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Wikipedia

Joint Light Tactical Vehicle

The Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) is a U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps and Special Operations Command program to partially replace the Humvee fleet[5] with a family of more survivable vehicles having a greater payload. Early studies for the JLTV program were approved in 2006. The JLTV program incorporates lessons learned from the earlier Future Tactical Truck Systems program and other associated efforts.[6]

Joint Light Tactical Vehicle
A production standard JLTV, the Oshkosh L-ATV, in USMC M1280 General Purpose (GP) configuration, fitted with deep fording kit, and tire chains
TypeLight tactical vehicle
Place of originUnited States
Production history
DesignerOshkosh Corporation
Designed2005–2015
ManufacturerOshkosh Defense
Unit costUS$344,000 in 2017, Average Procurement Unit Cost (APUC) in FY 2015 $[1]
Produced2016 (Low Rate Initial Production, LRIP); full rate production approved June 2019.[2]
No. builtover 18,500[3]
VariantsM1278, M1279, M1280, M1281, plus a companion trailer, JLTV-T
Specifications
Mass11.32 short tons (10.27 t) GVW
Length20 ft 4 in (6.2 m)
Width8 ft 2 in (2.5 m)
Height8 ft 6 in (2.6 m)
Crew1 + 3 in individual seats + optional gunner (I + 1; M1279 Utility)

ArmorClassified (A-kit/B-kit configuration)
Main
armament
Various light and medium caliber weapons, plus AGLs or ATGWs as required
EngineGale Banks Engineering 866T, 6.6-liter diesel (based on GM Duramax architecture)[4]
TransmissionAllison 2500SP six-speed automatic
SuspensionOshkosh TAK-4i independent suspension
Operational
range
300 miles
Maximum speed Forward: 70 mph (110 km/h)
Reverse: 8 mph (13 km/h)
Steering
system
Power-assisted, front axle

The JLTV program has evolved considerably throughout various development phases and milestones including required numbers and pricing. Variants are capable of performing armament carrier, utility, command and control (shelter), ambulance, reconnaissance and a variety of other tactical and logistic support roles. JLTV follows the U.S. Army's Long Term Armor Strategy with kits for two levels of armor protection. Oshkosh's L-ATV was selected as the winner of the JLTV program in August 2015 and awarded an initial production contract for up to 16,901 JLTVs. The U.S. Army approved the JLTV for full-rate production in June 2019.

Development

The High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV), which first entered service in 1985, was developed during the Cold War when improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and asymmetric warfare were not a major factor for military planners. The HMMWVs demonstrated vulnerability to IEDs, and the difficulties and costs experienced in satisfactorily up-armoring HMMWVs led to the development of a family of more survivable vehicles with greater payload and mobility. JLTV was originally reported as a one-for-one HMMWV replacement; however, U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) officials now emphasize that JLTVs are not intended to replace all HMMWVs.[7]

The JLTV publicly emerged in 2006. Early government documents note: "In response to an operational need and an aging fleet of light tactical wheeled vehicles, the joint services have developed a requirement for a new tactical wheeled vehicle platform that will provide increased force protection, survivability, and improved capacity over the current [Up-armored Humvee] while balancing mobility and transportability requirements with total ownership costs." The joint service nature of the effort was assured through Congressional language in the Fiscal Year 2006 (FY06) Authorization Act, which mandated that any future tactical wheeled vehicle program would be a joint program.[6]

The Joint Chief of Staff's Joint Requirements Oversight Council approved the JLTV program in November 2006; this began a 13-month Concept Refinement phase which is a pre-systems acquisition process designed to further develop the initial concepts resident in the Initial Capabilities Document. The Concept Refinement phase also includes an Analysis of Alternatives. At the conclusion of the Concept Refinement phase in December 2007, the Joint Program Office JLTV project manager intended to transition the program directly into the engineering, manufacturing, and development phase. However, as milestone approached, it became clear that the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment John Young would not support the JLTV program entering into the acquisition process at that time. He denied the request and instructed the Army and the Marine Corps to develop a more vigorous Technology Development (TD) phase.[6]

The DoD released a Request for Proposal (RFP) for the TD phase of the JLTV program on 5 February 2008. Industry proposals were due 7 April. TD phase contract award was postponed in July 2008.[6] The following companies and partnerships responded to the TD phase RFP:

 
BAE Systems Valanx JLTV in 2012. BAE's Valanx would not progress to EMD phase.
 
General Tactical Vehicles JLTV during field trials in 2010. This design would not progress to EMD phase.
 
Lockheed Martin JLTV variants in 2012. Lockheed Martin's vehicle would progress to EMD phase and be selected to progress to prototype stage.
 
AM General BRV-O JLTV on static display. The BRV-O would progress to EMD phase and be selected to progress to prototype stage.

On 28 October 2008, the Pentagon narrowed the field of vendors to Lockheed Martin, General Tactical Vehicles and BAE Systems/Navistar. Each team was awarded contracts worth between $35.9 million and $45 million to begin the next phase of the program, which at the time was stated to be worth $20 billion or more.[17] The Northrop Grumman/Oshkosh group contested the awards, but their protest was denied by the Government Accountability Office.[18] On 1 June 2010, it was confirmed that all three contractors had delivered seven JLTV platforms for TD phase evaluation. The U.S. Army appeared to have reduced its support for the program at this time, omitting JLTV numbers from its tactical vehicle strategy published in June 2010.[19][20] However, the U.S. Army clarified that JLTVs are slated to both replace and complement the Humvee.[20][21]

JLTV's TD phase was completed in May 2011. In February 2011, the JLTV Program Office announced the award of the follow-on Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase contract would be delayed until January or February 2012 because the Army changed requirements for the JLTV, requiring it to have the same level of under body protection as the Mine-Resistant, Ambush-Protected All-Terrain Vehicle (M-ATV).[6] Updated specifications for the program included reducing the payload options to the Combat Tactical Vehicle (CTV) configuration, which would be a 4-seat vehicle with a 3,500 pound payload, and the Combat Support Vehicle (CSV), which would be a 2-seat vehicle with a 5,100 pound payload.

Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase

The draft RFP for the Engineering and Manufacturing Development (EMD) phase was released on 2 October 2011. This called for an average unit manufacturing cost between $230,000 and $270,000 across the JLTV family of vehicles. The cost target for the B-kit armor package remains at US$65,000. EMD phase requirements also created some trade space for industry by easing weight and mobility constraints. At this time JLTV was in danger of severe budget cuts and possible cancellation in the wake of spiraling costs, delays, and defense-wide budgetary cutbacks; it was also competing against the HMMWV Modernized Expanded Capacity Vehicle (MECV) program, the draft RFP for which was released on 11 August 2011.

On 26 January 2012 the Request for Proposals for JLTV's EMD phase was released. Budget priorities for FY13 released on the same day included the termination of the HMMWV MECV program in order to focus vehicle modernization resources on JLTV.[6] Not all of the TD phase contract award teams remained in place for the EMD phase. By late March 2012, at least six teams had submitted responses to the EMD phase RFP,[22] and following EMD phase contract awards on 23 August 2012, in September Hardwire LLC disclosed itself as a previously unknown seventh bidder. The bidders were:

  • AM General (still at the time teamed with GTV for a separate offering) offered the Blast-Resistant Vehicle – Off Road (BRV-O), a product based on its own R&D, and a design that leveraged some of AM General's then recent experience with HMMWV MECV designs.
  • BAE Systems (previously teamed with Navistar) realigned its team for the EMD phase to include Ford (Ford Motor Company's Power Stroke 6.7 liter turbocharged diesel engine; Ford had been considering participating in the JLTV's EMD competition with its own offering) and proposed a design that capitalized on earlier TD phase work with the Valanx.
  • GTV dropped its TD phase developed design and opted to offer a lowest risk solution, a further development of the in-production MOWAG Eagle.
  • Lockheed Martin opted to stay with its TD phase offering, albeit a version that according to the company was "hundreds of pounds lighter in weight."
  • Navistar, which broke away from BAE Systems for the EMD phase, offered a variant of its Saratoga light tactical vehicle, this unveiled in October 2011 as a middle-ground offering between the HMMWV and JLTV, the latter with its then current TD phase spec still technically in place.
  • Oshkosh proposed a variant of the company's L-ATV, unveiled in October 2011. L-ATV has developmental origins that trace back to Oshkosh/Northrop-Grumman's failed initial JLTV proposal.
  • Hardwire offered a proposal featuring a hybrid-electric drive train. Hardwire's armor has been employed on MRAP vehicles, and the company is known for developing a "blast chimney" that it designed to provide an outlet for energy released in an underbelly blast.[6]

On 23 August 2012, the Army and Marine Corps selected the Lockheed Martin JLTV, the Oshkosh L-ATV, and the AM General BRV-O as the winners of the EMD phase of the competition. The three companies were awarded a contract to build 22 prototype vehicles in 27 months to be judged by the services.[23] Losing bidder Navistar filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office over the evaluation criteria on 31 August 2012;[24] the company withdrew the protest on 4 September 2012.[25]

On 27 August 2013, the Army and Marine Corps announced that full-scale testing of JLTV prototypes would begin the following week. Each company delivered 22 vehicles and six trailers to Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, and Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona. Previous testing had already put the vehicles through more than 400 ballistic and blast tests on armor testing samples, underbody blast testing, and more than 1,000 miles in shakedown testing. Soldiers from the Army Test and Evaluation Command and personnel from the Defense Department's Office of Test and Evaluation put the vehicles through realistic and rigorous field testing during 14 months of government performance testing. Testing was to be completed by FY 2015, with a production contract to be awarded to a single vendor for nearly 55,000 vehicles.[26] On 3 September 2013, full-pace, full-scope JLTV testing began at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Yuma Proving Ground, and Redstone Arsenal, Alabama.[27]

On 1 October 2013, the Defense Department Inspector General launched a year-long audit of the JLTV program. It was one of about a dozen acquisition programs outlined in the FY 2014 "audit plan". The audit was to determine whether Army and Marine Corps officials were overseeing and managing the program effectively before low-rate production began. A June 2013 report by the Congressional Research Service estimates the program cost at $23 billion, or $400,000 per vehicle; military leaders contend the unit cost at $250,000.[28] The Army planned to issue a RFP to companies interested in bidding for production contracts in mid-November 2014 and to pick a winner possibly by July 2015.[29] Discrepancies in unit cost have been attributed to different methods for analyzing cost. The Inspector General report concludes program officials "appropriately assessed the affordability" of the effort, and that average unit production cost remains stable at $250,000.[30] All three vehicles completed limited user testing and production readiness reviews by mid-November 2014.[31]

The Army released the final JLTV RFP for low rate initial production (LRIP) and full rate production (FRP) on 12 December 2014, clearing the way for AM General, Lockheed Martin, and Oshkosh Defense to submit their vehicle proposals. The Army gave competitors until 10 February 2015, to refine and submit their bids. The Army, on behalf of itself and the Marines, stated plans to select a winner and issue a single contract award in the late summer of 2015.[32] The winning contractor would build approximately 17,000 JLTVs for the Army and Marine Corps during three years of LRIP, followed by five years of FRP. The first Army unit would be equipped with JLTVs in FY 2018, and the Army's complete acquisition of 49,099 JLTVs would be completed in 2040, with 2,200 JLTVs delivered each year between 2020 and 2036. The Marine Corps would begin acquiring their 5,500 JLTVs at the beginning of production and would be completed by FY 2022.[32] FY 2015 budget requests included 176 JLTV for the Army and 7 JLTV for the Marine Corps in various configurations. The total procurement cost of the JLTV program was quoted as US$30.04 billion and US$0.98 billion in research and development funds, giving a total estimated program cost of US$31.03 billion (figures are aggregated annual funds spent over the life of the program with no price/inflation adjustment).

