- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 110
As disected above, looks like the CF has a bit of a reprieve before MGS order placed.
In early December 2004 GDLS-C spokesperson Ken Yamashita noted, in the London Free Press, that the company is adapting the MGS vehicle for the Canadian order but production is not expected to begin until later next year.
December 09, 2004, By Matthew Cox; Army Times staff writer
Stryker officials hope redesign of MGS will fix jamming problem
Stryker program officials are hoping that redesigning the sophisticated loader on the Mobile Gun System will prevent the jamming problems that last year caused the vehicle to fail reliability tests. :
Still in development, the Mobile Gun System is planned as one of the 10 variants in the Stryker family of wheeled, armored vehicles and is equipped with a direct-fire, 105mm cannon to destroy bunkers and other hard targets.
The Army wants to field 72 MGS Strykers as part of the total 2,449 vehicles slated for fielding to the six approved Stryker Brigades and a seventh that is still in the planning phase.
[Funny, even Army Times can't seem to get their #'s right. 203x MGS required for 6x SBCTs.
With each SBCT containing: 27x MGS (+4 ORF), with MGS integral to each Inf Bn - to be used more as an over watch force to support infantry movement into urban areas.]
The MGS Stryker and a nuclear-chemical-biological reconnaissance vehicle are the only two variants yet to be fielded. Other variants include an Infantry Carrier Vehicle; Commander's Vehicle; Fire Support Vehicle; Mortar Carrier; Engineer Squad Vehicle; Medical Evacuation Vehicle; Reconnaissance Vehicle; and the Anti-Tank Guided Missile vehicle (ATGM). [...]
As previously noted,
A Oct 2003 report 'Stryker Brigades Versus the Reality of War' by Mr. Victor O'Reilly - an author and counterterrorism authority with an obvious bias for the MTVL upgrade, has some damning MGS contradictions and revealing information (reference report page 5 and pages 46 thru 54). Most Notably, "Executive Summary: STRYKER MOBILE GUN SYSTEM [MGS] & ITS PROBLEMS: Too heavy to be C-130 deployable, a key requirement; Cannon too powerful for Stryker Chassis; Does not carry enough ready main gun Ammunition; Auto loader jams and fails to select correct ammunition; Commander and Gunners positions so cramped they fit less than 5 percent of the population."
[Purportedly GDLS has expanded the interior turret basket to somewhat alleviate the cramped turret compartment ergonomics, as previously noted by Matt, but on the lowered 8x8 LAV-III.5 chassis the room for expansion is minimal - at most MGS can now fit 20-25 percent of the Armour crews.]
"The ammunition issue. Too little, too late, and in the wrong place. Serious problems with the MGS Autoloader. The Stryker MGS provides only an 8 round carousel. The further 10 rounds available in the replenisher [giving a total of 18] can only be accessed by taking the gun out of action for minutes. This is absolutely not something you want to do in combat with hostiles shooting at you. It is a matter of basic survivability. The MGS autoloader has a tendency to jam. The sensors in the MGS autoloader may not be able to recognize certain types of ammunition with brass casings (such as existing CF warshot). The MGS . . . autoloader cannot identify types with accuracy. Brass cased rounds are just not detected. Also, the Stryker gunner cannot set the fuze on anti-personnel rounds, therefore the MGS cannot fire with soldiers to the front [a major capability limitation]."
In early December 2004 GDLS-C spokesperson Ken Yamashita noted, in the London Free Press, that the company is adapting the MGS vehicle for the Canadian order but production is not expected to begin until later next year.
December 09, 2004, By Matthew Cox; Army Times staff writer
Stryker officials hope redesign of MGS will fix jamming problem
Stryker program officials are hoping that redesigning the sophisticated loader on the Mobile Gun System will prevent the jamming problems that last year caused the vehicle to fail reliability tests. :
Still in development, the Mobile Gun System is planned as one of the 10 variants in the Stryker family of wheeled, armored vehicles and is equipped with a direct-fire, 105mm cannon to destroy bunkers and other hard targets.
The Army wants to field 72 MGS Strykers as part of the total 2,449 vehicles slated for fielding to the six approved Stryker Brigades and a seventh that is still in the planning phase.
[Funny, even Army Times can't seem to get their #'s right. 203x MGS required for 6x SBCTs.
With each SBCT containing: 27x MGS (+4 ORF), with MGS integral to each Inf Bn - to be used more as an over watch force to support infantry movement into urban areas.]
The MGS Stryker and a nuclear-chemical-biological reconnaissance vehicle are the only two variants yet to be fielded. Other variants include an Infantry Carrier Vehicle; Commander's Vehicle; Fire Support Vehicle; Mortar Carrier; Engineer Squad Vehicle; Medical Evacuation Vehicle; Reconnaissance Vehicle; and the Anti-Tank Guided Missile vehicle (ATGM). [...]
As previously noted,
A Oct 2003 report 'Stryker Brigades Versus the Reality of War' by Mr. Victor O'Reilly - an author and counterterrorism authority with an obvious bias for the MTVL upgrade, has some damning MGS contradictions and revealing information (reference report page 5 and pages 46 thru 54). Most Notably, "Executive Summary: STRYKER MOBILE GUN SYSTEM [MGS] & ITS PROBLEMS: Too heavy to be C-130 deployable, a key requirement; Cannon too powerful for Stryker Chassis; Does not carry enough ready main gun Ammunition; Auto loader jams and fails to select correct ammunition; Commander and Gunners positions so cramped they fit less than 5 percent of the population."
[Purportedly GDLS has expanded the interior turret basket to somewhat alleviate the cramped turret compartment ergonomics, as previously noted by Matt, but on the lowered 8x8 LAV-III.5 chassis the room for expansion is minimal - at most MGS can now fit 20-25 percent of the Armour crews.]
"The ammunition issue. Too little, too late, and in the wrong place. Serious problems with the MGS Autoloader. The Stryker MGS provides only an 8 round carousel. The further 10 rounds available in the replenisher [giving a total of 18] can only be accessed by taking the gun out of action for minutes. This is absolutely not something you want to do in combat with hostiles shooting at you. It is a matter of basic survivability. The MGS autoloader has a tendency to jam. The sensors in the MGS autoloader may not be able to recognize certain types of ammunition with brass casings (such as existing CF warshot). The MGS . . . autoloader cannot identify types with accuracy. Brass cased rounds are just not detected. Also, the Stryker gunner cannot set the fuze on anti-personnel rounds, therefore the MGS cannot fire with soldiers to the front [a major capability limitation]."