Stryker

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Stryker

M1126 Stryker ICV
Type Armored personnel carrier
Place of origin Flag of the United States United States
Specifications
Weight ICV: 16.47 t (18.12 sh tn)
MGS: 18.77 t (20.65 sh tn)
Length 6.95 m (22.92 ft)
Width 2.72 m (8.97 ft)
Height 2.64 m (8.72 ft)
Crew 2+9

Armor 14.5 mm resistant[1]
Primary
armament
M68A1E4 105 mm gun (MGS)
M2 .50 caliber machine gun or MK19 40 mm grenade launcher mounted in a PROTECTOR M151 Remote Weapon Station (RWS) (ICV)
Secondary
armament
.50-cal M2 MG and M240 7.62mm MG (MGS)
Engine Caterpillar 3126 turbo diesel
260 kW (350 hp)
Power/weight ICV: 15.8 kW/t (19.3 hp/sh tn)
Suspension 8×8 wheeled
Operational
range
500 km (300 mi)
Speed 100 km/h (62 mph)[1] - limited to 72 km/h (45mph) by US Army rule due to rollover danger at high speeds[citation needed]

The Stryker is a family of eight-wheeled all-wheel-drive armored combat vehicles produced by General Dynamics Combat Systems, in use by the United States Army. Based on the Canadian LAV III light-armored vehicle, which in turn is based on the Swiss Mowag Piranha, the Stryker is the U.S. Army's first new armored vehicle since the M2/M3 Bradley Fighting Vehicle in the 1980s.

The Stryker was championed by General Eric Shinseki when he was U.S. Army Chief of Staff. The vehicle is employed in Stryker Brigade Combat Teams, light and mobile units based on the Brigade Combat Team Doctrine that relies on vehicles connected by military C4I networks.

Contents

Pneumatic or hydraulic systems drive almost all of the vehicle's mechanical features; for example, a pneumatic system switches between 8X4 and 8X8 drive.

The vehicle comes in several variants with a common engine, transmission, hydraulics, wheels, tires, differentials and transfer case. Two exceptions are the M1130 Command Vehicle and M1133 Medical Evacuation Vehicle, which have an air conditioning unit mounted on the pack. The medical vehicle also has a higher-capacity generator.

The Stryker uses a Caterpillar diesel engine common in U.S. Army medium-lift trucks, eliminating extensive retraining of maintenance crews and allowing the use of common parts.[2]

Designers strove to ease the maintainer's job, equipping most cables, hoses, and mechanical systems with quick-disconnecting mechanisms. The engine and transmission can be removed and reinstalled in less than one hour, allowing repairs to the turbocharger and many other components to be done outside the vehicle.

  • Extensive computer support helps soldiers fight the enemy while reducing friendly fire incidents. Each vehicle can track friendly vehicles in the field as well as detected enemies.
  • A day-night thermal imaging camera allows the vehicle commander to see what the driver sees.
  • Soldiers can practice training with the vehicles from computer training modules inside the vehicle.
  • The driver and the gunner have periscopes that allow them to see outside the vehicle without exposing themselves to outside dangers. The gunner has almost a 360-degree field of vision; the driver, a little more than 90 degrees.
  • General Dynamics Land Systems is developing a new Power and Data Management Architecture to handle computer upgrades.[3]

  • The armor suite has been made thicker than the MOWAG design to stop 14.5mm armor-piercing machine-gun rounds and artillery fragments.[4][2]
  • The automatic fire extinguishing system has sensors in the engine and troop compartments that activate one or more halon fire bottles, which can also be activated by the driver.
  • "Catchers' mask"-style deflectors known as slat armor are designed to disable the high-explosive anti-tank warhead of a rocket-propelled grenade by squeezing the angled sides of the metal nose cone and shorting the conductors between the detonator at the tip and the explosive charge at the back. This type of armor is cheaper and lighter than spaced appliqué-plate or reactive armor.[2][5]
  • The fuel tanks are externally mounted and designed to blow away from the hull in the event of explosion.
  • The CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear) Warfare system keeps the crew compartment airtight and positively pressurized.