Contract award

Oshkosh was selected for production on 25 August 2015.[33] The award included a base contract and eight option years covering two years of LRIP (revised from three) and five years of FRP. The initial contract award was valued at US$114 million, with LRIP slated to begin in the first quarter of FY 2016, and with Oshkosh commencing delivery of vehicles approximately 10 months after contract award. The JLTV contract award had a value of up to US$6.749 billion and called for a maximum of 16,901 JLTVs and includes a sustainment element. JLTV manufacturing is performed in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Around contract award, Oshkosh CEO Charles Szews said the production contract award would involve more than 300 suppliers in 31 states across the country.[1]

On 8 September 2015, it was reported that Lockheed Martin would protest the award; on the same day it was also disclosed that AM General had decided not to file a protest. Any work that would be performed under the contract stopped during the review period.[34] On 15 December 2015 the Government Accountability Office (GAO) dismissed Lockheed Martin's protest because the company on 11 December 2015 decided to file a "Notice of Post-Award Bid Protest" with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims; according to a source with knowledge of the procedures, it is uncommon for a company to file with the court close to a GAO protest decision.[35][36] Immediately after the GAO dismissed the protest, the Army instructed Oshkosh to resume work on the JLTV order.[37] Lockheed Martin filed a preliminary injunction on 17 December, stating that new Army-supplied information related to the contract emerged toward the end of the GAO's protest process that was not considered before their ruling and no deadline extension was granted.[38] The U.S. Court of Federal Claims denied Lockheed Martin's request to stop work while the lawsuit was pending, allowing Oshkosh to continue work during the process.[39] The company withdrew its protest in the Court of Federal Claims on 17 February 2016.[40]

Around the time Lockheed Martin withdrew its protest some potentially crucial data from JLTV testing was revealed. The 472–page annual report from the Pentagon's independent Director of Operational Test and Evaluation revealed that in testing Oshkosh's JLTV prototype lasted nearly six times longer between significant breakdown than the next closest, Lockheed Martin's prototype. The Oshkosh vehicle achieved 7,051 mean miles between operational mission failure (MMBOMF); Lockheed Martin's vehicle achieved 1,271 MMBOMF. AM General's vehicle achieved just 526 MMBOMF. The target for JLTV is 2400 MMBOMF, the current up-armored HMMWV achieving 2,968 MMBOMF.[41][42] Information on protection levels was also released. It was found in testing that both Oshkosh and Lockheed prototypes met all threshold force protection requirements and some objective-level requirements. This level of protection is better than that of up-armored HMMWVs, and similar to MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) All-Terrain Vehicles without the underbody improvement kit across all spectrum of tested threats. AM General's prototype would need a significant redesign to meet threshold protection requirements. More details on vehicle protection were included in a classified report.[43]

In the Pentagon's FY 2017 budget, it requested US$587.5 million to procure 1,828 JLTVs for the Army and US$113.2 million to procure 192 for the Marines. About US$34.7 million was requested for research and development between the Army and Marines' JLTV programs.[44] Procurement objectives at this time remained 49,099 JLTV for the Army and 5,500 for the Marines.[45]

In March 2022, a competitive rebuy for the JLTV was in progress. The final Request for Proposal (RFP) for this issued on 9 February 2022 with a contract award expected in September 2022.[1] In February 2023, AM General won a competition to manufacture the JLTV.[46]

Production and deliveries

The first delivery order for JLTV was announced on 23 March 2016 with the U.S. Army ordering 657 JLTVs, along with kits and support. The $243 million order included vehicles for the Army and Marines. According to Oshkosh, "The vehicles, trailers, and installed kits for this order will be delivered by first quarter FY2018."[47][48] As part of the original JLTV base award in August 2015, an initial 201 JLTVs for the test and evaluation phase were ordered. The 657-vehicle order is an exercised option from the program's eight option years.[49] Initial USMC operating capability was stated to be delayed by about one year to the first quarter of FY2020, with procurement by the Marines complete by FY2022.[50]

In March 2016, the Pentagon announced that the total program costs had dropped 19.32%, from $30.574 billion to $24.668 billion "due primarily to revised estimates for unit costs of vehicles and kits based on realized savings", which accounted for a $3.7 billion decrease. A stretched out procurement "due to budget adjustments and revised assumptions regarding the maximum buy profile year" decreased costs by $1.28 billion, and several other changes – such as for cost estimation methodologies and indices – accounted for another $921 million decrease.[51] The total cost estimates include "research and development, procurement, military construction, and acquisition-related operations and maintenance" associated with a program, the Pentagon said. These reflect actual costs so far and anticipated costs in the future, with all estimates in fully inflated then-year dollars.[51] Scott Davis, program executive officer for Combat Support & Combat Service Support, stated that overall the JLTV program expects to cut about five years off of the total program and save about US$5.9 billion, as Oshkosh's final competitive bid was low enough so the Army decided to 'buy to budget' and get more platforms each year, which shrunk the total length of the contract and increased cost avoidances accrued each year.[52]

The U.S. Army disclosed that the JLTV was to be used as the platform for the upcoming Light Reconnaissance Vehicle (LRV) program rather than procuring a new system. The LRV is to be an off-road platform for carrying a suite of intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance sensors; it is to be light enough to be carried by a CH-47 Chinook helicopter. The JLTV was described as an "interim LRV solution".[53] It was also reported that the JLTV-RV (JLTV - Reconnaissance Vehicle) was to be incorporated into the JLTV technical data package and would be a kit option on future contracts.[54] By Q4 2020 the LRV requirement had evolved to such an extent that it excluded the JLTV, requiring a six-person crew.[1]

The Army received its first seven JLTVs for test at the end of September 2016. According to the Army, its first unit to receive JLTVs was to be an Infantry Brigade Combat Team in the 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, New York. The bulk of their 500 HMMWVs were to be replaced by early 2019. According to the Marine Corps, an infantry battalion within II MEF at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, were to receive 69 JLTVs to replace the same number of Humvees in July 2019. The Marine Corps revealed they wished to adjust their acquisition objective for JLTV by 65% to up to 9,091 vehicles. At this time overall JLTV requirements remained at 5,500 for the USMC and 49,099 for the army.[55]

In January 2017, the U.S. Air Force announced it was considering acquiring JLTVs for its security forces that protect missile launch facilities.[56] The vehicles are used by security forces, explosive ordnance disposal teams, para-rescue and personnel recovery units, tactical air control party teams, and special tactics forces. At this time, released documents revealed no further planned JLTV procurement for the period FY 2019–22, but the service was known to want to replace its entire fleet of 3,270 HMMWVs with JLTVs.[57] In its 2018 budget the Pentagon requested $1.143 billion for the program. The DoD requested 2,110 JLTVs for the Army, 140 for the Air Force, and 527 for the Marines.[58]

At AUSA 2016, Oshkosh displayed a JLTV General Purpose variant equipped with an EOS R-400S-MK2 remote weapon system integrated with Orbital ATK's M230 LF 30 mm lightweight automatic chain gun.[59] At AUSA 2017 JLTVs were displayed in three new configurations. Oshkosh displayed a general purpose variant fitted with a Boeing compact laser weapon system, a Kongsberg Protector LW 30 remote weapon system with a M230LF cannon, and a communications suite that includes a Thales VRC-111 and Thales VRC-121 VIPER. The company also displayed a utility variant equipped with the Boeing Maneuver short range air defense launcher including a M3P .50 cal machine gun, M299 launcher with four Longbow Hellfire missiles, sensor suite, and a communications suite including a Thales VRC-111. Rafael displayed a general purpose vehicle fitted with the company's Samson dual stabilized remote weapon system with M230 LF, and the Trophy Light active protection system.[60]

Following an announcement in December 2018 that a total of 500 JLTVs would be delivered by the end of March 2019, JLTV deliveries to the Army commenced the week of 7 January 2019. The first unit to receive JLTVs was the 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Stewart. To coincide with the first fielding Oshkosh confirmed that over 3,000 JLTVs had been delivered to the Army and Marine Corps.[61] In January 2019, the Army Reserve announced it was set to acquire 60 JLTVs for training in preparation for fielding to the entire force. No date for actual fielding was given.[62] On 20 June 2019, Dr. Bruce Jette, Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics and Technology, approved the JLTV program's transition into full-rate production (FRP).[63]

In July 2019 an initial Sources Sought notice (W56HZV19R0242) was issued for the A2 JLTV recompete program. Four draft Request For Proposals (RFPs) followed, these on 03 April 2020, 11 December 2020, 30 April 2021, and 29 October 2021.[1]

The Marine Corps declared initial operational capability for the JLTV on 2 August 2019, ahead of the scheduled June 2020 date.[64]The Marines had previously announced on 28 January 2019 that its first JLTV had fielded that day at the School of Infantry West at Camp Pendleton, California, with around 1,000 further JLTVs scheduled to be fielded during FY2020.[65]

For FY 2020 (1 October 2019 - 30 September 2020) the Pentagon's JLTV funding request totaled US$1.641 billion to procure 2,530 vehicles for the Army, 1,398 for the Marine Corps (with 3,986 more between FY2021 and FY2024), 140 for the Air Force, and 22 for the Navy. Other FY 2020 budget activities included US$4.8 million for engineering and manufacturing development. In March 2019, it was reported that Army's FY2020 budget request included proposed cuts to pay for modernization priorities, with one of those proposed cuts being the JLTV. It was reported that over the coming five years the service would spend US$800 million less on the JLTV program than initially expected; this potentially resulting in the purchase of 1,900 fewer vehicles. As of May 2019, the service had not changed its approved acquisition objective of 49,099 JLTVs.[62]

On 1 July 2020, Oshkosh stated that over 7,500 JLTVs had been delivered to the U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Air Force, and U.S. Navy since the production contract was awarded in 2015.[66] This order brought the total of JLTVs ordered for US forces to date to 15,052.

In September 2020 a Justification and Approval (J&A) for up to an additional 6,262 JLTVs sole source from Oshkosh was granted, the original notice (W56HZV-15-C-0095-P00282) published on 30 June 2020. This award will enable continued JLTV production, industry arguing successfully that it required up to 33 months with the JLTV TDP package to be able to respond to the A2 JLTV RfP. The up to 6,262 JLTVs approved will technically be delivered under a separate second JLTV contract, but the original contract costings and timelines and remain. Final orders must be placed in November 2023, with deliveries permitted until late 2025, but expected to conclude mid-2025. Permissible total orders under the original JLTV award were 16,901 JLTVs.[1]

When the U.S. Army unveiled its fiscal year 2021 (FY 2021) budget request in February 2020, supporting budget documents detailed plans for the "competitive follow on contract [JLTV] award" in FY 2022. It was disclosed that the service wants to reduce its JLTV buy by US$201.6 million over the coming years, but retaining a 40,099 procurement objective. Two years of JLTV production cuts, in FY 2020 and FY 2021, will now extend the full operational capability timeline out by three years until FY 2042. On 17 June 2020, Oshkosh announced the company had been awarded a $61.8M contract modification to increase available trailer options under the current JLTV Family of Vehicles contract from 32 to 3,541. The JLTV-T (JLTV - Trailer) was designed as an integral part of the JLTV Family of Vehicles.[67]

In February 2021 Oshkosh announced the company had produced its 10,000th JLTV, and had received orders for 18,126 JLTVs in contracts totalling more than USD6 billion. The first National Guard fielding of JLTV was the 19th SF in 3QFY21.

On 26 January 2022 a Presolicitation Notice (W56HZV-20-R-0072) was issued for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) Family of Vehicles (FoV) Follow-On, the A2 contract. The anticipated solicitation release date was 04 February 2022 with an anticipated proposal due date of 12 April 2022; actual release date was 09 Feb. The planned period of performance for this contract is from September 2022 through September 2032. The awarded contract will be a single award, five-year requirements type contract, with five one-year options on a Cost-Plus Fixed-Fee and Firm-Fixed Price basis. The projected contract value is $7.3 billion with original contract award pricing retained (plus inflation), and the award is expected to call for a maximum of 15,425 A2 JLTV and 6,000 JLTV Trailers, with deliveries to commence 18 months after contract award. In addition to Oshkosh, respondents to the RfP are expected to include AM General, GM Defense, and Navistar.[1]

As of April 2022, 15 JLTV delivery orders had been placed, the most recent of these in November 2021 and valued at USD591 million. The order includes 1,669 vehicles and 868 trailers, the vehicle total including 125 JLTVs for Brazil, Lithuania, Montenegro, and Slovenia. Deliveries are expected to be completed by September 2023. This latest order brings the total number of JLTVs ordered to date to 19,727.

