Fox armoured reconnaissance vehicle

This article is about the post-war British vehicle. For the World War II Canadian vehicle, see Fox Armoured Car. For the German/American NBC reconnaissance vehicle see M93 Fox
FV721 Fox

FV721 Fox in Ursel, Belgium
Type Armoured car
Place of origin  United Kingdom
Specifications
Weight 6.75 tonnes (7.44 short tons; 6.64 long tons)
Length 5.08 m (16 ft 8 in)
Width 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in)
Height 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in)
Crew 3

Armor Aluminium
Main
armament
30 mm L21 RARDEN cannon
Secondary
armament
Co-axial 7.62 mm L37A2 machine gun
Engine Jaguar J.60 No 1 Mk 100B Petrol
190 hp (142 kW)
Power/weight 28.1 hp/tonne
Suspension Wheel
Operational
range
434 km (269.675 mi)
Speed 104 km/h (64.6 mph)

The FV721 Fox Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Wheeled) (CVR(W)) was a 4x4 armoured car deployed by the British Army as a replacement for the Ferret scout car and the Saladin Armoured Car. The Fox was introduced into service in May 1973 and withdrawn in 1993/4.

Contents

Description

It had a crew of three and had a low profile rotating turret armed with a 30 mm L21 RARDEN cannon which was manually fed with 3 round clips; 99 rounds were carried. A coaxial L37A2 7.62 mm machine gun was mounted with 2,600 rounds. The weapons were not stabilised. This turret was also equipped with a set of 2 4-barrelled smoke dischargers. The vehicle had a combat weight of 6.75 tonnes and was designed to be air-portable.[1] The Fox had aluminium armour and was fitted with a flotation screen. It lacked protection against nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. Powered by a Jaguar 4.2 litre 6 cylinder petrol engine, the Fox was one of the fastest vehicles of its type.

The Fox was typically attached to armoured and mechanized infantry battalions. The Fox's all-welded aluminum armour hull and turret protected against medium and heavy machine gun fire and artillery splinters. The driver viewed through a integral periscope/hatch cover that lifts open while the turret holds the commander with gunner to his right and loader to his left. - Without preparation, the Fox can ford one metre of water and a flotation screen can be erected in two minutes. - Air portable, three Foxes can be carried by one C-130 Hercules aircraft,[1] two of which can be parachute dropped.

Variants

Operators

References

Sources

External links