Desert Patrol Vehicle
Desert Patrol Vehicle | |
---|---|
United States Navy SEALs operate Desert Patrol Vehicles (DPV) while preparing for an upcoming mission. U.S. Navy photo. | |
Type | Light attack vehicle |
Place of origin | United States |
Service history | |
In service | 1991 – present |
Wars | Gulf War |
Production history | |
Manufacturer | Chenowth Racing Products, Inc. |
Produced | 1991 – |
Specifications | |
| |
Engine |
2.0 litres (0.53 US gallons) air-cooled 200 horsepower (150 kW) |
Payload capacity | 1,500 pounds (680 kg)[1] |
Operational range | 200 miles (320 km) |
Speed | 60 miles per hour (97 km/h)[1] |
The Desert Patrol Vehicle (DPV), formerly called the Fast Attack Vehicle (FAV), is a high-speed, lightly armored sandrail-like vehicle first used in combat during the Gulf War in 1991.[2] Due to their dash speed and off-road mobility, the DPVs were used extensively during Operation Desert Storm. The first U.S. forces to enter Kuwait City were United States Navy SEALs in DPVs.
Performance
The DPV was built by Chenowth Racing Products, Inc.[1] The German Volkswagen Kübelwagen was the first military Light Utility Vehicle based on the Volkswagen Beetle which uses rear-wheel rather than four-wheel drive for mobility. Volkswagen components were also the basis for the postwar dune buggy, and its layout is used in the DPV with rear-mounted air-cooled 200 hp (150 kW) Volkswagen engine. This makes the lightweight vehicle capable of accelerating from 0 to 30 mph (0–50 km/h) in only four seconds and able to travel at speeds of up to 80 mph (130 km/h).[2] With its standard 21 gallon (79.5 litre) fuel tank, the DPV has a range of about 210 miles (338 km). An optional fuel bladder can extend the range to over 1,000 miles (1,610 km). Payload capacity is 1500 lb (680 kg).
History
The DPV is a variant of the Fast Attack Vehicle, which was developed during the 1980s as part of the United States Army's High Technology Light Division (9th Infantry Division). The HTLD was given carte blanche to develop doctrine, decide force structure, and design equipment by then Army Chief of Staff Edward C. Meyer. One of the pieces of equipment created was the Fast Attack Vehicle. Chenowth delivered 120 FAVs to the Army in 1982. HTTB (High Technology Test Bed) in the units in the 9th Infantry were first to deploy these vehicles. Along with light off-road motorcycles, the FAV was intended to provide a highly mobile component to the mostly foot infantry unit.
Eventually, the FAVs were replaced by Humvees in general military use, which did not provide nearly the speed nor extreme off-road capabilities of the FAVs. FAVs were transferred to special forces use where it has been largely replaced by the Light Strike Vehicle.
Armament
The original tests used commercial dune buggies modified to carry weapons such as TOW missiles and recoilless rifles. The recoilless rifles still had enough recoil to flip the lightweight dune buggies and were abandoned. The TOW missiles had much greater success, but they violated existing Army TOW doctrine. The Army had determined that a TOW needed a 3-man team to operate it. The DPVs could only carry a two-man crew and they seemed perfectly capable of operating the TOW, but this would have meant revising Army doctrine and possibly changing TOW deployment throughout the Army. Fort Benning decided to offer a "superior" DPV design that allowed a third crewman. This design was rejected by the HTLD team and was never produced.
The basic weapons on a DPV consist of a heavy .50 caliber M2 Browning machine gun, two lighter 7.62×51mm M60 machine guns, and two M136 AT4 anti-armor weapons. In some cases, the driver's M60 or the gunner's M2 is replaced with a 40 mm Mk 19 grenade launcher. Other light machine guns such as the M240 machine gun or 5.56×45mm M249 SAW can also be mounted.
Similar US equipment
The United States Marines Corps also fielded a Fast Attack Vehicle – a completely different piece of equipment based on the venerable M151 1/4-ton. This FAV stayed in use long after the fielding of the HMMWV because it could fit on Marine Corps helicopters while the wider HMMWV could not. In 1999, this FAV began to be replaced with the Interim Fast Attack Vehicle (IFAV) a version of the Mercedes-Benz MB 290 GD 1.5 ton truck.
In fiction
The DPV has appeared in many video games and movies.
- The DPV is the primary American attack vehicle in the 1986 Chuck Norris film Delta Force. They are armed with .50 Cal machine guns.
- The DPV was also seen in Three Kings. It is referred to as a Chenowth. It is the vehicle used by PV2 Walter Wogaman, to ferry around, and is later stolen by Adriana Cruz.
- Two DPVs were used by the Sector 7 team to transport the Allspark in the live-action film Transformers (2007). Accordingly, the toy line released alongside the movie used the DPV as the basis for the Autobot Landmine. It is implied on the toy's packaging that the Allspark granted the vehicle a Spark off-camera.
- The DPV appears in Battlefield 2 for the United States Marine Corps and the European Union. It later makes a reappearance in Battlefield 3's Back to Karkand and Battlefield 4's Second Assault expansion packs.
- The DPV, referred to by its original title of Fast Attack Vehicle or FAV, appears in the 1994 film In the Army Now, in which a group of wayward water supply troops led by Pauley Shore use them to conduct a raid upon a Libyan SCUD missile base.
- The DPV is used as the Brotherhood of Nod's primary fast attack, anti-infantry, and scouting vehicle in Command and Conquer: Tiberian Dawn. It is armed with an M60 machine gun in gameplay, though it appears to mount an M134 Minigun in renders and cutscenes.
- The DPV appears in Half-Life 2 as a drivable vehicle made of scrap. It's referred to as the Scout Car in-game and has a mounted energy weapon. Strangely, its engine sounds are taken from a tuned 1968 Chevrolet Camaro, even though the real DPV uses a Beetle engine.
See also
- Light Strike Vehicle
- Chenowth Advanced Light Strike Vehicle
- Long Range Desert Group
- ULTRA AP
- Willys FAMAE Corvo
- FMC XR311
- Saker LSV
Notes and references
- 1 2 3 "Desert Patrol Vehicle". Retrieved 2010-11-28.
- 1 2 "Desert Patrol Vehicle – Speed In The Desert". Retrieved 2010-11-28.