In summary, known JLTV delivery orders for U.S. armed forces to date have been:

  • August 2015: 201 as part of the original JLTV base award and for the test and evaluation phase
  • March 2016: 657; value $243 million
  • September 2016: 130; value $42 million
  • January 2017: 409; value $179 million
  • August 2017: 748; value $195 million
  • September 2017: 611; value $177 million
  • December 2017: 258; value $100.1 million
  • February 2018: 416; value $106 million
  • June 2018: 1,574; value $484 million
  • November 2018: 6,107; value $1.69 billion
  • December 2019: 2,721; value $803.9 million
  • February 2020: 1,240; value $407.3 million (includes unspecified quantities for Slovenia and Lithuania as FMS)
  • July 2020: 248; value $127 million
  • November 2020: 2,679; value $884.4 million (brought the total of JLTVs ordered for U.S. forces to date to 17,731, and was technically the first order under the second contract. Also included were 59 JLTVs valued at USD23 for Brazil, Lithuania, and Macedonia, making the overall total 2,738 JLTVs)
  • November 2021: 1,544; value including FMS is $591 million

(all orders include unspecified quantities of training, support, kits and/or trailers)

Other operators

Outside of the United States, a number of other countries have shown an interest in or have ordered the JLTV. These include Belgium, Brazil, Lithuania, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania and Slovenia. All have ordered via FMS with the exception of Belgium which is a direct sale. Portugal and the United Kingdom have expressed an interest in acquiring the JLTV. Australia joined the TD phase of JLTV but ultimately opted to procure the locally produced Thales Hawkei. India expressed an interest in joining the JLTV program, but did not join.[2]

Technical description

Given the competitive nature of the JLTV competition and recompete, only limited technical detail has been released by either the U.S. Army or Oshkosh. Only basic outline dimensions and limited operating weight and automotive data is available,[62] and is included in Specifications. The JLTV is based around Oshkosh's TAK-4i (i=intelligent) independent suspension system. Around 26,000 military vehicles are fitted with an earlier version of the system,[68] including the Oshkosh Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement (MTVR), Oshkosh Logistic Vehicle System Replacement (LVSR), and Oshkosh MRAP All-Terrain Vehicle (M-ATV); the TAK-4 system has been retro-fitted to the Force Protection Inc Cougar and BAE Systems RG-33 MRAPs.[69] The majority of systems supplied to date have been coil-sprung. The TAK-4i version fitted to the JLTV remains undisclosed, but is not coil-sprung and is of the variable adjustable ride-height type with up to 20 inches (51 cm) of wheel travel, 25% more than the current standard.[70][71] The JLTVs suspension aided egress system capability levels side to side and front to rear on slopes or grades when selected by the operator. The front and rear suspension height can also be independently controlled for ship and transportability. The suspension system has ride height control at all four wheels.[62]

Motive power is provided by a digitally-controlled Gale Banks Engineering 866T V-8 diesel, this based on the architecture of the General Motors Duramax LML.[4] Power output is 340 hp. Production of the Duramax LML engine concluded in 2017, the unit replaced by the Duramax L5P. JLTV A1 models that were introduced in 2017 are powered by a derivation of this engine. The A2 JLTV will be powered by the next generation of the Duramax engine, production of the current Duramax MY2020 L5P scheduled to conclude Q3FY22. An Allison 2500SP six-speed fully automatic transmission is fitted to all JLTVs[62]

The JLTV has been designed to comply with the U.S. Army's Long Term Armor Strategy (LTAS). The LTAS system follows an A-kit/B-kit principle, with vehicles designed "fitted for, but not with" protection. Protection kits can be installed and uninstalled from vehicles in the field using basic tools. The A-kit is fitted on the production line and is a combination of a limited amount of armoring, in difficult-to-access areas of the vehicle, together with a significant amount of armor installation attachments and required support structures. The bulk of the armor, the B-kit, is installed in the field on an as-required basis.[6] Two soldiers can install B-kit armor in five hours. An 800-pound RPG protection kit can be installed in two hours at field-level maintenance and completed by the crew within 30 minutes.[72] The JLTV offers protection levels greater than those of up-armored HMMWVs and comparable to those of original MRAP class designs, but in an overall vehicle package that is considerably smaller and lighter than vehicles procured under the U.S. Marines MRAP procurement.[73]

The benefits of the A-kit/B-kit principle are that armor is only fitted when required, reducing vehicle wear and tear and, by default, whole lifecycle costs. Improvements and/or upgrades to armor are also far easier to integrate into an appliqué solution. No quantity for JLTV armoring kits has yet been disclosed, but it is anticipated that the estimated $65,000 kits will be procured on a one kit to three vehicle basis.[6] The overall protection will include a spall liner to minimize perforation effects within a vehicle when the vehicle takes hostile fire.[74][75]

The JLTV has an automatic fire-extinguishing system to protect the crew cabin.[72] Fuel tanks are mounted externally and shielded by the JLTV structure. Each crew seat has a combined seat and blast restraint device. Ingress time for a crew of four in combat equipment is 30 seconds or less. Egress with B-kit doors is within 10 seconds.[72] The only weight-related data officially released includes a gross vehicle weight of 10,266 lb. Payload for the two-door variant is quoted as 2,318 kg, payload for the four-door variant is quoted as 1,590 kg. The USMC required a vehicle that can be transported by their current and planned systems. In April 2009, Marine Corps Commandant James Conway warned that the Marine Corps "will not buy a vehicle that's 20,000 lb."[76]

Requirements called for the cabin heater to raise the crew compartment temperature from −40 °F (−40 °C) to 65 °F (18 °C) in one hour. The air-conditioner should drop the temperature from 120 °F (49 °C) to 90 °F (32 °C) within forty minutes.[72] The JLTV was to be equipped with a diagnostic monitoring system that will electronically alert the operator of equipment failures so that they can be fixed. The electronic monitoring will observe the fuel, air intake, engine, cooling, transmission, energy storage, power generation and vehicle speed as well as other systems.[74]

Mobility

The Pentagon required at least 600 mean miles before an essential function failure.[72] The vehicle was to be capable of traveling for 3 miles (5 km) cross-country having endured three 0.3-inch (7.6 mm) perforations of half-full main fuel tanks.[62][74] The JLTV must also operate in altitudes from minus 500 feet to 12,000 feet and maintain full mission capability in temperatures from −40 to 125 °F (−40 to 52 °C), according to established requirements. When temperatures drop well below zero, the JLTV must start within one minute with no external aids, kits or prior warming of the batteries. The vehicle must be capable of traveling paved 350 miles (560 km) at 35 miles per hour (56 km/h) or 300 miles (480 km) in operational terrain on a single tank of JP-8 fuel. Acceleration from 0 to 30 miles per hour (0 to 48 km/h) in 9.7 seconds on dry, level, hard terrain was required as a threshold requirement (objective being 7 seconds), as was the ability to ford 60 inches (150 cm) of saltwater without a fording kit, in forward and reverse, while maintaining contact with the ground.[72][62]

Other tactically driven mobility requirements include a threshold 27-foot turning radius and the ability to climb 24-inch vertical obstacles in forward and reverse. JLTV must be able to drive off an 18-inch vertical step at 15 mph and sustain no mechanical damage. It will be capable of traversing a 20-degree V-ditch that is 25 feet wide at an approach angle of 45-degree. It can 'jump' a 6-inch parallel curb at 15 mph and traverse a 20-foot flight of stairs at 5 mph. It must climb a 60 percent dry, hard-surfaced gradient and traverse a 40 percent sideslope with no degradation in driver control.[72][62]

JLTV is transportable by sea, rail, and air. The JLTV is transportable on all classes of ocean-going transport ships with minimal disassembly. It was required to be rail-transportable on U.S. and NATO country railways. Air transportability will be by fixed-wing aircraft as large or larger than the C-130 Hercules and sling-loadable with rotary-wing aircraft such as the CH-47/MH-47 and CH-53. The proposed ambulance variant was to be air-droppable by C-5 and C-17 fixed-wing aircraft.[77] The JLTV can be prepared in 30 minutes for transport by aircraft, Maritime Prepositioning Force ships or rail. This is aided by an adjustable-height suspension.[72][62]

Versions

 
Early JLTV configurations

The JLTV family and its nomenclature evolved throughout the development process and to date the U.S. Army has allocated M designations to four individual JLTV configurations.[78] In JLTV's Initial Capability Document, there were four payload options, this later reduced to three, Payload Categories A, B, and C. By the time Capability Development Document version 3.3 was published at the conclusion of JLTV's Technology Development (TD) phase, payload options had been reduced to only two and payload verbiage had been dropped, replaced by reference to variants. From that point on two stated variants were required, the Combat Tactical Vehicle (CTV) and Combat Support Vehicle (CSV).[79]

 
JLTV variants including companion trailer as of October 2017

The CTV configuration replaced the previous Category A and Category B configurations and was a 4-seat vehicle with a 3,500-pound payload. The CSV replaced the previous Category C configuration and was a 2-seat vehicle with a 5,100-pound payload. The JLTV family now consists of three base vehicle platforms, Utility (JLTV-UTL), Close Combat Weapons Carrier (JLTV-CCWC) and General Purpose (JLTV-GP). The Utility base vehicle platform is a two-door configuration, the General Purpose and Close Combat Weapons Carrier base vehicle platforms are a four-door configuration. Standard U.S. military M-designators are applied base vehicle platforms when outfitted to a specific Mission Package Configuration. These currently are:

  • M1278 Heavy Guns Carrier - General Purpose vehicle platform in Heavy Guns Carrier Mission Package Configuration (JLTV-HGC)
  • M1279 Utility - Utility (JLTV-UTL) base vehicle platform in Utility Mission Package Configuration
  • M1280 General Purpose - General Purpose (JLTV-GP) base vehicle platform in General Purpose Mission Package Configuration
  • M1281 Close Combat Weapons Carrier - Close Combat Weapons Carrier (JLTV-CCWC) base vehicle platform in Close Combat Weapons Carrier Mission Package Configuration

There is also a companion trailer (JLTV-T), which is towable by all JLTV variants.[78]

L-ATV specific versions

Oshkosh showcased for the first time the L-ATV Ambulance at the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) Global Force Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama, from 26 to 28 March 2019. The L-ATV Ambulance is based on the utility configuration base platform and the rear can hold 4 litters or up to 8 seated patients or a combination of the two. At present the L-ATV Ambulance is not a JLTV variant, but according to the company the design will be marketed to the U.S. Army and Marines.[80]

Hybrid electric JLTV

In January 2022 Oshkosh unveiled a hybrid-electric Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (eJLTV) technology demonstrator that uses a ‘commercially available' lithium-ion battery. It takes the diesel engine of the JLTV about 30 minutes to charge the lithium-ion battery, and then the eJLTV can operate off of battery power for approximately the same amount of time. It is also able to export up to 115 kW of power. However, the hybrid electric configuration adds more than 453 kg to the vehicle's curb weight.

JLTV-T (T - Trailer)

From June 2019 a dedicated trailer (JLTV-T) is being procured for the JLTV, as in-service trailers were unable to safely match the performance and mobility of the JLTV. A dedicated companion trailer for the JLTV (the JLTV – Trailer (JLTV-T)) formed part of the requirement from its early stages, and the production contract awarded to Oshkosh included the option for trailer production. However, the decision was taken to leverage investment made in the HMMWV’s Light Tactical Trailer (LTT) and not to resource procurement of the JLTV-T. As a result of this, initial quantities were limited to test examples only. However, operational testing would demonstrate that the LTT was not compatible with a JLTV operating at mission profile speeds, thus the JLTV was limited to the safe towing speed of the LTT to limit equipment damage. In June 2020 Oshkosh announced that the company had been awarded a contract modification to increase available trailer options from 32 to 3,541, and as part of a November 2020 JLTV award 1,001 trailers were ordered. First fielding of the JLTV-Trailer is scheduled for March 2022, and until then the JLTV is used with the LTT, but at a reduced mission profile.

The JLTV-T is based on a bolted channel section chassis and features independent trailing arm and air suspension. Wheels and tires are shared with the JLTV. The cargo deck features removable sidewalls and tailgate, an onboard stowage box included for these when the trailer is used as a flatbed. ISO locks are provided on the loadbed for any required shelter of similar interface.

