Henschel TH-444
Notes:
This German vehicle is basically an armored sports utility vehicle, being
an armored version of the long-wheelbase version of the Mercedes-Benz 250 GD.
This vehicle is related to the Egyptian G-320 (see Egyptian Wheeled
Armored Personnel Carriers), and was used for much the same purpose, that of VIP
transport, usually for CEOs and other high officers of European corporations.
There is a door on each side of the cab, a door on the rear of the
vehicle, and a hatch above the cab passenger seat, which may be equipped with a
machinegun mount. The engine is a
112-horsepower diesel, coupled to a manual transmission.
Armor is minimal, and no special attention is paid to top or floor armor.
The driver and commander have a bullet-resistant windshield to the front
and bullet-resistant windows to each side in their doors.
The sides have two bullet-resistant windows each, and there is one in the
rear door.
Twilight 2000
Notes: During the war, many of these vehicles were appropriated by local police
and militia forces for use as personnel carriers and scout cars.
Price |
Fuel Type |
Load |
Veh Wt |
Crew |
Mnt |
Night Vision |
Radiological |
$9,299 |
D, A |
800 kg |
3.7 tons |
2+4 |
2 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
Tr Mov |
Com Mov |
Fuel Cap |
Fuel Cons |
Config |
Susp |
Armor |
262/64 |
60/15 |
110 |
51 |
Stnd |
W(2) |
HF2 HS2
HR2 |
Fire Control |
Stabilization |
Armament |
Ammunition |
None |
None |
MG-3 (C) or MAG (C) |
500x7.62mm |
Krauss-Maffei Wegmann Dingo APV
Notes: The Dingo
APV (All Protected Vehicle) is an MRAP-type APC designed by the Germans to
partially replace the M-113 in the German Army, and provide a safe and secure
multipurpose vehicle for both military and peacekeeping operations.
The Dingo grew out of Krauss-Maffei’s APCV (All-Purpose Carrier Vehicle)
project, which was based on an upgraded version of the Unimog U-100L light
truck; the Dingo is much larger and based on the Unimog U-1550L medium truck.
Besides Germany, the Dingo is used by Austria, Belgium, the Czech
Republic, and Luxembourg; Israel was very interested early on in the Dingo, but
the German government prohibited Krauss-Maffei Wegmann from selling the Dingo to
Israel, citing its probable use against the Palestinians. The US for a time
considered the Dingo 2 for use as a light MRAP, but ultimately chose the M-1117
instead. Some are also used by police forces worldwide.
The Czech acquisition is currently stalled due to allegations of
corruption among Czech government officials. Dingos are small and light enough
to be easily air-transported (including sling-loaded from heavy-lift
helicopters), and air-dropped. The
Dingo 1 entered service in the late 1990s; the Dingo 2 entered service in the
mid-2000s.
The Dingo 1
As stated, the
Dingo is an MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) vehicle, using a V-shaped
bottom and special floor armor to protect the crew against mine and IED blasts,
as well as special seats and mounts for interior gear.
The initial version, now called the Dingo 1, is used only by Germany and
is rapidly being replaced by the later Dingo 2 version.
The Dingo 1 is based on the U-1550L chassis, and uses an OM-366A
155-horsepower diesel engine coupled to an automatic transmission.
The suspension if beefed-up for better off-road performance and has
run-flat tires. The Dingo 1 is a basic sort of APC, though it can be topped with
a cupola with a light or heavy machinegun or grenade launcher or an RWS with the
same weapons or an autocannon. The
Dingo seats its troops down each side of the vehicle, with doors in the sides of
the cab for the driver and commander and a door in the rear for the troops.
There is also a door in each side of the vehicle. Other than the commander’s
roof hatch, there is another hatch on the rear deck. The front has a
bullet-resistant windshield; it is one piece for the driver and commander.
The driver and commander have bullet-resistant windows to their sides in
their doors, and there is window in each of the side doors and in the rear door.
The armor is largely of aluminum; the vehicle is built largely like a
truck, with a truck-like front and sides which are flat on the bottom half and
slanted on the upper sides. The MRAP hull, other than its armor value, allows
the crew and interior components to take 25% less damage than a standard
vehicle. The Dingo 1, however, is a small vehicle, not equal to a standard APC
in size, and carries only a small infantry squad; it is perhaps better used as a
patrol and reconnaissance vehicle than an APC.
The Dingo 1, in Afghanistan, has survived running over a 7-kilogram land
mine with no ill effects to the crew and passengers and only minor damage to the
vehicle.
The Dingo 2
The Dingo 2 is
based on the more robust Unimog U-5000 chassis, allowing for more armor and a
beefed-up suspension to be fitted.
The new chassis also slows the Dingo 2 to have two main variants: a short
wheelbase version (similar in size to the Dingo 1) and a long wheelbase that
carries more troops and cargo. The
different-length, more robust chassis also slows the creation of several
specialist vehicles which are both APC-type and non-APC-type.
It also allows for the fitting of enhancements such as (in German
service, for example, and provided for in the stats below) a GPS system, a
collective NBC system, a rear-view camera system, antilock brakes, and better
internal communications, as well as more radios in some roles.
The standard Dingo 2 replaces the commander’s weapon station with an RWS
mounted on the center of the roof, armed with a light, medium, or heavy
machinegun, automatic grenade launcher, or light autocannon.
