Jane's International Defence Review
27 January, 2006
Canada develops new reconnaissance vehicle to strengthen light force capability
By Sharon Hobson
The Canadian Army is developing a new reconnaissance vehicle to fill the gap between the Mercedes Benz G-wagons and the Coyote Light Armoured Vehicle - Reconnaissance (LAV-Recce).
Lieutenant-General Marc Caron, Chief of the Land Staff, told IDR that among his equipment plans there is "another requirement that I need to fit. You've got the Coyote, [with its] surveillance and reconnaissance suite well-integrated, but sometimes the Coyote may be too big. So you need another smaller one - a mini-Coyote".
Work on this "mini-Coyote", or Light Armoured Reconnaissance Vehicle (LARV), is underway with plans to have it ready for the army in 2010-11, according to project director Major Frank Lozanski. The project is not yet funded but given the army's current operations in Afghanistan and its desire to enhance its light force capability, the project may receive a high priority.
"I guess what we're talking about is a vehicle somewhere around the size of a VBL [Panhard Vehicule Blinde Leger] or a Humvee or a RST-V [Reconnaissance, Surveillance and Targetting Vehicle]," said Maj Lozanski.
The LARV will carry a crew of three (maximum four), with common crew stations "allowing anybody in the vehicle to have access to any of the subsystems that are required to do any of the jobs anybody else is doing". Maj Lozanski said: "Obviously you can't drive the vehicle from the gunner's station, but there's no reason why, in theory at least, in an emergency that the driver couldn't fire the gun from his position." He added: "We're thinking about that for the Coyote as well."
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Ought to be good news for all the recce. by death, er, I mean recce by stealth types out there. If they're going to go small, they should at least get something that's somewhat protected, has a high degree of mobility and has the provision to throw some dismounts into (even though the crew requirement is for 3-4, 2 dismounts per callsign would be nice).
My suggestion: Wiesel 2. Large enough for a 4 man crew, surv. equipment, ammo, and stores, with capability for a remote-weapons station on the roof. Its rubber track is less maintenance intensive than conventional track, can maintain good road speeds, and has excellent cross-country mobility, all in a weight that can be transported by a CH-47.