Operators

Current operators

  •   Montenegro: Armed Forces of Montenegro – Montenegro signed a US$36.17 million contract for the procurement of 67 JLTVs, announced on 23 October 2019. The vehicles will equip Montenegro's NATO-declared forces. The first 20 vehicles arrived in 2020, and deliveries will be completed during 2023. Montenegro is to acquire 55 JLTVs in basic configuration, eight in anti-tank configuration, and the remaining four in medical and command configurations.[81][82][1]
  •   United States of America: U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Air Force – Original contract award on 25 August 2015. Overall requirements have fluctuated, but as of January 2022 were stated by Micheal Sprang, JLTV Project Director to be: Army - 49,099 (this figure has remained relatively constant); Marine Corps - 12,500 (approx.); Air Force - 2000 (dependent on funding); Navy (approx. 400). The initial JLTV contract award had a potential value of US$6.749 billion and called for a maximum of 16,901 JLTVs. The second sole source to Oshkosh contract allows for 6,262 JLTVs to be ordered by November 2023. The JLTV re-compete award will allow for 15,586 JLTV when awarded. Current U.S. Army and Marines orders are for around 19,150 JLTVs.[83][84][1]
  •   Slovenia: Slovenian Ground Force – Signed government-to-government agreement for the procurement of 38 Oshkosh JLTVs in November 2018, with deliveries to take place in 2021–2023.[85] The JLTV order announced in February 2020 included JLTVs for Slovenia but the actual quantity was not disclosed.[86]On 11 May 2021, 38 JLTVs for the Slovenian Army arrived at the port of Luka Koper. They are armed with station M153 Kongsberg.[87]The vehicles were unveiled to the public on June 4th.[88] In June 2021 Slovenia announced it will order another 37 JLTVs during 2021.[89] On 14 September 2021, a contract was signed for an additional 37 JLTVs. In December 2022, another 47 vehicles were ordered, 7 vehicles will be donated by the USA. The Slovenian army will acquire a total of 129 JLTVs.[90][91]
  •   Lithuania: Lithuanian Army - On 21 November 2019, Lithuania and the U.S. signed a contract for 200 vehicles.[92] The first batch of 50 was delivered in August 2021.[93] A contract for another 300 vehicles was signed in October 2022, for a total of 500 vehicles ordered.[94]
  •   Brazil: Brazilian Marine Corps - On 5 October 2020, the Brazilian Marine Corps signed a contract for a batch of 12 JLTVs, to be delivered between 2022 and 2026.[95][96] In September 2021, it was reported that the Brazilian Marine Corps (CFN) was looking to acquire an additional 48 JLTVs. The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Marine Infantry Battalions would each receive 12 of the vehicles, while the remaining 12 would go to the Special Operations Battalion.[1] The Brazilian Marine Corps received four JLTVs on 2 March 2023.[97][98]

Future operators

  •   Belgium: Belgian Army - Belgium's Council of Ministers approved the purchase of 322 JLTVs in September 2020 for EUR135 million. In service the JLTV will replace the Iveco LMV fleet for command and liaison missions, and 20 examples will be configured as ambulances. The contract also includes a multiyear open agreement for technical assistance. First deliveries are anticipated in 2023.[99]
  •   North Macedonia: The U.S. Army announced a JLTV contract modification in November 2020 that identified North Macedonia as a customer. Oshkosh announced in December 2020 that it had been contracted to produce and deliver 59 JLTVs to Brazil, Lithuania, and North Macedonia, but with no breakdown. Earlier funding statements allowed for equipping the Army of the Republic of North Macedonia with 33 JLTVs, the first delivery of which were expected in late 2021 or early 2022. North Macedonia's Long Term Defence Capability Development Plan predicts the acquisition by 2024 of 96 JLTVs.[100]
  •   Poland: 26 M1279A1 in both passenger and cargo variants as a part of a sale of 116 M1A1 Abrams tanks.[101]
  •   Romania: The Romanian Ministry of National Defence (MoND) confirmed in July 2021 that it will acquire more than 100 JLTVs for Romanian special forces under a EUR47 million contract. Oshkosh announced in a press release on 1 July 2021 that Romania was one of the countries for which it had been awarded a USD152 million order for JLTVs.

Potential operators

  •   Greece - Hellenic Army - In June 27 2022, the Hellenic Army General Staff met with representatives from Elbit Systems after showing interest in the acquisition of SPEAR 120mm mortar systems mounted on the JLTV.[102][103]
  •   Portugal - Portuguese Army - In April 2020, Portugal announced that it would be seeking to procure the JLTV through the US Foreign Military Sales program. The intention was expressed to Janes by Lieutenant Colonel Ricardo Manuel dos Santos Camilo, head of the capabilities branch of the army general staff's force planning division. In 2019, EUR79 million (US$86 million) was allocated to the revised Portuguese Military Programming Law for the acquisition of JLTVs by 2030 for further army modernisation. However, the total procurement was under review and it was stated that it could change. If purchased, the JLTV would replace the Land Rover Defender series and the Toyota Land Cruiser HZJ73LV vehicles currently used by the Portuguese Army.[104][105]
  •   United Kingdom: British Army – In June 2016 it was reported that to meet Package 1 of the Multi Role Vehicle-Protected (MRV-P) requirement, the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) was in talks with the Pentagon on acquiring the JLTV via the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) route. “We can confirm that we are talking to the US DOD regarding Package 1 [of MRV-P], to inform our understanding of an FMS option for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle,” said an MoD spokesman.[106] It was stated in January 2017 by Maj. Gen. Robert Talbot Rice, the director of land equipment at the Defence Equipment and Support arm of the Ministry of Defence (MoD), that: "We are working through the Foreign Military Sales process. A letter of request has been sent to our American colleagues, and we expect a response in the next few months." Talbot Rice told an audience of industry executives and military personnel at the International Armoured Vehicles conference in London on 24 January that the Army had opted for the single-source purchase due to its ability to meet UK requirements and its value for money.[107] In July 2017, the DSCA notified the US Congress of a possible sale of 2,747 JLTV vehicles and accessories to the UK.[108][57] Jane's Defence Weekly reported in September 2019 that approval for the JLTV to enter the demonstration phase was received in April 2019 and that once the demonstration phase was complete in 2021, a new business case would be submitted to the MoD for approval to enter full rate production. The requirement at that time stood at 821 vehicles for the Army and Marines.[109] In June 2022, it was announced that the Package 1 Multi Role Vehicle-Protected (MRV-P) requirement purchase would not move forward; cancellation of the MRV-P Package 1 is not a direct cancellation of the JLTV acquisition, and actually a result of the British Army reviewing its protected mobility needs after the 2021 Integrated Review and associated Command Paper. Delaying any JLTV purchase will also allow the UK to await the outcome of the US Army JLTV recompete process.[110]

Gallery

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  106. ^ "UK interested in the JLTV even though they have the excellent FoxHound?". SNAFU. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  107. ^ "British Army Works to Secure Oshkosh JLTV". DefenseNews. 24 January 2017. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  108. ^ "United Kingdom – Joint Light Tactical Vehicles (JLTV) and Accessories". DSCA. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  109. ^ "British Army working on JLTV prototype". Jane's. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  110. ^ "JLTV June 2022". Janes. 6 June 2022. Retrieved 6 June 2022.

External links

  • DSEi 2017: JLTV UK and US update - Sept 2017
  • AUSA 2015: Oshkosh Defense on their JLTV program (October 2015 video)
  • Oshkosh is JLTV (July 2015 video)
  • JLTV Ready (March 2015 video)
  • Oshkosh Defense L-ATV page
  • AUSA 2017: Flexible weapons integration on the Oshkosh JLTV video