The Stryker navigates rough terrain.
The Stryker navigates rough terrain.
  • The vehicle can alter the pressure in all eight tires to suit terrain conditions: highway, cross-country, mud/sand/snow, and emergency. The system warns the driver if the vehicle exceeds the recommended speed for its tire pressure, then automatically inflates the tires to the next higher pressure setting. The system can also warn the driver of a flat tire, although the Stryker is equipped with run-flat tire inserts that also serve as bead-locks, allowing the vehicle to move several miles before the tire completely deteriorates.
  • In August 2004, the US Air Force successfully air dropped an up-weighted Stryker Engineering Support Vehicle from a C-17.[6] This test to to determine the feasibility of air dropping a Stryker MGS. Even though this test was a success, none of the Stryker variants have been certified for airdrop.
  • The Stryker is too heavy (19 - 26 tons, depending on which variant and which add-on features) to be lifted by existing helicopters.
  • Its tires exert very high ground pressures (300psi/ square-inch) on the soil it moves on, severely limiting the Stryker's cross-country mobility.[citation needed]

The cost to purchase the initial Stryker ICVs (without add-ons, including the cage armor) was US$ 3 million in April 2002.[7] By May 2003, the regular production cost of the vehicle was US$ 1.42 million. (page 20 [8])

The US Army plans to improve its fleet of Stryker vehicles with the introduction of improved semi-active suspension, modifications reshaping the hull into a shallow V-shaped structure, additional armor for the sides, redesigned hatches to minimize gaps in the armor, blast absorbing mine resistant seats (or BENCHES), non-flammable tires, an upgrade to the remote weapon station that allows it to fire on the go, increased 500 amp power generation, a new solid state power distribution system and data bus, and the automotive and power plant systems will be upgraded to support a 25% Gross Vehicle Weight increase. The upgrade incorporating lessons learned from Afghanistan is designated LAV-H and General Dynamics had a technology demonstrator displayed at the 2007 Association of the United States Army (AUSA) Exposition.[9]

The vehicle is named for two American servicemen who posthumously received the Medal of Honor: Pfc Stuart S. Stryker, who died in World War II and Spc Robert F. Stryker, who died in the Vietnam War.[10]

The Stryker MGS moved into low-rate initial production in 2005 for evaluation,[11] with plans for full production in 2007.

Currently the Stryker is in the research and development phase of being converted to a vehicle capable of Autonomous Navigation.[12] TARDEC has also tested an active Magneto Rheological suspension, developed by MillenWorks for the Stryker, at the Yuma Proving Ground, which resulted in greater vehicle stability.[13]

Iraq War, 2003-present:

  • The first Stryker brigades were deployed to Iraq in October 2003. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division from Fort Lewis was the first to field and deploy the Stryker vehicle to combat in Iraq from Nov 2003 to Nov 2004.
  • 3rd Brigade was relieved by 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division (SBCT). 1st Brigade served in Iraq from October 2004 to October 2005. Units from this Brigade participated in the Battle of Mosul (2004) and were responsible for the first successful elections in January 2005. The Brigade was awarded the Valorous Unit Award for their tour in Iraq.
  • The 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team from Fairbanks, Alaska's Fort Wainwright began its initial deployment in August 2005 to Summer 2006. Their stay was subsequently extended for up to four months and they were reassigned to Baghdad. The Brigade was awarded the Valorous Unit Award for their tour in Iraq.
  • The 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division re-deployed to Iraq late Spring of 2006 and returned home in September 2007. Like its sister brigades it too was awarded the Valorous Unit Award for operations in Baqubah, Iraq.
  • The 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division is stationed in Vilseck, Germany, after reflagging to the U.S. 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, to have a European presence and be able to deploy quickly to that part of the world. In this process, the existing 2nd Cavalry Regiment was reflagged to 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. The 172nd SBCT has returned from Iraq, and has been reflagged as the 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division.
  • In May 2007, the 4th Brigade 2nd Infantry Division deployed as part of the "surge" in Iraq. This deployment marked the first time the Stryker Mobile Gun System was deployed in Iraq. Also, the 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment (MANCHU), deployed Land Warrior for the first time in combat.
  • In August 2007 the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment deployed to Baghdad for a 15-month tour, relieving 3rd BDE, 2ID.
  • In December 2007 the 2nd Brigade 25th Infantry division deployed to Iraq.

The Stryker chassis' modular design supports a wide range of variants. The main chassis is the Infantry Carrier Vehicle (ICV). Additionally, there is the Mobile Gun System (MGS), a heavier chassis to support a variant of the 105 mm M68A1 rifled cannon (M68A1E4), a lightweight version of the gun system used on the original M1 Abrams main battle tanks and the M60 Patton main battle tank. The M68A1E4 also features a muzzle brake to assist with recoil and an autoloader, a rare feature on US tank guns.

