Véhicule Blindé Léger

VBL

VBL of the 1st Parachute Hussar Regiment in Afghanistan.
Type Wheeled all-terrain vehicle
Place of origin  France
Specifications
Weight 3.5 to 4 tonnes
Length 3.80 m (4.00 m long version)
Width 2.02 m
Height 1.70 m
Crew 2-3

Armour STANAG level 1 (protection against 7.62×51 NATO rounds and shrapnel)
Main
armament
depends on the version
Secondary
armament
none
Engine Peugeot XD3T turbo-diesel
95 hp (70 kW)
Power/weight 27–23.75 hp/t
Suspension 0.35 m ground clearance
Operational
range
600 km (can be extended to 1000 km with external gas tanks)
Speed 95 km/h

The Panhard Véhicule Blindé Léger ("Light armoured vehicle") is a wheeled 4x4 all-terrain vehicle offered in various configurations. It was designed to combine the agility of the Peugeot VLTT liaison vehicle with adequate protection against small arms fire, artillery fragments, mines and NBC weapons. The VBL is fully amphibious and can swim at 5.4 km/h; it is also air transportable by C-130, C-160 and A400M.

The VBL was developed during the 1980s and entered operational service in France in 1990. It has a fuel consumption of 16 litres per 100 km.

Contents

Combat experience

The VBL has been used in many peacekeeping operations, notably in Bosnia, Somalia and Kosovo.

Due to the contribution of the French Army to the Blue Helmets in Yugoslavia, the VBL was one of the ubiquitous sights in the Siege of Sarajevo, earning it the nickname of "Sarajevo Taxi".

Variants

French versions

Export versions

Note that the reconnaissance version is equipped with TR-VP 213 or PR4G radio, OB 41 and OB 43 night vision goggles and DUK-DUR 440 radiation meter and a dosimeter.

Operators

1,621 VBLs currently in use.
64
30
7
12
243
Georgian HQ units who are part of the ISAF are using the VBL and VAB in the Kabul area.
The Indonesian Army operates 18 VBLs.
20, Used by Kuwait Police.
40 in service. the first country to buy this model.
7.
IISS Military Balance 2007 estimates Nigeria has 72 VBLs (reported).
132.
37.
16.
16.
2 used by the PTJ (ex-UN vehicle believed to have been captured by Bosnian Serb forces in Bosnia and later transferred to Serbia).
2.

See also

External links