George Wallace
Army.ca Dinosaur
- Reaction score
- 170
- Points
- 710
daftandbarmy said:You clearly haven't seen the size of some of our Bde staff, have you?
Does this mean that all the trucks come with Hydraulic Lifts?
daftandbarmy said:You clearly haven't seen the size of some of our Bde staff, have you?
Mountie said:According to the manufacturer's website, the Kerax has a 17-23 tonne payload capacity. Is this not more like a HLVW replacement than an MLVW replacement?
I would have thought something like the Zetros 4x4 (5-tonne) and 6x6 (10-tonne) vehicles would have been suitable as a MLVW replacement with the Actos or Kerax in the 15+ tonne range replacing the HLVW.
Underway said:Agreed. If there's going to be 2800 of these guys then there should be no major issues. It's the one offs and small mixed equipments that are a pain.
Old EO Tech said:At a fleet level yes this is true, but at the tactical level, it would be much better to have an entire fleet based off one OEM, with common parts across light, medium and heavy trucks. As it is right now, I at 1VP have 7 Seacans of parts to support 15 days for a mobile mech inf Bn. If I can reduce that by even 33% due to common parts, that is two less seacans I have to move on low beds or PLS forward. And likely 5000 line items gone. Repeat this across all first line units....it is not insignificant...
The MLVW or Medium Logistics Vehicle Wheeled is in service with Canadian armed forces. It is based on the obsolete US M35 cargo truck design, dated back to 1950s, however Canadian version includes many modifications. The MLVW entered service in 1982. Over 2 700 of these trucks had been license-produced by Bombardier.
Old EO Tech said:At a fleet level yes this is true, but at the tactical level, it would be much better to have an entire fleet based off one OEM, with common parts across light, medium and heavy trucks. As it is right now, I at 1VP have 7 Seacans of parts to support 15 days for a mobile mech inf Bn. If I can reduce that by even 33% due to common parts, that is two less seacans I have to move on low beds or PLS forward. And likely 5000 line items gone. Repeat this across all first line units....it is not insignificant...
cupper said:Not to mention it makes it more difficult to scavenge parts from other disabled vehicles when you have several different vehicle platforms.
George Wallace said:Not many parts on an AFV that will be useful to a B Veh.
cupper said:True, but that's not the point, is it.
George Wallace said:Point is: Cbt Arms units don't need to carry enough spare parts to fix every conceivable problem. That is what Svc Bn is for.
cupper said:Right. I got that. But only you combat arms guys would try to take parts off an MLVW in hopes of repairing your Leo.
recceguy said:.........and with gun tape and WD40 we have the ingenuity to make it happen
Ludoc said:1500 MSVS SMP + 1300 MSVS MilCOTS = 2800 trucks.
That is slightly more than the size of the MLVW fleet. (The .pdf said we had 2760 MLs)
Plus, the new trucks have a greater payload and may have a larger bed. So we will have more trucks that can each carry more.
George Wallace said:Tactical vehicles are one thing. Support vehicles are another. F Ech of a Cbt Arms unit would have no issues here. A and B Ech of a Cbt Arms unit would only need to have the minimum of parts to provide support, then everything else should be passed to the Rear and 2nd Line Repairs/Recovery. Sounds almost like you are carrying everything that 3rd Line would carry, which is not necessary.
Old EO Tech said:Not at all, like I indicated I am carrying 15 days of 1st line parts for 200 A and B vehicles, exactly as I am suppose to by doctrine. The fact that it takes 7 seacans is because of the amount of different platforms I have to support... There is a CFTO called a Permissive Repair Schedule that actually tells us what is a first and second line repair, and by extension what parts are held by a SPSS as apposed to RPPL and EMAS at a service battalion.