Canada's equipment in Afghanistan
Last Updated: Thursday, July 9, 2009 | 4:36 PM ET CBC News
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Canadian forces working with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan are using a number of different vehicles and pieces of equipment to carry out their duties. Here is what's being used:
Leopard 2A6M
The first Canadian Leopard 2 tanks, leased from Germany, arrived in Afghanistan in 2007 as replacements for the aging Leopard 1 tanks. The tanks have stronger armour, superior firing capabilities and go twice as fast as the older generation tanks they replaced.
The hardy tanks are designed for minimum maintenance. It's possible to completely replace the engine and transmission in 30 minutes in the field.
Variants:
Armoured Repair and Recovery Vehicle — Bueffel (Buffalo).
Armoured Engineer Vehicle — Kodiak.
Armoured Bridge Layer — Biber (Beaver).
Armament:
120-mm L55 smooth bore gun (34 rounds).
1 x 7.62-mm co-axially mounted machine-gun (4500 rounds).
1 x 7.62-mm anti-aircraft machine-gun.
76-mm grenade launchers (2 clusters of 8 launchers).
Specifications:
Length: 11.0 m (gun facing forward).
Weight: 63.5 tonnes.
Engine: Multi-fuel engine, 12 cylinders, 1,500 hp.
Speed: 72 km/h.
"G-Wagon" (Gelaendenwagen)
(Photo Courtesy of DND) In 2005, the Canadian Forces took delivery of the first new Gelaendenwagen vehicles, "G-Wagon" for short, produced by Mercedes Benz in Graz, Austria. The G-Wagon will be used as a tactical transport vehicle for regular and reserve units in field operations and training.
It has specially designed armour to provide protection against small arms, hand grenades and anti-personnel mines. The Canadian Forces say the armour kits are based on a modular approach, so that vehicle parts such as the doors and front windshield can be removed and replaced by armoured modules. Additional armour protects the floor, roof and rear wall of the crew area.
Variants:
More on link
Last Updated: Thursday, July 9, 2009 | 4:36 PM ET CBC News
Article Link
Canadian forces working with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan are using a number of different vehicles and pieces of equipment to carry out their duties. Here is what's being used:
Leopard 2A6M
The first Canadian Leopard 2 tanks, leased from Germany, arrived in Afghanistan in 2007 as replacements for the aging Leopard 1 tanks. The tanks have stronger armour, superior firing capabilities and go twice as fast as the older generation tanks they replaced.
The hardy tanks are designed for minimum maintenance. It's possible to completely replace the engine and transmission in 30 minutes in the field.
Variants:
Armoured Repair and Recovery Vehicle — Bueffel (Buffalo).
Armoured Engineer Vehicle — Kodiak.
Armoured Bridge Layer — Biber (Beaver).
Armament:
120-mm L55 smooth bore gun (34 rounds).
1 x 7.62-mm co-axially mounted machine-gun (4500 rounds).
1 x 7.62-mm anti-aircraft machine-gun.
76-mm grenade launchers (2 clusters of 8 launchers).
Specifications:
Length: 11.0 m (gun facing forward).
Weight: 63.5 tonnes.
Engine: Multi-fuel engine, 12 cylinders, 1,500 hp.
Speed: 72 km/h.
"G-Wagon" (Gelaendenwagen)
(Photo Courtesy of DND) In 2005, the Canadian Forces took delivery of the first new Gelaendenwagen vehicles, "G-Wagon" for short, produced by Mercedes Benz in Graz, Austria. The G-Wagon will be used as a tactical transport vehicle for regular and reserve units in field operations and training.
It has specially designed armour to provide protection against small arms, hand grenades and anti-personnel mines. The Canadian Forces say the armour kits are based on a modular approach, so that vehicle parts such as the doors and front windshield can be removed and replaced by armoured modules. Additional armour protects the floor, roof and rear wall of the crew area.
Variants:
More on link