Amphibious Assault Vehicle
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The Amphibious Assault Vehicle (AAV)—official designation AAV-7A1 (formerly known as LVT-7) is the current amphibious troop transport of the United States Marine Corps and is also operated by other forces.
The AAV-7A1 is a fully tracked amphibious landing vehicle manufactured by FMC Corporation.
It is used by USMC Amphibious Assault Battalions to land the surface assault elements of the landing force and their equipment in a single lift from assault shipping during amphibious operations to inland objectives and to conduct mechanized operations and related combat support in subsequent mechanized operations ashore.
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Development
The LVT-7 was first introduced in 1972 as a replacement for the LVT-5. In 1982, FMC was contracted to conduct the LVT-7 Service Life Extension Program, which converted the LVT-7 vehicles to the improved AAV-7A1 vehicle by adding an improved engine, transmission, and weapons system and improving the overall maintainability of the vehicle. Existing P-7A1s were later upgraded to carry the UGWS (UpGunned Weapons Station), which mounts a .50 cal (12.7 mm) M-2HB machine gun and a Mk-19 40 mm grenade launcher.
Variants
Image:Aav.jpg Three types of AAV-7A1s exist;
- AAVP-7A1 (Personnel)
- AAVC-7A1 (Command)
- AAVR-7A1 (Recovery)
The P-7A1 is by far the most common type. The P-7A1 has the capacity to carry 25 combat-equipped Marines. AAVP-7A1s are operated by three crewmen; the crew chief, driver, and rear crewman.
AAVP-7A1s have also been modified to carry the Mk 154 MCLC, or Mine Clearance Line Charge. The MCLC kit can fire three linear demolition charges to breach a lane through a minefield. MCLCs were used in the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
Combat History
Twenty U.S.-built LVTP-7s were used by Argentina during the 1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands. It was heavily used in the conflict in Iraq and was provided with an antitank armor add-on kit by Rafael, making it one of the safest armored personal carriers in the Iraqi theatre. AAV-7A1s were also used extensively in the Persian Gulf War and in Operation Restore Hope.
The AAV is still used by the United States Marine Corps, although it is slated to be replaced with the Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle starting in 2008
Operators
Image:AAV-7A1 comes ashore.jpg
- United States Marine Corps - 1311
- Argentina
- Italian Army - 35 LVPT7s, 25 of which have been upgraded to AAV-7A1 standard.
- Spanish Marine Brigade (BRIMAR) - 16
- South Korea - 63
- Taiwan - 54