The Dingo 2’s armor can be supplemented with additional appliqué armor,
normally a spaced aluminum/steel composition made by IBD and part of the MEXAS
system. The Dingo 2 is powered by
stronger 237-horsepower diesel engine.
The suspension is heavy and on run-flat tires, with central tire pressure
regulation.
Dingo 2
APC-Type Variants
Variants of the
Dingo 2 are normally based on the LWB version, which offers more room for
customization and equipment. Some variants include an armored ambulance, able to
take two stretcher cases and three seated patients as well as a medic in the
rear. It has, despite the limited
space, a defibrillator, an oxygen administration kit, the equivalent of a
doctor’s medical bag and 10 personal medical kits, an assortment of splits,
bandages, cravats, space blankets, and other such items.
A logistics
version has large roof hatches as well as a widened rear hatch, and has rollers,
lock-down points, and tie-down points for cargo.
The vehicle has a 2-ton-capacity crane to assist in cargo handling, and
removable ramps to off-load the same.
It is essentially a stripped-down version of the LWB Dingo 2.
The BUR carries
a GSR set and a small crew to operate it.
The BUR’s GSR has a range of 30 kilometers.
Sensors also include a FLIR and image intensifier. A small computer helps
tie together the data, and there is storage for intelligence gathered.
The vehicle has a long-range and a short-range radio, and the long-range
radio is data-capable.
There is an NBC
reconnaissance version which has all the required gear for the detection and
measurement of chemical, biological, and radiological contamination, including
Geiger counters, dosimeters, chemical agent detection and identification
equipment, and sampling equipment.
This version is equipped with an NBC overpressure system with a collective NBC
backup. A small computer helps tie together the detection and sampling data, and
the vehicle has a data-capable long-range radio and a short-range radio.
Twilight 2000
Notes: The Dingo 1 exists in the Twilight 2000 timeline, but is a rare vehicle
that exists only in German service.
The Dingo 2 does not exist in the Twilight 2000 timeline.
Vehicle |
Price |
Fuel Type |
Load |
Veh Wt |
Crew |
Mnt |
Night Vision |
Radiological |
Dingo 1 |
$18,664 |
D, A |
1.1 tons |
6.4 tons |
2+5 |
2 |
Passive IR (C) |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 SWB |
$48,135 |
D, A |
1.2 tons |
9.2 tons |
3+4 |
4 |
Passive IR (C), Image Intensification (C) |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 SWB w/Appliqué |
$49,136 |
D, A |
1.1 tons |
9.7 tons |
3+4 |
4 |
Passive IR (C), Image Intensification (C) |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 LWB |
$50,488 |
D, A |
1.2 tons |
11.9 tons |
3+7 |
6 |
Passive IR (C), Image Intensification (C) |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 LWB w/Appliqué |
$51,489 |
D, A |
1.1 tons |
12.4 tons |
3+7 |
6 |
|
|
Dingo 2 Ambulance |
$58,062 |
D, A |
600 kg |
12.1 tons |
**** |
7 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 Ambulance w/Appliqué |
$59,063 |
D, A |
500 kg |
12.6 tons |
**** |
7 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 Logistics |
$39,135 |
D, A |
1.5 tons |
10.9 tons |
2 |
5 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 Logistics w/Appliqué |
$40,136 |
D, A |
1.4 tons |
11.4 tons |
2 |
5 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 BUR |
$232,482 |
D, A |
600 kg |
12 tons |
3 |
7 |
Image Intensification (Mast), Thermal Imaging (Mast), GSR |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 BUR w/Appliqué |
$233,483 |
D, A |
500 kg |
12.5 tons |
3 |
9 |
Image Intensification (Mast), Thermal Imaging (Mast), GSR |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 NBC Recon |
$388,082 |
D, A |
500 kg |
12.3 tons |
3 |
9 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Dingo 2 NBC Recon w/Appliqué |
$389,083 |
D, A |
400 kg |
12.8 tons |
3 |
9 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Vehicle |
Tr Mov |
Com Mov |
Fuel Cap |
Fuel Cons |
Config |
Susp |
Armor |
Dingo 1 |
170/86 |
39/20 |
110 |
78 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF4
HS3 HR2* |
Dingo 2 SWB |
174/88 |
41/20 |
245 |
116 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS4 HR3** |
Dingo 2 SWB w/Appliqué |
165/84 |
39/19 |
245 |
122 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF7Sp
HS5Sp HR3*** |
Dingo 2 LWB |
134/68 |
32/15 |
245 |
150 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS4 HR3** |
Dingo 2 LWB w/Appliqué |
129/65 |
31/15 |
245 |
156 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF7Sp
HS5Sp HR3*** |
Dingo 2 Ambulance |
131/67 |
31/15 |
245 |
153 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS4 HR3** |
Dingo 2 Ambulance w/Appliqué |
126/64 |
30/14 |
245 |
159 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF7Sp
HS5Sp HR3*** |
Dingo 2 Logistics |
146/74 |
35/16 |
245 |
138 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS4 HR3** |
Dingo 2 Logistics w/Appliqué |
139/71 |
33/16 |
245 |
144 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF7Sp
HS5Sp HR3*** |
Dingo 2 BUR |
133/67 |
32/15 |
245 |
152 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS4 HR3** |
Dingo 2 BUR w/Appliqué |
127/65 |
30/14 |
245 |
158 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF7Sp
HS5Sp HR3*** |
Dingo 2 NBC Recon |
130/66 |
31/15 |
245 |
155 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS4 HR3** |
Dingo 2 NBC Recon w/Appliqué |
125/63 |
30/14 |
245 |
162 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF7Sp
HS5Sp HR3*** |
Vehicle |
Fire Control |
Stabilization |
Armament |
Ammunition |
Dingo 1 |
+1 |
Fair |
MG-3 or MAG (C) or M-2HB (C) or HK GMG or Mk 19 (C), or 20mm Rh-202
autocannon |
1000x7.62mm or 500x.50 or 150x40mm or 300x20mm |
Dingo 2 APC |
+1 |
Fair |
MG-3 or MAG or M-2HB or HK GMG or Mk 19 or 20mm Rh-202 autocannon |
1400x7.62mm or 700x.50 or 220x40mm or 430x20mm |
Dingo 2 BUR/Logistics/NBC Recon |
None |
None |
MG-3
or MAG (C) |
1000x7.62mm |
*The Dingo 1 has a floor AV of 4Sp in addition to being an MRAP hull.
