Force Dynamics LLC, a joint venture between Force Protection Inc. (FRPT) and General Dynamics [GD] Land Systems, on Wednesday said it was awarded a $1 million contract for two Cheetah light-weight, high mobility Production Representative Vehicles (PRVs) for the Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command (TACOM) Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain Vehicle (M-ATV) program.
The two vehicles were delivered on Feb. 23 and met the government’s initial requirements.
BAE Systems and Oshkosh Corp. [OSK] have separately delivered two prototype M-ATV vehicles to the government for testing.
The Cheetah, which has been in development since late 2005, previously successfully passed testing to MRAP I survivability levels and has undergone initial mobility and durability testing at the Army’s Nevada Automotive Test Center.
Damon Walsh, executive vice president for Force Protection and program director of Force Dynamics, said: “Delivery of these first test vehicles and the subsequent sale to TACOM is an important milestone gate in the M-ATV competition. We have long believed that there was a need for a lightweight, highly mobile and highly survivable tactical wheeled vehicle to supplement the current fleet. We are proud, not only to have pioneered the MRAP category of vehicles with our Cougar MRAP, but to have foreseen–through the development of the Cheetah–the need to evolve the category with enhanced mobility to navigate the rugged terrain and wider variety of missions that characterize the conflict in Afghanistan. Our troops can’t afford to choose between mobility and survivability; they deserve both and the Cheetah was designed to meet this very requirement.”
The Cheetah provides the same level of survivability as the Cougar at approximately half the curb weight. The M-ATV Cheetah incorporates several improvements to the original Force Protection Inc. Cheetah, including independent suspension, additional interior capacity, and a significantly increased power-to-weight ratio.
The partnership between Force Protection and General Dynamics Land Systems as well as a strong suite of original equipment manufacturers and partners will allow Force Dynamics to successfully execute on the aggressive procurement schedule required to deliver this urgently needed survivability solution to the conflict in Afghanistan.
Together, Force Protection and General Dynamics have successfully delivered over 3,000 MRAP Category I and Category II vehicles under the MRAP program.
Force Protection has commenced low-rate production of the Cheetah at its Ladson, S.C., facility and Force Dynamics has begun to procure long-lead materials to move from limited to extended Cheetah production.
Mike Cannon, chairman of the board for Force Dynamics and vice president, Ground Combat Systems, at General Dynamics Land Systems, said, “We are confident that the respective strengths of each of the partners contributing to this effort position our submission extremely well. We believe we offer an unmatched combination of research and development expertise; manufacturing ability and an excellent logistics network to our customer. We are excited to enter the testing and evaluation phase of the M-ATV program and to have the continued opportunity to serve our customer and the warfighter with some of the most important and life-saving equipment on the battlefield.”