joint, light, tactical, vehicle, jltv, redirects, here, other, uses, jltv, disambiguation, jltv, army, marine, corps, special, operations, command, program, partially, replace, humvee, fleet, with, family, more, survivable, vehicles, having, greater, payload, . JLTV redirects here For other uses see JLTV disambiguation The Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV is a U S Army U S Marine Corps and Special Operations Command program to partially replace the Humvee fleet 5 with a family of more survivable vehicles having a greater payload Early studies for the JLTV program were approved in 2006 The JLTV program incorporates lessons learned from the earlier Future Tactical Truck Systems program and other associated efforts 6 Joint Light Tactical VehicleA production standard JLTV the Oshkosh L ATV in USMC M1280 General Purpose GP configuration fitted with deep fording kit and tire chainsTypeLight tactical vehiclePlace of originUnited StatesProduction historyDesignerOshkosh CorporationDesigned2005 2015ManufacturerOshkosh DefenseUnit costUS 344 000 in 2017 Average Procurement Unit Cost APUC in FY 2015 1 Produced2016 Low Rate Initial Production LRIP full rate production approved June 2019 2 No builtover 18 500 3 VariantsM1278 M1279 M1280 M1281 plus a companion trailer JLTV TSpecificationsMass11 32 short tons 10 27 t GVWLength20 ft 4 in 6 2 m Width8 ft 2 in 2 5 m Height8 ft 6 in 2 6 m Crew1 3 in individual seats optional gunner I 1 M1279 Utility ArmorClassified A kit B kit configuration MainarmamentVarious light and medium caliber weapons plus AGLs or ATGWs as requiredEngineGale Banks Engineering 866T 6 6 liter diesel based on GM Duramax architecture 4 TransmissionAllison 2500SP six speed automaticSuspensionOshkosh TAK 4i independent suspensionOperationalrange300 milesMaximum speedForward 70 mph 110 km h Reverse 8 mph 13 km h SteeringsystemPower assisted front axleThe JLTV program has evolved considerably throughout various development phases and milestones including required numbers and pricing Variants are capable of performing armament carrier utility command and control shelter ambulance reconnaissance and a variety of other tactical and logistic support roles JLTV follows the U S Army s Long Term Armor Strategy with kits for two levels of armor protection Oshkosh s L ATV was selected as the winner of the JLTV program in August 2015 and awarded an initial production contract for up to 16 901 JLTVs The U S Army approved the JLTV for full rate production in June 2019 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase 1 2 Contract award 1 3 Production and deliveries 1 4 Other operators 2 Technical description 2 1 Mobility 3 Versions 3 1 L ATV specific versions 3 2 Hybrid electric JLTV 3 3 JLTV T T Trailer 4 Operators 4 1 Current operators 4 2 Future operators 4 3 Potential operators 5 Gallery 6 References 7 External linksDevelopment EditThe High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle HMMWV which first entered service in 1985 was developed during the Cold War when improvised explosive devices IEDs and asymmetric warfare were not a major factor for military planners The HMMWVs demonstrated vulnerability to IEDs and the difficulties and costs experienced in satisfactorily up armoring HMMWVs led to the development of a family of more survivable vehicles with greater payload and mobility JLTV was originally reported as a one for one HMMWV replacement however U S Department of Defense DoD officials now emphasize that JLTVs are not intended to replace all HMMWVs 7 The JLTV publicly emerged in 2006 Early government documents note In response to an operational need and an aging fleet of light tactical wheeled vehicles the joint services have developed a requirement for a new tactical wheeled vehicle platform that will provide increased force protection survivability and improved capacity over the current Up armored Humvee while balancing mobility and transportability requirements with total ownership costs The joint service nature of the effort was assured through Congressional language in the Fiscal Year 2006 FY06 Authorization Act which mandated that any future tactical wheeled vehicle program would be a joint program 6 The Joint Chief of Staff s Joint Requirements Oversight Council approved the JLTV program in November 2006 this began a 13 month Concept Refinement phase which is a pre systems acquisition process designed to further develop the initial concepts resident in the Initial Capabilities Document The Concept Refinement phase also includes an Analysis of Alternatives At the conclusion of the Concept Refinement phase in December 2007 the Joint Program Office JLTV project manager intended to transition the program directly into the engineering manufacturing and development phase However as milestone approached it became clear that the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment John Young would not support the JLTV program entering into the acquisition process at that time He denied the request and instructed the Army and the Marine Corps to develop a more vigorous Technology Development TD phase 6 The DoD released a Request for Proposal RFP for the TD phase of the JLTV program on 5 February 2008 Industry proposals were due 7 April TD phase contract award was postponed in July 2008 6 The following companies and partnerships responded to the TD phase RFP Boeing Textron and Millenworks 8 9 General Dynamics and AM General as General Tactical Vehicles 10 Force Protection Inc and DRS Technologies 11 12 officially rejected on 14 August 2008 13 BAE Systems and Navistar Northrop Grumman Oshkosh Truck and Plasan Lockheed Martin BAE Systems Land amp Armaments Global Tactical Systems Alcoa Defense and JWF Industries 14 15 Blackwater and Raytheon 16 BAE Systems Valanx JLTV in 2012 BAE s Valanx would not progress to EMD phase General Tactical Vehicles JLTV during field trials in 2010 This design would not progress to EMD phase Lockheed Martin JLTV variants in 2012 Lockheed Martin s vehicle would progress to EMD phase and be selected to progress to prototype stage AM General BRV O JLTV on static display The BRV O would progress to EMD phase and be selected to progress to prototype stage On 28 October 2008 the Pentagon narrowed the field of vendors to Lockheed Martin General Tactical Vehicles and BAE Systems Navistar Each team was awarded contracts worth between 35 9 million and 45 million to begin the next phase of the program which at the time was stated to be worth 20 billion or more 17 The Northrop Grumman Oshkosh group contested the awards but their protest was denied by the Government Accountability Office 18 On 1 June 2010 it was confirmed that all three contractors had delivered seven JLTV platforms for TD phase evaluation The U S Army appeared to have reduced its support for the program at this time omitting JLTV numbers from its tactical vehicle strategy published in June 2010 19 20 However the U S Army clarified that JLTVs are slated to both replace and complement the Humvee 20 21 JLTV s TD phase was completed in May 2011 In February 2011 the JLTV Program Office announced the award of the follow on Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase contract would be delayed until January or February 2012 because the Army changed requirements for the JLTV requiring it to have the same level of under body protection as the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain Vehicle M ATV 6 Updated specifications for the program included reducing the payload options to the Combat Tactical Vehicle CTV configuration which would be a 4 seat vehicle with a 3 500 pound payload and the Combat Support Vehicle CSV which would be a 2 seat vehicle with a 5 100 pound payload Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase Edit The draft RFP for the Engineering and Manufacturing Development EMD phase was released on 2 October 2011 This called for an average unit manufacturing cost between 230 000 and 270 000 across the JLTV family of vehicles The cost target for the B kit armor package remains at US 65 000 EMD phase requirements also created some trade space for industry by easing weight and mobility constraints At this time JLTV was in danger of severe budget cuts and possible cancellation in the wake of spiraling costs delays and defense wide budgetary cutbacks it was also competing against the HMMWV Modernized Expanded Capacity Vehicle MECV program the draft RFP for which was released on 11 August 2011 On 26 January 2012 the Request for Proposals for JLTV s EMD phase was released Budget priorities for FY13 released on the same day included the termination of the HMMWV MECV program in order to focus vehicle modernization resources on JLTV 6 Not all of the TD phase contract award teams remained in place for the EMD phase By late March 2012 at least six teams had submitted responses to the EMD phase RFP 22 and following EMD phase contract awards on 23 August 2012 in September Hardwire LLC disclosed itself as a previously unknown seventh bidder The bidders were AM General still at the time teamed with GTV for a separate offering offered the Blast Resistant Vehicle Off Road BRV O a product based on its own R amp D and a design that leveraged some of AM General s then recent experience with HMMWV MECV designs BAE Systems previously teamed with Navistar realigned its team for the EMD phase to include Ford Ford Motor Company s Power Stroke 6 7 liter turbocharged diesel engine Ford had been considering participating in the JLTV s EMD competition with its own offering and proposed a design that capitalized on earlier TD phase work with the Valanx GTV dropped its TD phase developed design and opted to offer a lowest risk solution a further development of the in production MOWAG Eagle Lockheed Martin opted to stay with its TD phase offering albeit a version that according to the company was hundreds of pounds lighter in weight Navistar which broke away from BAE Systems for the EMD phase offered a variant of its Saratoga light tactical vehicle this unveiled in October 2011 as a middle ground offering between the HMMWV and JLTV the latter with its then current TD phase spec still technically in place Oshkosh proposed a variant of the company s L ATV unveiled in October 2011 L ATV has developmental origins that trace back to Oshkosh Northrop Grumman s failed initial JLTV proposal Hardwire offered a proposal featuring a hybrid electric drive train Hardwire s armor has been employed on MRAP vehicles and the company is known for developing a blast chimney that it designed to provide an outlet for energy released in an underbelly blast 6 On 23 August 2012 the Army and Marine Corps selected the Lockheed Martin JLTV the Oshkosh L ATV and the AM General BRV O as the winners of the EMD phase of the competition The three companies were awarded a contract to build 22 prototype vehicles in 27 months to be judged by the services 23 Losing bidder Navistar filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office over the evaluation criteria on 31 August 2012 24 the company withdrew the protest on 4 September 2012 25 On 27 August 2013 the Army and Marine Corps announced that full scale testing of JLTV prototypes would begin the following week Each company delivered 22 vehicles and six trailers to Aberdeen Proving Ground Maryland and Yuma Proving Ground Arizona Previous testing had already put the vehicles through more than 400 ballistic and blast tests on armor testing samples underbody blast testing and more than 1 000 miles in shakedown testing Soldiers from the Army Test and Evaluation Command and personnel from the Defense Department s Office of Test and Evaluation put the vehicles through realistic and rigorous field testing during 14 months of government performance testing Testing was to be completed by FY 2015 with a production contract to be awarded to a single vendor for nearly 55 000 vehicles 26 On 3 September 2013 full pace full scope JLTV testing began at Aberdeen Proving Ground Yuma Proving Ground and Redstone Arsenal Alabama 27 On 1 October 2013 the Defense Department Inspector General launched a year long audit of the JLTV program It was one of about a dozen acquisition programs outlined in the FY 2014 audit plan The audit was to determine whether Army and Marine Corps officials were overseeing and managing the program effectively before low rate production began A June 2013 report by the Congressional Research Service estimates the program cost at 23 billion or 400 000 per vehicle military leaders contend the unit cost at 250 000 28 The Army planned to issue a RFP to companies interested in bidding for production contracts in mid November 2014 and to pick a winner possibly by July 2015 29 Discrepancies in unit cost have been attributed to different methods for analyzing cost The Inspector General report concludes program officials appropriately assessed the affordability of the effort and that average unit production cost remains stable at 250 000 30 All three vehicles completed limited user testing and production readiness reviews by mid November 2014 31 The Army released the final JLTV RFP for low rate initial production LRIP and full rate production FRP on 12 December 2014 clearing the way for AM General Lockheed Martin and Oshkosh Defense to submit their vehicle proposals The Army gave competitors until 10 February 2015 to refine and submit their bids The Army on behalf of itself and the Marines stated plans to select a winner and issue a single contract award in the late summer of 2015 32 The winning contractor would build approximately 17 000 JLTVs for the Army and Marine Corps during three years of LRIP followed by five years of FRP The first Army unit would be equipped with JLTVs in FY 2018 and the Army s complete acquisition of 49 099 JLTVs would be completed in 2040 with 2 200 JLTVs delivered each year between 2020 and 2036 The Marine Corps would begin acquiring their 5 500 JLTVs at the beginning of production and would be completed by FY 2022 32 FY 2015 budget requests included 176 JLTV for the Army and 7 JLTV for the Marine Corps in various configurations The total procurement cost of the JLTV program was quoted as US 30 04 billion and US 0 98 billion in research and development funds giving a total estimated program cost of US 31 03 billion figures are aggregated annual funds spent over the life of the program with no price inflation adjustment Contract award Edit Oshkosh was selected for production on 25 August 2015 33 The award included a base contract and eight option years covering two years of LRIP revised from three and five years of FRP The initial contract award was valued at US 114 million with LRIP slated to begin in the first quarter of FY 2016 and with Oshkosh commencing delivery of vehicles approximately 10 months after contract award The JLTV contract award had a value of up to US 6 749 billion and called for a maximum of 16 901 JLTVs and includes a sustainment element JLTV manufacturing is performed in Oshkosh Wisconsin Around contract award Oshkosh CEO Charles Szews said the production contract award would involve more than 300 suppliers in 31 states across the country 1 On 8 September 2015 it was reported that Lockheed Martin would protest the award on the same day it was also disclosed that AM General had decided not to file a protest Any work that would be performed under the contract stopped during the review period 34 On 15 December 2015 the Government Accountability Office GAO dismissed Lockheed Martin s protest because the company on 11 December 2015 decided to file a Notice of Post Award Bid Protest with the U