**This version has a floor AV of 6Sp and a roof AV of 3 as well as being an MRAP
hull.
***This version has a floor AV of 7Sp and a roof AV of 4 as well as being an
MRAP hull.
****See Notes for Crew and passenger capacity.
Thyssen-Henschel Condor
Notes:
The Condor was designed in the late 1970s to be the successor to the
UR-416. It did not enjoy the
success of the UR-416, however, as it was not enough of an improvement over the
UR-416 for most users of the UR-416 or potential new users to accept it.
The exception to this was Malaysia, who employed over 450 of them, where
they acquired a reputation for vulnerability during combat use with the
Malaysian Army in their operations with the UN force in Somalia in the 1990s; a
few were even present during the “Black Hawk Down” incident, and one was lost to
an RPG-7 round which not only killed the driver, but penetrated through to the
engine compartment. The Uruguayans
also used 64 of them, and the Turkish, Thais, Portuguese, Indonesians, and
Kuwaitis each used less than 25 each; small amounts have also been sold to NGOs
and some national or city police forces worldwide.
Production continues today, though the Condor is now being built by
Rheinmetall instead of Thyssen-Henschel.
That said, the
Condor does have improved armor, speed and load carrying capability over the
UR-416, and is also amphibious. The
amount of ammunition normally carried is quite large for a vehicle of its size.
The driver sits on the front left with bullet-resistant windows to the front and
sides; these windows can be covered by armored shutters with vision slits in
them to increase protection. The
small turret has a single hatch for the gunner.
The troops sit down the sides of the vehicle, and the infantry squad
leader is behind the driver also facing the center. He has a pair of vision
blocks to see out of the left side of the vehicle, but no firing port. There is
a cluster of three smoke grenade launchers on each side of the turret (though
some countries mount the smoke grenade launchers in banks of three on each side
of the vehicle near the rear). The troop compartment has three firing ports in
each side and two in the rear, as well as a hatch on the rear deck. There is a
winch that can be led out the front or rear, with a capacity of 5 tons and 50
meters of cable. It is large for a
4x4 vehicle, but much of this is the high ground clearance which gives the
Condor good performance off-road and some extra resistance to mines and IEDs.
The engine of
the Condor is Mercedes-Benz OM-352A 168-horsepower diesel which is to the right
of the driver compartment. The
driver has conventional controls, and a manual transmission.
The turrets used are Thyssen-Henschel designs, except for the 20mm
autocannon turret which is a British FVT-900 turret as used on some versions of
the Stormer APC. The suspension is partially borrowed from some Panhard designs;
as stated above, the suspension is high, and the tires are, as on most wheeled
military vehicles, run-flat tires. The vehicle is propelled in the water by a
propeller that can be moved 360 degrees.
A trim vane must also be erected at the front for amphibious operations,
and bilge pumps turned on; preparation for amphibious operations takes two
minutes. Optional features include air conditioning, a collective NBC system,
and a hatch for the driver which has a night vision block in it.
Twilight 2000
Notes: This armored personnel carrier was manufactured by Germany, but in the
Twilight 2000 timeline was not actually used by that country until the Twilight
War. Germany normally outfitted
Condors as long-range scout vehicles, with the rear set up to carry extra gear,
ammunition, rations, and radios.
Merc 2000 Notes:
Light and inexpensive, the Condor is a popular APC for Third World countries in
the Twilight 2000 timeline.
Vehicle |
Price |
Fuel Type |
Load |
Veh Wt |
Crew |
Mnt |
Night Vision |
Radiological |
Twin MG Turret |
$39,719 |
D, A |
3 tons |
12 tons |
3+9 |
8 |
Passive IR (C) |
Enclosed |
.50/7.62 Turret |
$42,934 |
D, A |
3.2 tons |
12.2 tons |
3+9 |
8 |
Passive IR (C) |
Enclosed |
20mm Turret |
$45,694 |
D, A |
3.2 tons |
12.7 tons |
3+7 |
10 |
Passive IR (C) |
Enclosed |
Vehicle |
Tr Mov |
Com Mov |
Fuel Cap |
Fuel Cons |
Config |
Susp |
Armor |
Twin MG Turret |
126/63 |
30/14/3 |
280 |
82 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF3 TS3
TR2 HF5
HS3 HR2* |
.50/7.62 Turret |
124/62 |
29/14/3 |
280 |
84 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF3 TS3
TR2 HF5
HS3 HR2* |
20mm Turret |
118/59 |
28/13/3 |
280 |
87 |
Trtd |
W(3) |
TF5 TS3
TR3 HF5
HS3 HR3* |
Vehicle |
Fire Control |
Stabilization |
Armament |
Ammunition |
Twin MG Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
2xMG-3 |
3600x7.62mm |
.50/7.62 Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
M-2HB, MG-3 |
1100x.50, 1800x7.62mm |
20mm Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
20mm
Oerlikon KAA, MG-3 |
440x20mm, 1800x7.62mm |
*Floor armor
is 3.