M1134 Anti-Tank Guided Missile (ATGM) Variant equipped with a TOW missile and M240B machine gun.
M1134 Anti-Tank Guided Missile (ATGM) Variant equipped with a TOW missile and M240B machine gun.

The Stryker has the following configurations with more planned:

M1126 APC variant equipped with the PROTECTOR M151 with MK19 automatic grenade launcher and anti-HEAT slat armor
M1126 APC variant equipped with the PROTECTOR M151 with MK19 automatic grenade launcher and anti-HEAT slat armor
M1134 Stryker ATGM carrier
M1134 Stryker ATGM carrier

The Stryker family of vehicles fill a role in the United States Army that is neither heavy nor light, but rather an attempt to create a force that can move infantry to the battlefield quickly and in relative security. Brigades that have been converted to Strykers have been light, or, in the case of the 2nd Cavalry Regiment, unarmored HMMWV-based cavalry scouts. For these units, the addition of Strykers has increased combat power by providing armor protection, a vehicle-borne weapon system to support each dismounted squad (a PROTECTOR M151 Remote Weapon Station with .50-cal or Mk-19), and the speed and range to conduct missions far from the operating base.

Stryker units seem to be especially effective in urban areas, where vehicles can establish initial security positions near a building and dismount squads on a doorstep.[20]

Similar to a UH-60 Black Hawk, the Stryker relies on its speed for the majority of its defense against heavy weapon systems. It is not capable of engaging heavily armored units and relies on other units to control threats outside of its classification.

However, at the National Training Center (Fort Irwin California) 3rd Brigade 2nd ID proved that through the use of unconventional tactics and small dismounted teams armed with anti-armor weaponry, a Stryker unit could hold its own against a conventional armored unit should the need arise. This situation is something that commanders would most likely avoid due to a higher casualty rate.

Brigades equipped with the Stryker are intended to be strategically mobile (i.e. capable of being rapidly deployed over long distances). As such the Stryker was intentionally designed with a lower level of protection compared to tracked vehicles like the M2 Bradley, but with much lower logistic requirements.

A Stryker vehicle with it's wheels on fire in Iraq.
A Stryker vehicle with it's wheels on fire in Iraq.
A Stryker vehicle stuck in the mud in a combat zone.
A Stryker vehicle stuck in the mud in a combat zone.

The Stryker had come under intense scrutiny since its introduction in the US Army. A report written by Victor O'reilly and submitted to New Jersey Republican Representative Jim Saxton initially blasted various points concerning the vehicle, only to have soldiers in the field seemingly exonerate its performance in a report by the US Army. Some criticism of the Stryker continues a decades-long ongoing debate issues concerning whether tracked or wheeled vehicles are more effective. Other criticism is specific to the Stryker, with complaints concerning various Stryker features.[21]

Much of the controversy centers around the Stryker's not being an Infantry fighting vehicle (IFV) in the mode of the M2 Bradley. The Stryker lacks heavy armor protection and its wheels provide less off-road mobility than tracks. The U.S. Army argues that the comparison with IFVs is inappropriate, since Strykers have been primarily deployed in foot infantry units which had previously relied on unarmored trucks and Humvees for mobility. Proponents of this view argue that Strykers are an enhancement to the protection of unarmored formations.[citation needed]

Other criticism arises from comparison to the proven, lighter and less expensive M113 Armored Personnel Carriers, and the M8 Armored Gun System. The Government Accountability Office reviewed the original purchase decision and found no reason to go against the US Army’s choice of the Stryker.[22] After the Stryker ICV was fielded, Congress ordered the GAO to perform tests to compare an M113A3 to a M1126 Stryker ICV. While they found both vehicles were adequate, the Stryker was found to be a superior infantry carrier.[23]

Documented testimony of the officers and men using the Stryker have been supportive of the vehicle and its protection. The level of protection provided is superior to up armored Humvees.[24]

Weight creep and heavy-lift transport also come up as issues. The ability of the Stryker to be air transportable by C-130 transport aircraft is one of the problems cited.[citation needed]