S Court of Federal Claims according to a source with knowledge of the procedures it is uncommon for a company to file with the court close to a GAO protest decision 35 36 Immediately after the GAO dismissed the protest the Army instructed Oshkosh to resume work on the JLTV order 37 Lockheed Martin filed a preliminary injunction on 17 December stating that new Army supplied information related to the contract emerged toward the end of the GAO s protest process that was not considered before their ruling and no deadline extension was granted 38 The U S Court of Federal Claims denied Lockheed Martin s request to stop work while the lawsuit was pending allowing Oshkosh to continue work during the process 39 The company withdrew its protest in the Court of Federal Claims on 17 February 2016 40 Around the time Lockheed Martin withdrew its protest some potentially crucial data from JLTV testing was revealed The 472 page annual report from the Pentagon s independent Director of Operational Test and Evaluation revealed that in testing Oshkosh s JLTV prototype lasted nearly six times longer between significant breakdown than the next closest Lockheed Martin s prototype The Oshkosh vehicle achieved 7 051 mean miles between operational mission failure MMBOMF Lockheed Martin s vehicle achieved 1 271 MMBOMF AM General s vehicle achieved just 526 MMBOMF The target for JLTV is 2400 MMBOMF the current up armored HMMWV achieving 2 968 MMBOMF 41 42 Information on protection levels was also released It was found in testing that both Oshkosh and Lockheed prototypes met all threshold force protection requirements and some objective level requirements This level of protection is better than that of up armored HMMWVs and similar to MRAP Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain Vehicles without the underbody improvement kit across all spectrum of tested threats AM General s prototype would need a significant redesign to meet threshold protection requirements More details on vehicle protection were included in a classified report 43 In the Pentagon s FY 2017 budget it requested US 587 5 million to procure 1 828 JLTVs for the Army and US 113 2 million to procure 192 for the Marines About US 34 7 million was requested for research and development between the Army and Marines JLTV programs 44 Procurement objectives at this time remained 49 099 JLTV for the Army and 5 500 for the Marines 45 In March 2022 a competitive rebuy for the JLTV was in progress The final Request for Proposal RFP for this issued on 9 February 2022 with a contract award expected in September 2022 1 In February 2023 AM General won a competition to manufacture the JLTV 46 Production and deliveries Edit The first delivery order for JLTV was announced on 23 March 2016 with the U S Army ordering 657 JLTVs along with kits and support The 243 million order included vehicles for the Army and Marines According to Oshkosh The vehicles trailers and installed kits for this order will be delivered by first quarter FY2018 47 48 As part of the original JLTV base award in August 2015 an initial 201 JLTVs for the test and evaluation phase were ordered The 657 vehicle order is an exercised option from the program s eight option years 49 Initial USMC operating capability was stated to be delayed by about one year to the first quarter of FY2020 with procurement by the Marines complete by FY2022 50 In March 2016 the Pentagon announced that the total program costs had dropped 19 32 from 30 574 billion to 24 668 billion due primarily to revised estimates for unit costs of vehicles and kits based on realized savings which accounted for a 3 7 billion decrease A stretched out procurement due to budget adjustments and revised assumptions regarding the maximum buy profile year decreased costs by 1 28 billion and several other changes such as for cost estimation methodologies and indices accounted for another 921 million decrease 51 The total cost estimates include research and development procurement military construction and acquisition related operations and maintenance associated with a program the Pentagon said These reflect actual costs so far and anticipated costs in the future with all estimates in fully inflated then year dollars 51 Scott Davis program executive officer for Combat Support amp Combat Service Support stated that overall the JLTV program expects to cut about five years off of the total program and save about US 5 9 billion as Oshkosh s final competitive bid was low enough so the Army decided to buy to budget and get more platforms each year which shrunk the total length of the contract and increased cost avoidances accrued each year 52 The U S Army disclosed that the JLTV was to be used as the platform for the upcoming Light Reconnaissance Vehicle LRV program rather than procuring a new system The LRV is to be an off road platform for carrying a suite of intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance sensors it is to be light enough to be carried by a CH 47 Chinook helicopter The JLTV was described as an interim LRV solution 53 It was also reported that the JLTV RV JLTV Reconnaissance Vehicle was to be incorporated into the JLTV technical data package and would be a kit option on future contracts 54 By Q4 2020 the LRV requirement had evolved to such an extent that it excluded the JLTV requiring a six person crew 1 The Army received its first seven JLTVs for test at the end of September 2016 According to the Army its first unit to receive JLTVs was to be an Infantry Brigade Combat Team in the 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum New York The bulk of their 500 HMMWVs were to be replaced by early 2019 According to the Marine Corps an infantry battalion within II MEF at Camp Lejeune North Carolina were to receive 69 JLTVs to replace the same number of Humvees in July 2019 The Marine Corps revealed they wished to adjust their acquisition objective for JLTV by 65 to up to 9 091 vehicles At this time overall JLTV requirements remained at 5 500 for the USMC and 49 099 for the army 55 In January 2017 the U S Air Force announced it was considering acquiring JLTVs for its security forces that protect missile launch facilities 56 The vehicles are used by security forces explosive ordnance disposal teams para rescue and personnel recovery units tactical air control party teams and special tactics forces At this time released documents revealed no further planned JLTV procurement for the period FY 2019 22 but the service was known to want to replace its entire fleet of 3 270 HMMWVs with JLTVs 57 In its 2018 budget the Pentagon requested 1 143 billion for the program The DoD requested 2 110 JLTVs for the Army 140 for the Air Force and 527 for the Marines 58 At AUSA 2016 Oshkosh displayed a JLTV General Purpose variant equipped with an EOS R 400S MK2 remote weapon system integrated with Orbital ATK s M230 LF 30 mm lightweight automatic chain gun 59 At AUSA 2017 JLTVs were displayed in three new configurations Oshkosh displayed a general purpose variant fitted with a Boeing compact laser weapon system a Kongsberg Protector LW 30 remote weapon system with a M230LF cannon and a communications suite that includes a Thales VRC 111 and Thales VRC 121 VIPER The company also displayed a utility variant equipped with the Boeing Maneuver short range air defense launcher including a M3P 50 cal machine gun M299 launcher with four Longbow Hellfire missiles sensor suite and a communications suite including a Thales VRC 111 Rafael displayed a general purpose vehicle fitted with the company s Samson dual stabilized remote weapon system with M230 LF and the Trophy Light active protection system 60 Following an announcement in December 2018 that a total of 500 JLTVs would be delivered by the end of March 2019 JLTV deliveries to the Army commenced the week of 7 January 2019 The first unit to receive JLTVs was the 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Stewart To coincide with the first fielding Oshkosh confirmed that over 3 000 JLTVs had been delivered to the Army and Marine Corps 61 In January 2019 the Army Reserve announced it was set to acquire 60 JLTVs for training in preparation for fielding to the entire force No date for actual fielding was given 62 On 20 June 2019 Dr Bruce Jette Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition Logistics and Technology approved the JLTV program s transition into full rate production FRP 63 In July 2019 an initial Sources Sought notice W56HZV19R0242 was issued for the A2 JLTV recompete program Four draft Request For Proposals RFPs followed these on 03 April 2020 11 December 2020 30 April 2021 and 29 October 2021 1 The Marine Corps declared initial operational capability for the JLTV on 2 August 2019 ahead of the scheduled June 2020 date 64 The Marines had previously announced on 28 January 2019 that its first JLTV had fielded that day at the School of Infantry West at Camp Pendleton California with around 1 000 further JLTVs scheduled to be fielded during FY2020 65 For FY 2020 1 October 2019 30 September 2020 the Pentagon s JLTV funding request totaled US 1 641 billion to procure 2 530 vehicles for the Army 1 398 for the Marine Corps with 3 986 more between FY2021 and FY2024 140 for the Air Force and 22 for the Navy Other FY 2020 budget activities included US 4 8 million for engineering and manufacturing development In March 2019 it was reported that Army s FY2020 budget request included proposed cuts to pay for modernization priorities with one of those proposed cuts being the JLTV It was reported that over the coming five years the service would spend US 800 million less on the JLTV program than initially expected this potentially resulting in the purchase of 1 900 fewer vehicles As of May 2019 the service had not changed its approved acquisition objective of 49 099 JLTVs 62 On 1 July 2020 Oshkosh stated that over 7 500 JLTVs had been delivered to the U S Army U S Marine Corps U S Air Force and U S Navy since the production contract was awarded in 2015 66 This order brought the total of JLTVs ordered for US forces to date to 15 052 In September 2020 a Justification and Approval J amp A for up to an additional 6 262 JLTVs sole source from Oshkosh was granted the original notice W56HZV 15 C 0095 P00282 published on 30 June 2020 This award will enable continued JLTV production industry arguing successfully that it required up to 33 months with the JLTV TDP package to be able to respond to the A2 JLTV RfP The up to 6 262 JLTVs approved will technically be delivered under a separate second JLTV contract but the original contract costings and timelines and remain Final orders must be placed in November 2023 with deliveries permitted until late 2025 but expected to conclude mid 2025 Permissible total orders under the original JLTV award were 16 901 JLTVs 1 When the U S Army unveiled its fiscal year 2021 FY 2021 budget request in February 2020 supporting budget documents detailed plans for the competitive follow on contract JLTV award in FY 2022 It was disclosed that the service wants to reduce its JLTV buy by US 201 6 million over the coming years but retaining a 40 099 procurement objective Two years of JLTV production cuts in FY 2020 and FY 2021 will now extend the full operational capability timeline out by three years until FY 2042 On 17 June 2020 Oshkosh announced the company had been awarded a 61 8M contract modification to increase available trailer options under the current JLTV Family of Vehicles contract from 32 to 3 541 The JLTV T JLTV Trailer was designed as an integral part of the JLTV Family of Vehicles 67 In February 2021 Oshkosh announced the company had produced its 10 000th JLTV and had received orders for 18 126 JLTVs in contracts totalling more than USD6 billion The first National Guard fielding of JLTV was the 19th SF in 3QFY21 On 26 January 2022 a Presolicitation Notice W56HZV 20 R 0072 was issued for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Family of Vehicles FoV Follow On the A2 contract The anticipated solicitation release date was 04 February 2022 with an anticipated proposal due date of 12 April 2022 actual release date was 09 Feb The planned period of performance for this contract is from September 2022 through September 2032 The awarded contract will be a single award five year requirements type contract with five one year options on a Cost Plus Fixed Fee and Firm Fixed Price basis The projected contract value is 7 3 billion with original contract award pricing retained plus inflation and the award is expected to call for a maximum of 15 425 A2 JLTV and 6 000 JLTV Trailers with deliveries to commence 18 months after contract award In addition to Oshkosh respondents to the RfP are expected to include AM General GM Defense and Navistar 1 As of April 2022 15 JLTV delivery orders had been placed the most recent of these in November 2021 and valued at USD591 million The order includes 1 669 vehicles and 868 trailers the vehicle total including 125 JLTVs for Brazil Lithuania Montenegro and Slovenia Deliveries are expected to be completed by September 2023 This latest order brings the total number of JLTVs ordered to date to 19 727 In summary known JLTV delivery orders for U S armed forces to date have been August 2015 201 as part of the original JLTV base award and for the test and evaluation phase March 2016 657 value 243 million September 2016 130 value 42 million January 2017 409 value 179 million August 2017 748 value 195 million September 2017 611 value 177 million December 2017 258 value 100 1 million February 2018 416 value 106 million June 2018 1 574 value 484 million November 2018 6 107 value 1 69 billion December 2019 2 721 value 803 9 million February 2020 1 240 value 407 3 million includes unspecified quantities for Slovenia and Lithuania as FMS July 2020 248 value 127 million November 2020 2 679 value 884 4 million brought the total of JLTVs ordered for U S forces to date to 17 731 and was technically the first order under the second contract Also included were 59 JLTVs valued at USD23 for Brazil Lithuania and Macedonia making the overall total 2 738 JLTVs November 2021 1 544 value including FMS is 591 million all orders include unspecified quantities of training support kits and or trailers Other operators Edit Outside of the United States a number of other countries have shown an interest in or have ordered the JLTV These include Belgium Brazil Lithuania North Macedonia Montenegro Romania and Slovenia All have ordered via FMS with the exception of Belgium which is a direct sale Portugal and the United Kingdom have expressed an interest in acquiring the JLTV Australia joined the TD phase of JLTV but ultimately opted to procure the locally produced Thales Hawkei India expressed an interest in joining the JLTV program but did not join 2 Technical description EditGiven the competitive nature of the JLTV competition and recompete only limited technical detail has been released by either the U S Army or Oshkosh Only basic outline dimensions and limited operating weight and automotive data is available 62 and is included in Specifications The JLTV is based around Oshkosh s TAK 4i i intelligent independent suspension system Around 26 000 military vehicles are fitted with an earlier version of the system 68 including the Oshkosh Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement MTVR Oshkosh Logistic Vehicle System Replacement LVSR and Oshkosh MRAP All Terrain Vehicle M ATV the TAK 4 system has been retro fitted to the Force Protection Inc Cougar and BAE Systems RG 33 MRAPs 69 The majority of systems supplied to date have been