Notes:
This vehicle was not originally intended to be a simple armored personnel
carrier; instead, the Fuchs was meant to be a base chassis for a variety of
specialist vehicles. The Fuchs is
therefore sometimes called a “retrofit platform,” since over 90 possible
combinations are possible (32 of which have been built and gone into service).
Variants of the basic chassis ranging from ambulances to command vehicles to
combat engineer vehicles have been made; perhaps the most numerous variant is
the NBC reconnaissance vehicle, such as the M-93 Fox, used by Germany, the US,
Israel, Britain, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia.
The front hull
has two overhead hatches, one for the driver and one for the commander with a
weapon mount; alternately, the hatch in the center deck of the vehicle can be
fitted with a weapon mount instead.
Normal armament in German service is an MG-3, but the mounts are capable of
taking any weapon able to be mounted on an NLT, NMT, or NHT; the US routinely
uses the M-2HB on its M-93 Foxes, and the Germans have recently been, in
Afghanistan, been mounting M-3M machineguns or HK GMG grenade launchers.
Troops enter and exit through two large doors in the rear; there are two
vision blocks in each side of the hull and one in the right rear door, but no
firing ports are fitted. There are
two more hatches on the rear deck, staggered from one another, and these
normally also have weapon mounts.
The commander and driver have hatches on the sides of the cab for entry and
exit. The engine of the Fuchs is a powerful Mercedes-Benz OM-402A multifuel
engine developing 320 horsepower.
Transmission is automatic, and controls are power-assisted.
Suspension is 6x6 off-road with run-flat tires.
The Fuchs is amphibious, requiring the erection of a trim vane and the
turning on of bilge pumps and propellers, requiring 2 minutes.
A banks of four smoke grenade cluster is count near the front on the
sides of the vehicle.
Basic APC versions can
carry up to 14 troops, including the crew; the roof weapons are manned by those
troops. They sit in seats slung
from roof harnesses, to help absorb the shock of running over a mine or IED.
However, as stated above, an APC is not normally the role of a Fuchs.
Some variants
include one carrying the RASIT ground surveillance radar and other sensors on an
extendible mast, to make a reconnaissance and surveillance vehicle.
The RASIT vehicle has both a GSR and a mortar/artillery counterbattery
radar set (with a range of 30km), and the sensor mast includes FLIR, day and
night image intensification, a laser rangefinder, TV cameras (both day and
LLTV), and recording equipment, along with extra radios (two long range with
data capability, two medium-range, and one short-range), a ruggedized computer,
and copious digital and analog storage capacity.
The command
version has a BMS system with additional vision gear on the roof on an
extendible mast, similar to the RASIT sensor mast above, but without the
recording equipment. The vehicle
has two long-range radios (one of which is data-capable), two medium-range, and
two-short-range radios, a ruggedized computer, and the usual LCD screens,
monitoring equipment for the vehicle and enemy and friendly units, and space for
maps, office and plotting-type supplies, and an independent map board.
The vehicle has a small table and folding chairs for the command crew.
The
communications vehicle is normally used in a command post unit
at battalion level and above. The
vehicle has four long-range and two medium-range vehicles; one long-range radio
is data-capable (for supplying data to the command post).
It has a switchboard able to handle up 30 field telephones, and itself
carries 20 field telephones and 200 meters of commo wire.
It also carries a variety of spare parts for radios and communications
equipment, and has a SATCOM terminal.
The vehicle has a computer which is used to coordinate the communications
functions, and is not a fully-functioning computer. The communications version
normally tows a trailer with more communications gear such as parts and hoards
more commo wire, as well as spare radios and communications gear for the command
post. There are several different
versions of this vehicle, with somewhat different equipment.
The command and communications versions are both collectively referred to
as the FüFü.
The NBC
reconnaissance version, designated the Spürfuchs by the Germans, is perhaps the
most common version of the Fuchs in use in the world.
Perhaps the best known example is the US M-93 Fox (which will be covered
on the US Wheeled APCs page), but in general, the Spürfuchs includes sensors to
detect a wide variety of chemical, biological, and radiological agents,
including the ability to take samples not only from the air, but from surfaces
in the area through two extendible arms.
The vehicle includes an onboard computer to assist in chemical analysis;
this computer is restricted to analyzing and detecting chemical agents and
relaying the information to other units.
A data-capable long-range radio, medium-range radio, and short-range
radio has been mounted. The
radiological sensors include a basic Geiger counter, a dosimeter, and a
radiation analysis mechanism (types and amounts of various rays such as alpha,
beta, and gamma radiation). The
Spürfuchs is radiation-hardened and has an NBC overpressure system with a
collective NBC backup. At the rear,
a set of two 40-flag dispensers are mounted to mark contaminated areas; these
operate remotely.
