an armored personnel carrier or unarmored trucks.

However, the JLTV program could be outpaced by the rapid development of light weight MRAPs.

Australia signed an agreement in February 2009 to fund nine of the first 30 JLTV prototypes.

Joint Light Tactical Vehicle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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nice pic man.....
 
Will this involve Domestic production.

Or do we have to wait for delivery each time
 
Will this involve Domestic production.

Or do we have to wait for delivery each time

Right now a vendor is still to be chosen , so even to think about domestic production would be a bit premature.

On 29 October 2008 the Pentagon narrowed the field of vendors to the Lockheed Martin, General Tactical Vehicles and BAE Systems/Navistar teams to compete for the final version and contract for the JLTV. Each team received contracts worth between $35.9 million and $45 million to begin the second phase of the program, which could ultimately be worth $20 billion or more.
 
BAE / Navistar



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Candidates that failed to make it:

Boeing, Textron and Millenworks

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Force Protection Inc / DRS Technologies



Northrop Grumman / Oshkosh Truck / Plasan

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Blackwater and Raytheon

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can anybody confirm me that india also develop anti-terror armoured vehicle Viper & Dhruv ATC. so why we are going for export item.
 
can anybody confirm me that india also develop anti-terror armoured vehicle Viper & Dhruv ATC. so why we are going for export item.

You might have mistakenly written - export them , rather we are planning to import them.
 
Right now a vendor is still to be chosen , so even to think about domestic production would be a bit premature.

On 29 October 2008 the Pentagon narrowed the field of vendors to the Lockheed Martin, General Tactical Vehicles and BAE Systems/Navistar teams to compete for the final version and contract for the JLTV. Each team received contracts worth between $35.9 million and $45 million to begin the second phase of the program, which could ultimately be worth $20 billion or more.

Is there a frontrunner for JLTV?
GTV seems like a reliable vendor.
 
Is there a frontrunner for JLTV?
GTV seems like a reliable vendor.

Lockheed Martin, General Tactical Vehicles and BAE Systems/Navistar are still competing and i have no idea about a front runner. All three seem reliable to me . However, the JLTV program could be outpaced by the rapid development of light weight MRAPs
 
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