coil sprung The TAK 4i version fitted to the JLTV remains undisclosed but is not coil sprung and is of the variable adjustable ride height type with up to 20 inches 51 cm of wheel travel 25 more than the current standard 70 71 The JLTVs suspension aided egress system capability levels side to side and front to rear on slopes or grades when selected by the operator The front and rear suspension height can also be independently controlled for ship and transportability The suspension system has ride height control at all four wheels 62 Motive power is provided by a digitally controlled Gale Banks Engineering 866T V 8 diesel this based on the architecture of the General Motors Duramax LML 4 Power output is 340 hp Production of the Duramax LML engine concluded in 2017 the unit replaced by the Duramax L5P JLTV A1 models that were introduced in 2017 are powered by a derivation of this engine The A2 JLTV will be powered by the next generation of the Duramax engine production of the current Duramax MY2020 L5P scheduled to conclude Q3FY22 An Allison 2500SP six speed fully automatic transmission is fitted to all JLTVs 62 The JLTV has been designed to comply with the U S Army s Long Term Armor Strategy LTAS The LTAS system follows an A kit B kit principle with vehicles designed fitted for but not with protection Protection kits can be installed and uninstalled from vehicles in the field using basic tools The A kit is fitted on the production line and is a combination of a limited amount of armoring in difficult to access areas of the vehicle together with a significant amount of armor installation attachments and required support structures The bulk of the armor the B kit is installed in the field on an as required basis 6 Two soldiers can install B kit armor in five hours An 800 pound RPG protection kit can be installed in two hours at field level maintenance and completed by the crew within 30 minutes 72 The JLTV offers protection levels greater than those of up armored HMMWVs and comparable to those of original MRAP class designs but in an overall vehicle package that is considerably smaller and lighter than vehicles procured under the U S Marines MRAP procurement 73 The benefits of the A kit B kit principle are that armor is only fitted when required reducing vehicle wear and tear and by default whole lifecycle costs Improvements and or upgrades to armor are also far easier to integrate into an applique solution No quantity for JLTV armoring kits has yet been disclosed but it is anticipated that the estimated 65 000 kits will be procured on a one kit to three vehicle basis 6 The overall protection will include a spall liner to minimize perforation effects within a vehicle when the vehicle takes hostile fire 74 75 The JLTV has an automatic fire extinguishing system to protect the crew cabin 72 Fuel tanks are mounted externally and shielded by the JLTV structure Each crew seat has a combined seat and blast restraint device Ingress time for a crew of four in combat equipment is 30 seconds or less Egress with B kit doors is within 10 seconds 72 The only weight related data officially released includes a gross vehicle weight of 10 266 lb Payload for the two door variant is quoted as 2 318 kg payload for the four door variant is quoted as 1 590 kg The USMC required a vehicle that can be transported by their current and planned systems In April 2009 Marine Corps Commandant James Conway warned that the Marine Corps will not buy a vehicle that s 20 000 lb 76 Requirements called for the cabin heater to raise the crew compartment temperature from 40 F 40 C to 65 F 18 C in one hour The air conditioner should drop the temperature from 120 F 49 C to 90 F 32 C within forty minutes 72 The JLTV was to be equipped with a diagnostic monitoring system that will electronically alert the operator of equipment failures so that they can be fixed The electronic monitoring will observe the fuel air intake engine cooling transmission energy storage power generation and vehicle speed as well as other systems 74 Mobility Edit The Pentagon required at least 600 mean miles before an essential function failure 72 The vehicle was to be capable of traveling for 3 miles 5 km cross country having endured three 0 3 inch 7 6 mm perforations of half full main fuel tanks 62 74 The JLTV must also operate in altitudes from minus 500 feet to 12 000 feet and maintain full mission capability in temperatures from 40 to 125 F 40 to 52 C according to established requirements When temperatures drop well below zero the JLTV must start within one minute with no external aids kits or prior warming of the batteries The vehicle must be capable of traveling paved 350 miles 560 km at 35 miles per hour 56 km h or 300 miles 480 km in operational terrain on a single tank of JP 8 fuel Acceleration from 0 to 30 miles per hour 0 to 48 km h in 9 7 seconds on dry level hard terrain was required as a threshold requirement objective being 7 seconds as was the ability to ford 60 inches 150 cm of saltwater without a fording kit in forward and reverse while maintaining contact with the ground 72 62 Other tactically driven mobility requirements include a threshold 27 foot turning radius and the ability to climb 24 inch vertical obstacles in forward and reverse JLTV must be able to drive off an 18 inch vertical step at 15 mph and sustain no mechanical damage It will be capable of traversing a 20 degree V ditch that is 25 feet wide at an approach angle of 45 degree It can jump a 6 inch parallel curb at 15 mph and traverse a 20 foot flight of stairs at 5 mph It must climb a 60 percent dry hard surfaced gradient and traverse a 40 percent sideslope with no degradation in driver control 72 62 JLTV is transportable by sea rail and air The JLTV is transportable on all classes of ocean going transport ships with minimal disassembly It was required to be rail transportable on U S and NATO country railways Air transportability will be by fixed wing aircraft as large or larger than the C 130 Hercules and sling loadable with rotary wing aircraft such as the CH 47 MH 47 and CH 53 The proposed ambulance variant was to be air droppable by C 5 and C 17 fixed wing aircraft 77 The JLTV can be prepared in 30 minutes for transport by aircraft Maritime Prepositioning Force ships or rail This is aided by an adjustable height suspension 72 62 Versions Edit Early JLTV configurations The JLTV family and its nomenclature evolved throughout the development process and to date the U S Army has allocated M designations to four individual JLTV configurations 78 In JLTV s Initial Capability Document there were four payload options this later reduced to three Payload Categories A B and C By the time Capability Development Document version 3 3 was published at the conclusion of JLTV s Technology Development TD phase payload options had been reduced to only two and payload verbiage had been dropped replaced by reference to variants From that point on two stated variants were required the Combat Tactical Vehicle CTV and Combat Support Vehicle CSV 79 JLTV variants including companion trailer as of October 2017 The CTV configuration replaced the previous Category A and Category B configurations and was a 4 seat vehicle with a 3 500 pound payload The CSV replaced the previous Category C configuration and was a 2 seat vehicle with a 5 100 pound payload The JLTV family now consists of three base vehicle platforms Utility JLTV UTL Close Combat Weapons Carrier JLTV CCWC and General Purpose JLTV GP The Utility base vehicle platform is a two door configuration the General Purpose and Close Combat Weapons Carrier base vehicle platforms are a four door configuration Standard U S military M designators are applied base vehicle platforms when outfitted to a specific Mission Package Configuration These currently are M1278 Heavy Guns Carrier General Purpose vehicle platform in Heavy Guns Carrier Mission Package Configuration JLTV HGC M1279 Utility Utility JLTV UTL base vehicle platform in Utility Mission Package Configuration M1280 General Purpose General Purpose JLTV GP base vehicle platform in General Purpose Mission Package Configuration M1281 Close Combat Weapons Carrier Close Combat Weapons Carrier JLTV CCWC base vehicle platform in Close Combat Weapons Carrier Mission Package ConfigurationThere is also a companion trailer JLTV T which is towable by all JLTV variants 78 L ATV specific versions Edit Oshkosh showcased for the first time the L ATV Ambulance at the Association of the United States Army AUSA Global Force Symposium in Huntsville Alabama from 26 to 28 March 2019 The L ATV Ambulance is based on the utility configuration base platform and the rear can hold 4 litters or up to 8 seated patients or a combination of the two At present the L ATV Ambulance is not a JLTV variant but according to the company the design will be marketed to the U S Army and Marines 80 Hybrid electric JLTV Edit In January 2022 Oshkosh unveiled a hybrid electric Joint Light Tactical Vehicle eJLTV technology demonstrator that uses a commercially available lithium ion battery It takes the diesel engine of the JLTV about 30 minutes to charge the lithium ion battery and then the eJLTV can operate off of battery power for approximately the same amount of time It is also able to export up to 115 kW of power However the hybrid electric configuration adds more than 453 kg to the vehicle s curb weight JLTV T T Trailer Edit From June 2019 a dedicated trailer JLTV T is being procured for the JLTV as in service trailers were unable to safely match the performance and mobility of the JLTV A dedicated companion trailer for the JLTV the JLTV Trailer JLTV T formed part of the requirement from its early stages and the production contract awarded to Oshkosh included the option for trailer production However the decision was taken to leverage investment made in the HMMWV s Light Tactical Trailer LTT and not to resource procurement of the JLTV T As a result of this initial quantities were limited to test examples only However operational testing would demonstrate that the LTT was not compatible with a JLTV operating at mission profile speeds thus the JLTV was limited to the safe towing speed of the LTT to limit equipment damage In June 2020 Oshkosh announced that the company had been awarded a contract modification to increase available trailer options from 32 to 3 541 and as part of a November 2020 JLTV award 1 001 trailers were ordered First fielding of the JLTV Trailer is scheduled for March 2022 and until then the JLTV is used with the LTT but at a reduced mission profile The JLTV T is based on a bolted channel section chassis and features independent trailing arm and air suspension Wheels and tires are shared with the JLTV The cargo deck features removable sidewalls and tailgate an onboard stowage box included for these when the trailer is used as a flatbed ISO locks are provided on the loadbed for any required shelter of similar interface Operators EditCurrent operators Edit Montenegro Armed Forces of Montenegro Montenegro signed a US 36 17 million contract for the procurement of 67 JLTVs announced on 23 October 2019 The vehicles will equip Montenegro s NATO declared forces The first 20 vehicles arrived in 2020 and deliveries will be completed during 2023 Montenegro is to acquire 55 JLTVs in basic configuration eight in anti tank configuration and the remaining four in medical and command configurations 81 82 1 United States of America U S Army U S Marine Corps and U S Air Force Original contract award on 25 August 2015 Overall requirements have fluctuated but as of January 2022 were stated by Micheal Sprang JLTV Project Director to be Army 49 099 this figure has remained relatively constant Marine Corps 12 500 approx Air Force 2000 dependent on funding Navy approx 400 The initial JLTV contract award had a potential value of US 6 749 billion and called for a maximum of 16 901 JLTVs The second sole source to Oshkosh contract allows for 6 262 JLTVs to be ordered by November 2023 The JLTV re compete award will allow for 15 586 JLTV when awarded Current U S Army and Marines orders are for around 19 150 JLTVs 83 84 1 Slovenia Slovenian Ground Force Signed government to government agreement for the procurement of 38 Oshkosh JLTVs in November 2018 with deliveries to take place in 2021 2023 85 The JLTV order announced in February 2020 included JLTVs for Slovenia but the actual quantity was not disclosed 86 On 11 May 2021 38 JLTVs for the Slovenian Army arrived at the port of Luka Koper They are armed with station M153 Kongsberg 87 The vehicles were unveiled to the public on June 4th 88 In June 2021 Slovenia announced it will order another 37 JLTVs during 2021 89 On 14 September 2021 a contract was signed for an additional 37 JLTVs In December 2022 another 47 vehicles were ordered 7 vehicles will be donated by the USA The Slovenian army will acquire a total of 129 JLTVs 90 91 Lithuania Lithuanian Army On 21 November 2019 Lithuania and the U S signed a contract for 200 vehicles 92 The first batch of 50 was delivered in August 2021 93 A contract for another 300 vehicles was signed in October 2022 for a total of 500 vehicles ordered 94 Brazil Brazilian Marine Corps On 5 October 2020 the Brazilian Marine Corps signed a contract for a batch of 12 JLTVs to be delivered between 2022 and 2026 95 96 In September 2021 it was reported that the Brazilian Marine Corps CFN was looking to acquire an additional 48 JLTVs The 1st 2nd and 3rd Marine Infantry Battalions would each receive 12 of the vehicles while the remaining 12 would go to the Special Operations Battalion 1 The Brazilian Marine Corps received four JLTVs on 2 March 2023 97 98 Future operators Edit Belgium Belgian Army Belgium s Council of Ministers approved the purchase of 322 JLTVs in September 2020 for EUR135 million In service the JLTV will replace the Iveco LMV fleet for command and liaison missions and 20 examples will be configured as ambulances The contract also includes a multiyear open agreement for technical assistance First deliveries are anticipated in 2023 99 North Macedonia The U S Army announced a JLTV contract modification in November 2020 that identified North Macedonia as a customer Oshkosh announced in December 2020 that it had been contracted to produce and deliver 59 JLTVs to Brazil Lithuania and North Macedonia but with no breakdown Earlier funding statements allowed for equipping the Army of the Republic of North Macedonia with 33 JLTVs the first delivery of which were expected in late 2021 or early 2022 North Macedonia s Long Term Defence Capability Development Plan predicts the acquisition by 2024 of 96 JLTVs 100 Poland 26 M1279A1 in both passenger and cargo variants as a part of a sale of 116 M1A1 Abrams tanks 101 Romania The Romanian Ministry of National Defence MoND confirmed in July 2021 that it will acquire more than 100 JLTVs for Romanian special forces under a EUR47 million contract Oshkosh announced in a press release on 1 July 2021 that Romania was one of the countries for which it had been awarded a USD152 million order for JLTVs Potential operators Edit Greece Hellenic Army In June 27 2022 the Hellenic Army General Staff met with representatives from Elbit Systems after showing interest in the acquisition of SPEAR 120mm mortar systems mounted on the JLTV 102 103 Portugal Portuguese Army In April 2020 Portugal announced that it would be seeking to procure the JLTV through the US Foreign Military Sales program The intention was expressed to Janes by Lieutenant Colonel Ricardo Manuel dos Santos Camilo head of the capabilities branch of the army general staff s force