The Eloka is an
electronic warfare vehicle with equipment to detect and jam radar and radio
transmissions. Jamming range for
radar is 15 kilometers and for radio 30 kilometers.
A total of four bands of radar and six bands of radio can be jammed, but
only two bands of radar and three of radio can be jammed at once.
Radar detection range is the same as its jamming range – 15 kilometers.
Radio detection range is 50 kilometers.
The EW version can be distinguished by the many unusual aerials on the
roof. A small computer helps tie
these functions together, but it is a simple computer which does not have the
functions of a laptop; it simply gives the crew the required information.
The HELAS is a more powerful EW/reconnaissance vehicle which can jam up
to six bands of radar and radio at once, and includes radar and radio detection
equipment with a range of 50 km each.
The HELAS can also detect the electronic emissions of a computer at short
range (15 km), and attempt to hack into such computers (Formidable: Electronics
task). The HELAS also has a GSR set as well as a sensor mast similar to that of
the RASIT above. The HELAS
necessarily has powerful computers with large amounts of storage and processing
power. It has limited BMS
capability, able to keep track of friendly and enemy positions and intelligence
information.
The Fuchs-San is
a standard Transportpanzer 1 Fuchs multipurpose vehicle outfitted for use as an
ambulance, and used by many of the same countries that use the Fuchs for other
purposes. In this role, the Fuchs
has brackets to carry up to 4 stretcher-borne patients and four seated patients
or 10 seated patients as well as a medic, and medical equipment such as a
refrigerator, oxygen administration set, a defibrillator, enough refills of the
personal medical kit for a platoon, a doctor's medical bag, and equipment such
as bandages and splints.
These specialist
versions of the Fuchs typically have APUs with a capacity of 5-15kW.
All of these vehicles can be fitted with an appliqué armor package
provided by MEXAS, which consists of spaced armor panels of steel and aluminum.
The appliqué armor kit normally includes power assist for the doors and hatches,
as it makes them heavier.
Twilight 2000
Notes: As the Twilight War went on, more and more of these vehicles were pressed
into service as APCs or logistics carriers, where their roomy interiors proved
very adept at transporting lots of troops or equipment.
There were at least 32 variants of the Fuchs before the war, and the
highly adaptable chassis spawned more ad
hoc variants during the Twilight War.
Vehicle |
Price |
Fuel Type |
Load |
Veh Wt |
Crew |
Mnt |
Night Vision |
Radiological |
Fuchs (Basic) |
$32,769 |
D,
G, A |
6
tons |
18.3
tons |
2+12 |
12 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Fuchs (Basic) w/Appliqué |
$41,351 |
D,
G, A |
5.6
tons |
19.7
tons |
2+12 |
12 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
RASIT |
$614,392 |
D,
G, A |
2.8
tons |
19.7
tons |
5 |
14 |
GSR,
Mortar/Artillery Radar, Thermal Imaging (Mast), 4xImage Intensification
(Mast) |
Shielded |
RASIT w/Appliqué |
$622,974 |
D,
G, A |
2.4
tons |
21.1
tons |
5 |
14 |
GSR,
Mortar/Artillery Radar, Thermal Imaging (Mast), 4xImage Intensification
(Mast) |
Shielded |
FüFü
Command |
$328,001 |
D,
G, A |
2.5
tons |
19.9
tons |
2+5 |
14 |
Thermal Imaging (Mast), 4xImage Intensification (Mast) |
Shielded |
FüFü
Command w/Appliqué |
$336,583 |
D,
G, A |
2.1
tons |
21.3
tons |
2+5 |
14 |
Thermal Imaging (Mast), 4xImage Intensification (Mast) |
Shielded |
FüFü Communications |
$116,148 |
D,
G, A |
2.8
tons |
19.6
tons |
5 |
14 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
FüFü Communications w/Appliqué |
$124,730 |
D,
G, A |
2.4
tons |
21
tons |
5 |
14 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Spürfuchs |
$432,641 |
D,
G, A |
1.3
tons |
18.7
tons |
3 |
14 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Spürfuchs w/Appliqué |
$441,223 |
D,
G, A |
950
kg |
20.1
tons |
3 |
14 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Eloka |
$705,230 |
D,
G, A |
2.9
tons |
18.7
tons |
5 |
14 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Eloka w/Appliqué |
$713,812 |
D,
G, A |
2.5
tons |
20.1
tons |
5 |
14 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
HELAS |
$1,164,580 |
D,
G, A |
2.8
tons |
18.9
tons |
5 |
15 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
HELAS w/Appliqué |
$1,173,162 |
D,
G, A |
2.4
tons |
20.3
tons |
5 |
15 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Fuchs-San |
$41,435 |
D,
G, A |
2.7
tons |
19
tons |
** |
13 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Fuchs-San w/Appliqué |
$50,017 |
D,
G, A |
2.3
tons |
20.4
tons |
** |
13 |
Headlights |
Shielded |
Vehicle |
Tr Mov |
Com Mov |
Fuel Cap |
Fuel Cons |
Config |
Susp |
Armor |
Fuchs (Basic) |
151/76 |
35/18/4 |
390 |
170 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
Fuchs (Basic) w/Appliqué |
140/71 |
33/17/3 |
390 |
184 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
RASIT |
140/71 |
33/17/3 |
390 |
184 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
RASIT w/Appliqué |
130/66 |
31/16/3 |
390 |
197 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
