Despite the pickup
truck and cow catcher styling, the prototype of the military's new Joint Light
Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) from Oshkosh Truck and Northrop
Grumman promises better maneuverability, survivability, and
payload capacity over the HMMWV it's designed to replace.
The U.S. Army and Marine Corps want something that comes
armor-equipped, fuel-efficient, and air-droppable. It also wants
a vehicle that can run on two flats and endure sustained
small-arms fire. But most of all, performance must "exceed" that
of the HMMWV, better known as the Humvee--which means it has to
be more mine-resistant and ambush-proof than the flimsy Hummers plying the roads of Iraq
today.
However, the
Defense Department's decision to buy 6,800 mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles
(MRAPs) as "interim" replacements to armored
Humvees may mean that troops won't see the new JLTV until 2012,
according to National Defense.
At least 18 other
manufacturers are contributing elements or developing prototypes to
compete for the next-generation of lightweight vehicles that will
replace the Humvee, including General Tactical Vehicles, Hadas, Intermap Technologies, Lockheed Martin, Magna Powertrain, Mistral,
ODF Optronics, Precision Remotes, Remote Reality, Reynolds
Fasteners, Robertson Aviation, Rockwell Collins, Tai, Tesla
Industries, and VSE, according to Defense News.
The companies
agreed that if they are selected for the JLTV program, Northrop Grumman's Mission Systems
sector will be the primary contractor and systems integrator,
while Oshkosh Truck's Defense Group will be responsible for
designing, engineering, and manufacturing the vehicle, according
to a joint statement.