Ground Mobility Vehicle

The Ground Mobility Vehicle (GMV) is a special operations version of the Humvee used by the United States Armed Forces.[1] Its design is mostly based on lessons learned during Operation Desert Storm.[2] The GMV will be replaced by the General Dynamics Flyer.

Design

Improvements over the Humvee include

Features

The GMV has a cruising range of 275 miles for operations behind enemy lines with only occasional resupply. GMVs feature an open rear, where an enclosed cabin would normally be. This flat bed area is used to store all the fuel, ammunition, rations and other supplies that the mission requires.

Armament

Variants

Early models were based on the M1025 Humvee chassis. Later models of GMVs included versions based on the M1113 chassis. Another model based on the M1165 HMMWV can be fitted with armor kits to create an 'up-armored' GMV with additional armor plating and an optional ballistic shield around the top gunner's turret.

GMV 1.1

In June 2012, the United States Special Operations Command requested proposals for a GMV version 1.1. Unlike converted Humvees, the vehicle needed to be light, fast, easily transportable by air, sea, and land, with next generation communications and computing equipment. The vehicle was expected to be selected by the end of the year with production beginning in 2013. 1,300 of the new vhicles are to be in service by 2020.[3][4] Vehicles entered were the Northrop Grumman Medium Assault Vehicle – Light (MAV-L), AM General's reengineered GMV design, HDT Global's Storm SRTV, the Oshkosh Special Purpose All-Terrain Vehicle (S-ATV), the Navistar Special Operations Tactical Vehicle (SOTV), and General Dynamics Flyer.[5] The winner was expected to be selected in May 2013.[6] The decision for the winner was delayed until August 2013 to work through processes in dealing with vendors. The remaining contenders included the AM General upgraded GMV, the General Dynamics Flyer, and the Navistar SOTV.[7] On 22 August 2013, General Dynamics was selected as the winner of the contract, potentially valued at $562 million. The vehicle will replace 1,092 GMVs, with funds to buy the first 101 in FY 2014 at $245,000 per vehicle.[8][9][10]

In September 2013, AM General and Navistar filed protests over the decision to award the contract to General Dynamics.[11] On December 19, 2013, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) denied Navistar and AM General's protests. On January 7, 2014, AM General sued the U.S. Special Operations Command in the Court of Federal Claims. The complaint from the case was sealed, with AM General indicating the suit contained "secret, source selection sensitive, confidential or other proprietary information" covered by a protective order issued by the GAO, with a proposed redacted version of the complaint for public release yet to be approved by the court.[12] On 7 April 2014, the US Federal Claims Court rejected AM General's lawsuit, allowing General Dynamics to resume work and continue with the contract.[13]

References

External links

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