FüFü
Command |
139/70 |
32/17/3 |
390 |
177 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
FüFü
Command w/Appliqué |
130/65 |
30/15/3 |
390 |
197 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
FüFü Communications |
140/71 |
32/17/3 |
390 |
182 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
FüFü Communications w/Appliqué |
131/66 |
30/16/3 |
390 |
196 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
Spürfuchs/Eloka |
148/74 |
34/18/3 |
390 |
173 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
Spürfuchs w/Appliqué/Eloka w/Appliqué |
137/69 |
32/16/3 |
390 |
187 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
HELAS |
146/74 |
34/18/3 |
390 |
175 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
HELAS w/Appliqué |
136/68 |
32/16/3 |
390 |
189 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
Fuchs-San |
145/73 |
34/17/3 |
390 |
177 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF8
HS5 HR3 |
Fuchs-San w/Appliqué |
136/68 |
32/16/3 |
390 |
189 |
Stnd |
W(4) |
HF12Sp HS6Sp
HR4* |
Vehicle |
Fire Control |
Stabilization |
Armament |
Ammunition |
Fuchs (except Fuchs-San) |
None |
None |
MG-3, MAG, M-2HB, M-3M, or HK GMG/Mk 19 AGL (C, 2xRear) |
Up
to 3000x7.62mm, 1800x.50, or 575x40mm, or ratio combination of those |
*Roof AV is
3; Floor AV is 4Sp.
**See Notes
above for Crew and passenger capacity.
Notes: This
light APC was produced as a successor to the UR-416 in some roles, and looks
like what it is: a medium Unimog truck chassis given an armored body.
The TM-170, designated the SW-4 in German service, was selected by the
German Border Guards in 1982; other than that use, the only known export
customers were Kuwait, who acquired the TM-170 in 1993, and Macedonia, who
bought some in 1999-2000 and called the Hermelin.
German TM-170s were passed on to the German Army at large some years ago.
The TM-170 was in turn replaced by the Condor. Military versions of the
TM-170 are carry the company designation of TM-170 BGS.
As stated, the
TM-170 is basically an armored truck, with the engine in front, driver and
commander to its immediate rear, and a rear troop compartment.
The troop compartment has one small and one large roof hatch, with the
smaller hatch in the center and having a machinegun mount.
Many also have a small turret in the center of the troop compartment,
armed with light or medium weapons.
Turrets are one-man. Police versions typically have a small turret with a
small single-shot grenade launcher loaded from the inside of the turret. The
troop compartment also has a door in each side of the hull, and double hatch in
the rear which opens up and down. Most are APCs, with some communications
vehicle versions and armored workshop versions. Some, though not all, have two
firing ports in each side and two in the rear. The troops sit down the sides of
the vehicle. Four smoke grenade launchers are found on each side of the vehicle
near the front of the hull; alternatively, there is one cluster of four at the
rear of the turret or commander’s cupola.
The driver and
commander are in the front, in a cab behind a bullet-resistant windshield, with
side doors which have bullet-resistant windows in them.
Armored shutters can be lowered to increase protection, with the
commander and driver using three vision blocks to the front during this time.
The driver and commander also have roof hatches, with the commander’s hatch
having a weapon mount on the standard APC version. The engine is front-mounted,
and is a Mercedes-Benz OM-366 turbocharged diesel developing 240 horsepower,
coupled to an automatic transmission which is power-boosted along with power
steering and brakes. The suspension is 4x4, switchable to 4x2 for road use, and
is a cross-country suspension with a beefed-up suspension and run-flat tires.
The TM-170 is fully amphibious with preparation (two minutes), and can ford to a
depth of 1.3 meters without preparation.
Police versions
are typically unarmed or have a light grenade launcher cupola, with a grenade
launcher able to launch irritant gas or smoke grenades. They have an air horn
and a loudspeaker/PA system, as well as a light dozer blade at the front for
clearing obstacles (it is not strong enough to dig fighting positions or plow
mines, but allows for an increase of armor of 2Sp if hit, which is a 25% chance
if hit from the front). A surveillance cupola is also available, with recording
devices, shotgun microphones, and LLTV, as well as recording equipment inside of
the vehicle; this turret is unarmed or has only a grenade launcher as per the
Police version (this is reflected in the stats below). Police versions can be
fitted with a water cannon fed by a 1000-liter water tank or an irritant gas
tank. The water/gas tank has a
range of 50 meters. A further version, the TM-170 Hardliner, is a low-cost
alternative to the TM-170, less armored, with the commander’s station having a
simple pintle weapons mount. The
Hardliner Patrol has an open rear section with a fully-enclosed cab and is
typically unarmed. The Hardliner
uses a 214-horsepower engine and has a smaller fuel tank at 170 liters.
Police versions and Hardliners are not amphibious.