Rollover is a greater risk with the Stryker relative to other transport vehicles, due to the Stryker's higher center of gravity. The high center of gravity was a deliberate design choice as an anti-mine/IED measure. This issue is aggravated on the Canadian LAV III due to its turret. In the book My War, Colby Buzzell states that the first three fatalities of his Stryker brigade on its deployment to Iraq were from a rollover incident where a Stryker rolled over into a ditch of water. This was the only mention of a Stryker rollover in the book.[25] However, the book fails to mention the roll over was due to an eroded trail that gave way under the combined weight of two Strykers on the night of December 8, 2003 in Al Daluyia, Iraq.[citation needed] The pair of vehicles rolled into the adjacent body of water around 2200 hours. Inside the inverted Strykers, eighteen men struggled to survive in the frigid neck deep water before being rescued by their fellow soldiers. The vehicles were later refitted and soon patrolled the streets of Mosul, Iraq in early 2004.[citation needed]

Reports from military personnel and analysts indicate the Stryker is superior to other military vehicles (including Abrams tanks, Bradley IFV's and Humvees) regarding survivability against IEDs (improvised explosive devices).[26][27] One colonel said that the Strykers saved the lives of at least a hundred soldiers deployed in northern Iraq.[28]

Soldiers and officers who use Strykers defend them as very effective vehicles; an article in the Washington Post states:

"But in more than a dozen interviews, commanders, soldiers and mechanics who use the Stryker fleet daily in one of Iraq's most dangerous areas unanimously praised the vehicle. The defects outlined in the report were either wrong or relatively minor and did little to hamper the Stryker's effectiveness, they said." [29]

  1. ^ a b "Army Fact File - Stryker". Retrieved on 2008-04-16.
  2. ^ a b c Stryker Armored Vehicle
  3. ^ Stryker Armored Personnel Carrier
  4. ^ Stryker gets new armor, decreases in weight
  5. ^ Slat Armour for Stryker
  6. ^ "Stryker airdrop test". Retrieved on 2008-07-12.
  7. ^ Jeffrey St. Clair: the General, GM and the Stryker
  8. ^ "GAO Compares Stryker to M113A3". Retrieved on 2008-07-13.
  9. ^ http://www.defense-update.com/newscast/0508/news/news1505_stryker.htm
  10. ^ "Army Announces Name For Interim Armored Vehicle", U.S. Army. Accessed August 15, 2007.
  11. ^ "General Dynamics Delivers First Production Stryker MGS Vehicles". Retrieved on 2008-07-13.
  12. ^ Vetronics Technology Integration (VTI)
  13. ^ http://www.millenworks.com/html/aboutus/news/Stryker_Test.pdf
  14. ^ Stryker Self Propelled (SP) 105mm Indirect Fire, GlobalSecurity.org.
  15. ^ Jane's International Defence Review, June 2006, p.64-5
  16. ^ a b Fort Lewis Website; http://www.lewis.army.mil/52sbct/
  17. ^ A Soldier's Guide to Army Transformation - Building a Direct Fire Unit - http://www.army.forces.gc.ca/lf/English/5_4_1_4.asp
  18. ^ CBC News In Depth, Equipment: Mobile Gun System vs. Leopard tank, Oct 30 2003, http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/cdnmilitary/equipment.html
  19. ^ Army might buy surplus tanks from Germans, Swiss. CTV News, Oct 31 2006 http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20061031/canada_tanks_061031/20061031?hub=Canada
  20. ^ Army of Dude: Three Sixty Five
  21. ^ http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/docs/2wheels98.pdf
  22. ^ "GAO Denies protest in choosing the Stryker over the M113 and M8". Retrieved on 2008-07-13.
  23. ^ "GAO Compares Stryker to M113A3". Retrieved on 2008-07-13.
  24. ^ Canadian American Strategic Review. "Reviewing the LAV III – Rollovers and Suicide Bombers". LAV III. Retrieved on 2006-05-14 =.
  25. ^ Buzzell, Colby. My War: Killing Time in Iraq, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2005. ISBN 0399153276.
  26. ^ Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) in Iraq and Afghanistan: Effects and Countermeasures, Congressional Research Service, Sept. 25 2006.
  27. ^ Stryker increases troops’ survivability, U.S. Army 40th Public Affairs Detachment, Jan. 3 2007.
  28. ^ Soldiers Defend Faulted Strykers, Washington Post
  29. ^ Soldiers Defend Faulted Strykers by Steve Fainaru, Washington Post Foreign Service Sunday, April 3, 2005; Page A21.

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