U.S. Army to integrate drones with Assault Breacher Vehicles

The U.S. Army is seeking to integrated tactical unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) with its heavy armored obstacle breaching system, called the Assault Breacher Vehicle.

The Army Contracting Command plans to integrate small tactical UAS with the heavy armored mine- and explosives-clearing vehicle, based on the M1 Abrams-chassis, to increase its battlefield survivability and combat effectiveness.

On Aug. 26, the service made public its update draft request in support of obtaining Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) to be embedded with the Assault Breacher Vehicle (ABV) platform through a notice posted on the U.S. government’s main contracting website.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

“The primary objective of the UAS will be to carry a smart radio to retransmit a Radio Frequency/Signal and to provide additional situational awareness (vision) to troops that would be operating from a concealed and covered location,” the notice reads.

The ABV is a heavy engineering vehicle in U.S. Army and Marine Corps services.

With increased capabilities and efficiency, the ABV greatly reduces the clearing time from hours to minutes. This allows assets in the rear to advance forward faster to provide additional support or aid as needed.

It consists of an M1A1 Abrams tank hull; a unique turret with two Linear Demolition Charge Systems (employing two Mine Clearing Line Charges (MICLIC) and rockets); a Lane Marking System (LMS); Integrated Vision System; and a High Lift Adapter that interchangeably mounts a Full Width Mine Plow (FWMP) or a Combat Dozer Blade.

ABV, which requires a crew of two Soldiers, improves the mobility and survivability of combat engineers while having the speed and ability to keep pace with the maneuver force. It creates a tank-width cleared lane through a minefield by launching and detonating one of its MICLIC systems across the minefield, then proofing the lane with its FWMP while marking the cleared lane with its LMS.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor
  • In this story
  • USA

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Echodyne plans to mass produce radars for the drone war

Echodyne's counter-drone radar has become one of the most widely deployed sensors on modern battlefields, showing up on test ranges in the United States,...

Elite US, French forces train together near Chinese base

Elite American and French forces spent a week in the desert heat of East Africa calling in live airstrikes together, sharpening the exact skill...

U.S. Air Force weighs a pilotless successor to the C-5 and C-17

The U.S. Air Force is asking aircraft makers a question that would have sounded like science fiction a decade ago: could the giant cargo...

Pentagon seeks a single brain for Guam’s scattered defenses

An American island sits closer to Beijing than it does to Hawaii, hosts thousands of U.S. troops, and the Pentagon has opened bidding for...

U.S. Army orders new barge in $24M deal

A Louisiana shipyard has won its latest chunk of a quiet, decades-long business relationship that keeps America's rivers, locks, and harbors running, one unglamorous...