Vehicle |
Price |
Fuel Type |
Load |
Veh Wt |
Crew |
Mnt |
Night Vision |
Radiological |
TM-170 BGS Basic APC |
$23,074 |
D, A |
1.5 tons |
11.6 tons |
2+10 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
TM-170 BGS Twin MG Turret |
$32,727 |
D, A |
1.4 tons |
11.8 tons |
3+8 |
6 |
Passive IR (G) |
Enclosed |
TM-170 BGS .50/7.62 Turret |
$35,434 |
D, A |
1.3 tons |
12 tons |
3+8 |
6 |
Passive IR (G) |
Enclosed |
TM-170 BGS Autocannon Turret |
$40,468 |
D, A |
1.2 tons |
12.5 tons |
3+8 |
10 |
Passive IR (G) |
Enclosed |
TM-170 Police |
$26,975 |
D, A |
1.6 tons |
11.6 tons |
3+8 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
TM-170 Surveillance |
$34,183 |
D, A |
700 kg |
11.8 tons |
3+4 |
7 |
Image Intensification (Turret/G) |
Enclosed |
TM-170 Hardliner |
$22,524 |
D, A |
1.4 tons |
11.6 tons |
2+10 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
TM-170 Hardliner Patrol |
$12,755 |
D, A |
1.5 tons |
11.3 tons |
2+10 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
Vehicle |
Tr Mov |
Com Mov |
Fuel Cap |
Fuel Cons |
Config |
Susp |
Armor |
TM-170 BGS Basic APC |
168/85 |
39/20/4 |
200 |
125 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF6 HS3
HR2 |
TM-170 BGS Twin MG Turret |
165/83 |
38/19/3 |
200 |
127 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS3 HR2 |
TM-170 BGS .50/7.62 Turret |
163/82 |
38/19/3 |
200 |
129 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS3 HR2 |
TM-170 BGS Autocannon Turret |
159/80 |
37/18/3 |
200 |
135 |
Trtd |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS3 HR2 |
TM-170 Police |
168/85 |
39/20 |
200 |
125 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS3 HR2 |
TM-170 Surveillance |
165/83 |
38/19 |
200 |
127 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF6
HS3 HR2 |
TM-170 Hardliner |
154/78 |
36/18 |
170 |
111 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF5 HS3
HR2 |
TM-170 Hardliner Patrol |
157/79 |
36/18 |
170 |
108 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF5 HS3
HR2* |
Vehicle |
Fire Control |
Stabilization |
Armament |
Ammunition |
TM-170 BGS Basic APC/Hardliner |
None |
None |
M-2HB (C) or MG-3 (C) |
1000x.50 or 2000x7.62mm |
TM-170 BGS Twin MG Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
2xMG-3 |
2000x7.62mm |
TM-170 BGS .50/7.62 Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
M-2HB, MG-3 |
500x.50, 1000x7.62mm |
TM-170 BGS Autocannon Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
20mm Rh-202 Autocannon, MG-3 |
400x20mm, 1000x7.62mm |
TM-170 Police/Surveillance |
None |
None |
37mm, 38mm, or 40mm Irritant Gas Grenade Launcher |
375x37mm, 38mm, or 40mm |
*This
vehicle has no top for its rear troop section.
Notes:
Based on the chassis of a Unimog cross-country vehicle fitted with an
armored body, the UR-416 is a light APC used mostly by police forces and border
guards in the countries that use them.
The UR-416 is or has been used by some 20 countries, on every continent
except North America. They were
built under license by several countries, and without license by the former
Rhodesia; one is even used by Lebanon, who captured it from the PLO, who in turn
are not licensed builders of the UR-416.
Production began in 1969, and the UR-416 was produced mostly for export.
Many countries who use the UR-416 call it the Pig or some variation of it, at
least informally. The UR-416 is largely an APC, but can also be used in a
variety of other roles. About 1030
were built, with over 1000 of them being exported or license-produced.
They are not particularly well-protected or good APCs, but are cheap and
easy to build and maintain.
The UR-416 is a
lumpish, squat, square-bodied vehicle with moderately-sloped frontal and side
armor. The driver is in the front
left of the vehicle behind a vision port that has an armored shutter.
To his side is a window, also with an armored shutter.
To the driver’s right is a commander’s station, also with armored
shutters and vision ports. The
commander has a roof hatch with a weapons mount, or light turret. (Most are
armed only with light or medium machineguns.)
Troop access is by a door on either side of the vehicle (and one in the
rear), and there are two roof hatches.
There are four vision blocks on each side of the vehicle and two in the
rear, along with two firing ports in each side and two in the rear, but these
are merely holes in the hull with armored shutters. The doors are clamshell-type
doors, with the bottom half having small stairs. The roof hatches also have
firing ports and can be used as armored gun shields when raised. The troops are
seated three down each side and two at the rear facing the rear.
In the front of the vehicle is a winch with a 5-ton capacity and 40
meters of cable.
The engine used
in a Mercedes-Benz OM-352 120-horsepower diesel engine, with manual transmission
and power steering and brakes. The
suspension has decent cross-country capabilities, with a good ground clearance.
The drive is 4x4, switchable to 4x2 for road use, with the rear wheels
becoming the drive wheels. The
UR-416 generally has a pintle-mounted machinegun at the commander’s hatch, but
sometimes this is replaced by an automatic grenade launcher or a small turret
fitted with a 20mm autocannon, M-2HB, or twin light/medium machineguns.
The unlicensed
Rhodesian copies of the UR-416 were built after a controversy about how they got
the plans in the first place.