planning division In 2019 EUR79 million US 86 million was allocated to the revised Portuguese Military Programming Law for the acquisition of JLTVs by 2030 for further army modernisation However the total procurement was under review and it was stated that it could change If purchased the JLTV would replace the Land Rover Defender series and the Toyota Land Cruiser HZJ73LV vehicles currently used by the Portuguese Army 104 105 United Kingdom British Army In June 2016 it was reported that to meet Package 1 of the Multi Role Vehicle Protected MRV P requirement the UK Ministry of Defence MoD was in talks with the Pentagon on acquiring the JLTV via the Foreign Military Sales FMS route We can confirm that we are talking to the US DOD regarding Package 1 of MRV P to inform our understanding of an FMS option for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle said an MoD spokesman 106 It was stated in January 2017 by Maj Gen Robert Talbot Rice the director of land equipment at the Defence Equipment and Support arm of the Ministry of Defence MoD that We are working through the Foreign Military Sales process A letter of request has been sent to our American colleagues and we expect a response in the next few months Talbot Rice told an audience of industry executives and military personnel at the International Armoured Vehicles conference in London on 24 January that the Army had opted for the single source purchase due to its ability to meet UK requirements and its value for money 107 In July 2017 the DSCA notified the US Congress of a possible sale of 2 747 JLTV vehicles and accessories to the UK 108 57 Jane s Defence Weekly reported in September 2019 that approval for the JLTV to enter the demonstration phase was received in April 2019 and that once the demonstration phase was complete in 2021 a new business case would be submitted to the MoD for approval to enter full rate production The requirement at that time stood at 821 vehicles for the Army and Marines 109 In June 2022 it was announced that the Package 1 Multi Role Vehicle Protected MRV P requirement purchase would not move forward cancellation of the MRV P Package 1 is not a direct cancellation of the JLTV acquisition and actually a result of the British Army reviewing its protected mobility needs after the 2021 Integrated Review and associated Command Paper Delaying any JLTV purchase will also allow the UK to await the outcome of the US Army JLTV recompete process 110 Gallery Edit JLTVs destined for the Marines 2016 Oshkosh L ATV configured as a JLTV and equipped with M153 CROWS II remote weapon system integrated with M2 Browning 50 caliber Heavy machine gun At AUSA 2017 a JLTV Utility variant mounting Boeing s SHORAD Launcher Slovenian JLTV Lithuanian JLTV with suspension lowered References Edit a b c d e f g h i j Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Janes Retrieved 29 March 2022 a b JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Jane s Retrieved 8 January 2021 Oshkosh secures 543m order to deliver JLTV JLTV T for US forces 19 December 2022 a b Humvee Replacement Powered by Banks Built Duramax Diesel trucktrend com August 2015 Retrieved 11 July 2017 Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Programme Army Technology a b c d e f g h i Executive Overview Logistics Support and Unmanned IHS Jane s Shaun C Connors amp Christopher F Foss 5 May 2015 Retrieved 19 May 2015 Andrew Feickert Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Background and Issues for Congress PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved 19 March 2015 Defense Markets Summary October 2007 Defense Update com Archived from the original on 26 October 2007 Retrieved 1 November 2007 A Little LUV for the Future Military Jeep Archived 15 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Defense Tech AM General and General Dynamics Announce Joint Venture Company globalsecurity org Melissa Davis Weak MRAP Order Wrecks Force Protection TheStreet Archived from the original on 4 February 2013 DRS Technologies Force Protection team to compete for JLTV programme SEC Info Force Protection Inc 10 K for 12 31 07 Lockheed Martin And Armor Holdings Announce Teaming Agreement For Joint Light Tactical Vehicles globalsecurity org 1 Wired com Blackwater Raytheon Pitch JLTV Candidate dead link Defense News MSN com Hotmail Outlook Skype Bing Latest News Photos amp Videos Archived from the original on 8 March 2007 Retrieved 29 October 2008 Kris Osborne 17 February 2009 GAO denies protest of Army JLTV award Army Times Army Times Publishing Co JLTV Sinking EFV Wobbly Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 7 October 2010 a b http images dodbuzz com wp content uploads 2010 08 Army Truck Program Report pdf Archived 29 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine ARMY TRUCK PROGRAM TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLE ACQUISITION STRATEGY 2 U S Army Race to build JLTV grows to 6 Archived from the original on 23 May 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2012 EMD contract Archived 27 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine DodBuzz com 23 August 2012 McLeary Paul Navistar Files Protest JLTV Program Comes To Halt Defense News 31 August 2012 McLeary Paul Navistar Withdraws JLTV Protest Defense News 4 September 2012 Army Marine Corps take delivery of JLTVs for user testing Army mil 27 August 2013 JLTV testing begins program on schedule budget Army mil 5 September 2013 Pentagon Inspector General to Audit JLTV DoDBuzz com 28 October 2013 Army to Start Next JLTV Competition This Fall DoDBuzz com 25 September 2014 Army JLTV on Track Despite Budget Uncertainty DoDBuzz com 15 October 2014 All JLTV Rivals Finish Limited User Testing Next Stop RFP Breakingdefense com 19 November 2014 a b Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV IHS Jane s Retrieved 30 March 2016 Oshkosh Wins JLTV Award Defense News 25 August 2015 Lockheed Martin Protests JLTV contract award to Oshkosh 8 September 2015 Retrieved 9 September 2015 Jen Judson 15 December 2015 GAO Dismisses Lockheed JLTV Protest Cites Pending Litigation DefenseNews Retrieved 16 December 2015 GAO Decision B 412056 B 412056 2 B 412056 3 Dec 15 2015 U S Government Accountability Office US Government Accountability Office Retrieved 13 March 2017 US Army Orders Oshkosh to Resumes JLTV Work Defense Update com 16 December 2015 Lockheed Files Injunction To Stop Work On JLTV Defensenews com 18 December 2015 Oshkosh To Continue JLTV Production During Lawsuit Defensenews com 12 February 2016 Lockheed Withdraws Protest of Army s JLTV Award Archived 19 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine DoDBuzz com 17 February 2016 Lockheed Drops JLTV Suit DOT amp E Knocks Reliability breakingdefense com Sydney J Freedberg Jr 18 February 2016 Retrieved 8 March 2016 DOT amp E FY2015 Annual Report DOT amp E Retrieved 8 March 2016 DoD Weapons Tester Report Sheds Light on JLTV Competition Defense News Jen Judson 2 February 2016 Retrieved 8 March 2016 Geoff Fein 18 February 2016 Lockheed Martin drops JLTV contract award challenge IHS Jane s Retrieved 1 March 2016 USMC Commandant Neller Marines Made Cuts In FY2017 JLTV Buy To Save ACV G ATOR USNI News Megan Eckstein 11 February 2016 Retrieved 8 March 2016 AM General unseats Oshkosh to build Joint Light Tactical Vehicle Defense News 9 February 2023 Daniel Wasserbly JLTV orders begin after protest dropped IHS Jane s Retrieved 30 March 2016 Cox Matthew 26 September 2016 Army Places Order for More JLTVs DoDBuzz com Military com Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 5 March 2017 News Desk 24 March 2016 JLTV defense update com Retrieved 7 April 2017 Jen Hudson 14 April 2016 Humvee Replacement Delayed for Army and Marine Corps DefenseNews Retrieved 12 May 2016 a b Daniel Wasserbly Pentagon JLTV programme costs decrease IHS Jane s Retrieved 30 March 2016 Daniel Wasserbly AUSA 2016 First JLTVs accepted new testing round to begin IHS Jane s Retrieved 7 October 2016 Stew Magnuson Army selects JLTV Truck for Light Recon Vehicle Program National Defense Magazine Archived from the original on 22 May 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2016 Daniel Wasserbly Pentagon budget 2018 Jane s Defence Weekly Retrieved 20 June 2017 Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV IHS Jane s Shaun C Connors Christopher F Foss Daniel Wasserbly Retrieved 7 August 2017 Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Background and Issues for Congress PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved 7 April 2017 a b Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV IHS Jane s Shaun C Connors Christopher F Foss Daniel Wasserbly Retrieved 9 September 2017 Daniel Wasserbly Pentagon budget 2018 JLTV procurement ramps up with USD1 billion request Jane s Defence Weekly Retrieved 25 May 2017 Oshkosh Corporation 6 October 2016 Oshkosh Exhibiting JLTV and M ATV Vehicles at AUSA 2016 OEMoffhighway com Retrieved 8 October 2016 Oshkosh makes Joint Light Tactical Vehicle more lethal Defense News 9 October 2017 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Shaun Connors Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV 19 03 2017 IHS Jane s Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV March 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2017 a b c d e f g h i Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV May 2019 IHS Jane s Shaun C Connors Retrieved 16 May 2019 Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV IHS Jane s Shaun C Connors Christopher F Foss Retrieved 25 June 2019 USMC declares IOC for JLTV fleet Shephard Todd South 28 February 2019 Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV These Marine units are the first to field the newest ground combat vehicle the JLTV Retrieved 6 March 2019 Oshkosh Defense Receives Order for 248 Joint Light Tactical Vehicles Oshkosh Defense July 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Oshkosh Defense Awarded 61 8M to Produce Trailers for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Oshkosh Defense 17 June 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Smooth ride tracing the path to improved mobility Jane s International Defense Review IDR 18 August 2014 Oshkosh receives contract for MRAP suspension units Jane s Defence Industry 29 September 2009 Light Combat Tactical All Terrain Vehicle L ATV Army Technology com L ATV Light Combat Tactical All Terrain Vehicle Archived 15 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Armyrecognition com a b c d e f g h Safety cost cuts help JLTV overtake Humvee 16 February 2012 Accessed 20 May 2015 Andrew Feickert JLTV Background amp Issues For Congress Congressional Research Service Retrieved 9 February 2015 a b c Osborn Kris 9 July 2007 Beefing up the Humvee s replacement Army Times Vol 67 no 51 Army Times Publishing Co p 18 John Pike Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Pentagon Seeks More Power From Vehicles permanent dead link DRAFT PURCHASE DESCRIPTION PD FOR JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE JLTV FAMILY OF VEHICLES PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 August 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2010 a b Shaun Connors Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV 19 03 2017 IHS Jane s Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV March 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2017 Joint Light Tactical Vehicle A Case Study PDF 20 August 2012 Archived from the original on 21 May 2015 Retrieved 19 May 2015 OSHKOSH DEFENSE TO PREMIER L ATV AMBULANCE AT AUSA GLOBAL FORCE SYMPOSIUM 2019 Oshkosh 26 March 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Montenegro receives first JLTVS Joint Light Tactical Vehicles manufactured by Oshkosh from US Defense News October 2020 Global Security army industry Defense Security global news industry army 2020 Archive News year JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 Sgt 1st Class Emily Anderson May 15 2019 JLTV training officially kicks off at Fort McCoy IAV 2020 JLTV interview with Michael Sprang Project Director Jane s Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Bozinovski Igor Fiorenza Nicholas 24 November 2018 Slovenia announces 4 4 JLTV procurement as it awaits Boxer offer IHS Jane s 360 Skopje London Archived from the original on 23 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 MO RS 12 May 2021 Vceraj so v pristanisce Koper prispela nova lahka oklepna kolesna vozila JLTV 4x4 proizvajalca Oshkosh ki jih je Tweet Retrieved 6 June 2021 via Twitter Vsak dan prvi 24ur com www 24ur com Retrieved 6 June 2021 JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 Ministrstvo v nakup dodatnih 99 lahkih oklepnih vozil Oshkosh www 24ur com in Slovenian Retrieved 25 September 2021 Predstavitev tovornih vozil 8x8 in lahkih kolesnih oklepnih vozil LKOV 4x4 za Slovensko vojsko GOV SI Portal GOV SI in Slovenian Retrieved 16 December 2022 Lithuania signs agreement to purchase 200 JLTVs from US ArmyTechnology 25 November 2019 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Lithuanian military receives new JLTVs from the US LRT 16 August 2021 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Lithuania buying 300 additional JLTVs from US LRT 18 October 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2022 JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 La Defense achete 322 vehicules blindes a roues a la societe americaine Oshkosh Fuzileiros Navais apresentam o JLTV Defesa Aerea amp Naval in Brazilian Portuguese 6 March 2023 Retrieved 7 March 2023 Jr Paulo Roberto Bastos Fuzileiros Navais recebem seus blindados JLTV Tecnodefesa in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 7 March 2023 JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 https defence24 com armed forces land forces abrams tanks and a great number of munitions for poland Synanthsh me Ekproswpoys Etaireiwn ELBIT SYSTEMS kai OSHKOSH DEFENCE sto GES www mod mil gr in Greek HELLENIC REPUBLIC MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEFENCE Retrieved 27 June 2022 Ellhniko Endiaferon gia SPEAR 120 xlst epi oxhmatwn OSHKOSH JLTV in Greek NEMESIS HD Retrieved 27 June 2022 Portugal seeks JLTVs Jane s 360 janes com Retrieved 12 April 2020 JLTV JAA Yearbook entry January 2021 update Janes Retrieved 8 January 2021 UK interested in the JLTV even though they have the excellent FoxHound SNAFU Retrieved 30 June 2016 British Army Works to Secure Oshkosh JLTV DefenseNews 24 January 2017 Retrieved 26 January 2017 United Kingdom Joint Light Tactical Vehicles JLTV and Accessories DSCA Retrieved 11 July 2017 British Army working on JLTV prototype Jane s Retrieved 23 September 2020 JLTV June 2022 Janes 6 June 2022 Retrieved 6 June 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joint Light Tactical Vehicle Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oshkosh Corporation DSEi 2017 JLTV UK and US update Sept 2017 AUSA 2015 Oshkosh Defense on their JLTV program October 2015 video JLTV on Defense Update com Oshkosh is JLTV July 2015 video JLTV Ready March 2015 video Oshkosh Defense L ATV page Army Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV EMD Phase page Army Joint Light Tactical Vehicle JLTV Low Rate Initial Production LRIP Full Rate Production FRP Phase Final RFP W56HZV 14 R 0039 page AUSA 2017 Flexible weapons integration on the Oshkosh JLTV video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joint Light Tactical Vehicle amp oldid 1145235691, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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