Petit Véhicule Protégé

Petit Véhicule Protégé
PVP on display at an open door day of the 18ème Régiment de Transmissions (18th Signal Rgt), on 15 June 2009
Type Light armoured vehicle
Place of origin  France
Service history
Used by See Operators
Production history
Manufacturer Panhard
Unit cost €167,000[1] (FY 2012)
Produced 2008–2012
No. built 1133
Variants See Variants
Specifications
Weight 4,390 kg
Length 4,599 mm
Width 2,277 mm
Height 2,170 mm
Crew 2 to 4

Armour STANAG 4569 (6 to 10 mm)
Main
armament
Medium machine gun
Engine IVECO 8140 2.8litre turbo-diesel
160 hp ( kW)
Power/weight 34 hp/tonne
Suspension Wheeled 4 x 4
Operational
range
800 km
Speed 120 km/h

The Petit Véhicule Protégé ("Small Protected vehicle") is a light, general-purpose armoured 4-wheel drive vehicle used by the French Army, made by Panhard. It is also designated as Auverland A4 AVL (Armoured Vehicle Light). Built by Auverland, it is the successor to the Peugeot P4. It is intended mostly as personnel carrier, weapon carrier, and for reconnaissance, detection and communications purposes.

In 2004, the first batch of 314 vehicles was ordered. The first vehicles were delivered in February 2008 and production ended in July 2012.[1] 100 vehicles will be fitted with the WASP light RWS. It is expected that the French DGA will order an additional 300 PVP vehicles. The 2009-14 military budget originally called for a total of 1500 PVPs, but this was reduced to 1233 in 2010 and 1133 in 2012. In the end 1073 were delivered to the Army at a total cost of €242.7m (~US$325m) for a unit cost of €167,000 (~US$220,000), or €226,000 (~US$300,000) including development costs.[1]

Design

The PVP is modular, allowing extra seats to be added for more personnel, or to be used as a light truck. The armour, made of steel and aluminium, offers level 2 protection (STANAG 4569) for the crew and the engine. The floor is protected against antipersonnel mines (type DM 31).

Variants

  • PVP HD (Heavy Duty) – larger version, based on the same architecture but with level 3 armour. With 5 doors and more cargo area (2T payload, total internal volume of 7.9 m³). Gross vehicle weight is 7.6 tonnes.
  • PVP XL (Extra Large) – with a total internal volume of 9.4 m³ and a gross vehicle weight of 12 tonnes (max. payload: 3 tonnes). The maximum number of seats is 10. The basic armour of the XL model also offers a level 3 protection.
  • PVP APC – Based on the French Army's PVP but with a 150mm higher roofline to provide room for 6 troops. Developed in 2010.[2]
  • Gavial – Unbuilt 5-door version with pneumatic suspension, to be licence-built by Rheinmetall. Offered to the Bundeswehr but they chose the LAPV Enok instead.
  • Colt – License-built by Ashok Leyland, first revealed in 2012.[3] Variants of the original PVP as the Colt Light Tactical Vehicle,[4] the PVP HD as the Colt Light Armoured Vehicle[5] and the Colt Airmobile.[4]

Operators

Map of PVP operators in blue
  •  Chile – 15 PVP delivered (Chilean Marines)[6]
  •  France – 1073 PVP delivered[1]
  •  Romania – 16 PVP delivered from 2012–15.[7]
  •  Togo – 8 PVPs delivered in 2008 for Togolese forces deployed with MINURCAT.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Projet de loi de finances pour 2013 : Défense : équipement des forces" (in French). Senate of France. 22 November 2012. Retrieved 2013-11-07.
  2. http://www.panhard.fr/anglais/docnews/pvp_carrier_VA.pdf
  3. https://21stcenturyasianarmsrace.com/2017/05/07/armored-cars-ashok-leyland-colt-ltv/
  4. 1 2 https://web.archive.org/web/20170729141615/http://www.ashokleylanddefensesystems.com/specs/airmobile_specs.pdf
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20170729141623/http://www.ashokleylanddefensesystems.com/specs/lav_specs.pdf
  6. http://www.infodefensa.com/latam/2009/08/29/noticia-chile-adquiere-15-vehiculos-4x4-blindados-panhard-pvp-por-dos-millones-de-euros.html
  7. https://www.shephardmedia.com/news/landwarfareintl/romania-takes-delivery-last-six-pvp-laorv/
  8. http://www.defenceweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7156:togo-receives-pvp-armoured-vehicles-tc54-trucks&catid=50:Land&Itemid=105

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.