Zimbabwe still used them until recently. The first ones were direct copies of
the UR-416; they were the ones that started the “Pig” appellation. The next
versions of Rhodesian UR-416s differ greatly, having a raised roofline and
having no roof. Over the
commander’s station is a pintle mount for a Hispano-Suiza Mk 5 (HS-404) 20mm
autocannon, scavenged from old Vampire jet fighters.
On each side was a MAG machinegun on a pintle mount; at the rear was an
M-2HB. The vehicles were not
particularly protected against mines or IEDs and were eventually mostly replaced
with MRAP-type vehicles of South African origin.
These Rhodesian versions typically carried less troops and more
ammunition.
PLO versions
were sometimes seen with mounts for AT-3 or Entac ATGMs on the roof, though they
were most often equipped with additional machineguns by the roof hatches.
Salvadoran
UR-416s are normally equipped with wrap-around mesh armor, similar to a
chain-link fence, which stands off from the vehicle’s sides and front.
This is an ad hoc form of spaced armor which is light and easy to make
and maintain. Unlike standard
spaced armor, it stops only 1d6 damage instead of 2d6 from HE-type rounds.
In addition to the commander’s weapon, Salvadoran UR-416s have weapon
mounts by their roof hatches, which typically have an M-2HB by the center hatch
and an M-1919A4 converted to 7.62mm NATO at the rear hatch.
The commander’s weapon is normally an M-2HB as well. These mounts have
AV2 gun shields to the front of the weapon.
Police (Internal
Security) versions are equipped with an obstacle-clearing blade at the front of
the vehicle. This blade can push
something like a car or roadblock out of the way, but is not strong enough to
use as a mine plow or dig fighting positions.
It gives the UR-416 an increase in AV to the front of the vehicle of 2Sp
(25% chance to hit it). The Internal Security version has a rotating cupola
where the center roof hatch normally is that has a weapon mount for a standard
version; the cupola has a single vision block to the front and rear, as well as
a rotating periscope. A second weapon mount on the cupola has an irritant gas
nozzle, fed by a 500-liter internal tank. The Internal Security version has
double rows of vision blocks on each side instead of single vision blocks.
Passenger capacity is reduced somewhat by the irritant gas tank.
Twilight 2000
Notes: During the Twilight War, large numbers of these vehicles were pressed
into service as mainstream APCs due to losses among vehicles of other types.
At least 17 countries had the UR-416 in service at the time of the
Twilight War.
Vehicle |
Price |
Fuel Type |
Load |
Veh Wt |
Crew |
Mnt |
Night Vision |
Radiological |
Basic APC |
$15,198 |
D, A |
800 kg |
7.6 tons |
2+8 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
Twin MG Turret |
$27,925 |
D, A |
800 kg |
7.8 tons |
2+8 |
6 |
Passive IR (C) |
Enclosed |
M-2HB Turret |
$26,366 |
D, A |
800 kg |
7.8 tons |
2+8 |
6 |
Passive IR (C) |
Enclosed |
Autocannon Turret |
$31,311 |
D, A |
700 kg |
8.1 tons |
2+8 |
6 |
Passive IR (C) |
Enclosed |
Rhodesian UR-416 |
$46,954 |
D, A |
800 kg |
7.4 tons |
2+6 |
4 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
Salvadoran UR-416 |
$35,415 |
D, A |
700 kg |
7.8 tons |
2+8 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
Internal Security |
$53,172 |
D, A |
650 kg |
7.9 tons |
2+7 |
6 |
Headlights |
Enclosed |
Vehicle |
Tr Mov |
Com Mov |
Fuel Cap |
Fuel Cons |
Config |
Susp |
Armor |
Basic APC |
133/67 |
31/16 |
150 |
59 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF4 HS3
HR2 |
Twin MG Turret/M-2HB Turret |
131/66 |
31/15 |
150 |
61 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF4
HS3 HR2 |
Autocannon Turret |
125/63 |
29/15 |
150 |
63 |
CiH |
W(3) |
TF2 TS2
TR2 HF4
HS3 HR2 |
Rhodesian UR-416 |
135/68 |
31/17 |
150 |
57 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF4 HS3
HR2 |
Salvadoran UR-416 |
131/66 |
31/15 |
150 |
61 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF4Sp HS3Sp
HR2* |
Internal Security |
128/64 |
30/15 |
150 |
61 |
Stnd |
W(3) |
HF4 HS3
HR2 |
Vehicle |
Fire Control |
Stabilization |
Armament |
Ammunition |
Basic APC |
None |
None |
MG-3 or M-2HB (C) |
1000x7.62mm or 600x.50 |
Twin MG Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
2xMG-3 (C) |
1000x7.62mm |
M-2HB Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
M-2HB (C) |
600x.50 |
Autocannon Turret |
+1 |
Fair |
20mm
Rh-202 Autocannon (C) |
450x20mm |
Rhodesian UR-416 |
None |
None |
20mm
HS-404 Autocannon (C), MAG (Right, Left), M-2HB (R) |
500x20mm, 2000x7.62mm, 1000x.50 |
Salvadoran UR-416 |
None |
None |
M-2HB (C), M-2HB, MAG (Rear) |
1200x.50, 2000x7.62mm |
Internal Security |
None |
None |
MG-3, Irritant Gas Dispenser |
1000x7.62mm, 500 Liters Irritant Gas |
*This is not
standard spaced armor; see above.