ASCOD

This article is about the armored fighting vehicle. For the African Paralympic committee, see African Sports Confederation of Disabled.
ASCOD Ulan/Pizarro

Austrian Ulan
Type Armoured fighting vehicle
Place of origin Austria and Spain
Specifications
Weight 26.3 tonnes (29.0 short tons) (Pizarro)
28 tonnes (31 short tons) (Ulan)
Length 6.83 m (22 ft)
Width 3.64 m (12 ft)
Height 2.43 m (8 ft)
Crew 3 + 8 passengers

Armor rolled steel armor
options for explosive reactive armor and composite armor
Main
armament
30 mm Mauser MK 30/2
Secondary
armament
MG3 7.62×51mm NATO (Pizarro)
FN MAG 7.62×51mm NATO (Ulan)
Engine Diesel
600 hp (Pizarro)
720 hp (Ulan)
Suspension torsion bar and Piedrafita rotary dampers models AR01 and AR02.
Speed Road: 72 km/h

The ASCOD (Austrian Spanish Cooperation Development) armoured fighting vehicle family is the product of a cooperation agreement between Austrian Steyr-Daimler-Puch AG (in 1998 the production of heavy armed vehicles was sold out under the name Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeug, which is now the producer) and Spanish General Dynamics Santa Bárbara Sistemas (both companies are now divisions of a unit of General Dynamics). The ASCOD family includes the LT 105, a light tank equipped with a 105 mm gun, a SAM launcher, an anti-tank missile launcher, mortar carrier, R&R vehicle, Command & Control vehicle, ambulance, artillery observer, and the AIFV model. In Spanish service the vehicle is called Pizarro, while the Austrian version is called Ulan.

History

ASCOD prototype located in Spain

The ASCOD was designed to replace the older light armoured fighting vehicles of the Austrian and Spanish armies, such as the M113 armored personnel carrier and the Saurer APC. The Ulan, the Austrian version of the Pizarro, would provide a flexible complement to their heavy Leopard 2A4. The Ulan would allow the Austrian army to deploy rapidly and effectively over longer distances, especially for foreseeable future operations—such as troubled spots for UN operations.[1]

In 1982, Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeug initiated the conception phase for the development of a new infantry fighting vehicle. Following first talks with the militaries of Greece, Norway and Switzerland to find the desired requirements for a new IFV. The decision to develop a new IFV was made following the Bundesheer announced the military requirement for the Kampfschützenpanzer 90 (combat infantry fighting vehicle 90) in 1985.[2] Based on this, Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeug started the conception of the vehicle; however, it was clear that Austria would not order new IFVs in the next years and that the development costs exceeded Steyr's budget.[2] Therefore, in 1988, a cooperation with the Spanish company Empresa National Santa Barbara S. A. was signed, which resulted in the development being renamed to ASCOD (Austrian Spanish Cooperative Development).[2] Following this, the development of the ASCOD was started. The hulls were manufactured in Spain, while the ASCOD turrets (based on the SP-30 turret design used on the scout version of the Pandur) were made by Steyr in Austria. The first prototype was presented in 1991 in Sevilla[2] and tested by 1992 with production being possible only four years later.[3]

Following the numerous changed requirements during the conception and development phase of the ASCOD, the weight increased from an original 18.8 t to 25.2 t and finally 29.0 tonnes. The first prototype was trialed in Norway in 1993/94; however, Norway decided against buying the ASCOD and preferred the Swedish CV9030 instead.[2] Following the trials in Norway, a slightly updated third prototype was built, which essentially equals the version finally offered as ASCOD to Austria, Spain and other countries. In 1994, Spain decided to order four pre-series vehicles after successful trials of the prototype. In 1996, Spain ordered 144 vehicles with the designation "Pizarro". Due to financial reasons, Austria's order for the first 112 ASCOD vehicles did not happen until May 1999. The designation "Ulan" is used for the ASCOD in Austrian service. Four pre-series Ulan were given to the Austrian Bundesheer in April 2001 for the final qualification. The official handover happened in May 2001. In 2002, 28 Ulans were delivered, the next batch of 36 was delivered in 2003 and in 2004 the order was finished.[2] In contrast to the original prototypes, the "Ulan" was completely manufactured in Austria.[2]

The ASCOD was a very modern solution to bring both the Austrian and Spanish armour up to date. To put this into perspective, the Pizarro project was a part of the greater Project CORAZA (Project Armour), which was to replace Spain's M113 APCs, M60A3s, and M110 artillery pieces.[4] By 2005, the Austrian army was equipped with 112 Ulan vehicles[1] and Spain with 144 (123 IFV and 21 C2V).[5]

In 2004, the Spanish Ministry of Defence ordered another 212 Pizarros (170 IFV, 5 C2V, 28 Artillery observation, 8 recovery, 1 Engineering vehicle) for 707.5 million Euros,[6] with up to 356 units total planned.[7] By 2010 the cost of this second batch had increased to €845m.[8]

The improved ASCOD 2 vehicle was chosen by the UK MoD in March 2010 as the common base platform for the Scout Specialist Vehicle, which was later renamed Ajax. This selection was the result of the UK's Specialist Vehicle Programme. Around 300 British engineers at General Dynamics UK's Oakdale facility began developing the Ajax from the ASCOD 2 after being awarded the contract in 2010.[9][10] The ASCOD 2 Scout SV will serve as the replacement for CVR(T) family vehicles, including the FV107 Scimitar, the FV103 Spartan and the FV106 Samson armoured recovery vehicle.

General Dynamics offered the ASCOD 2 in an APC configuration to the competition for the Danish M113 replacement. The ASCOD 2 was not chosen, as the Danish army preferred a wheeled option with the Piranha 5.[11]

Deployment History

ASCOD entered service with the Spanish and Austrian armies in 2002.[7] The British Army is to receive its first ASCOD SV in 2020.[12] Despite being part of ISAF, Spain did not deploy the Pizarro IFV due to lacking a mine-protection kit.

Design

The rear compartment of an ASCOD Ulan

The main version of the ASCOD is the tracked infantry fighting vehicle. It follows a conventional layout with front-mounted engine and rear compartment for the dismounts. The driver's seat is located at the left hull front, whereas the commander and gunner are sitting in the slightly off-center-mounted two-men turret. The rear compartment also has two hatches at the roof. The Ulan can carry a total of 8 dismounts,[13] whereas the Pizarro only carries 7 dismounts.[14]

Armament

Ulan's SP-30 turret with the MK-30/2 gun

The ASCOD mounts a 30 mm Mauser MK-30/2 autocannon in a fully traversable electro-mechanical turret. The dual belt-fed 30 mm cannon, electrical stabilized on two planes, is able to fire at a rate of up to 770 rounds per minute and accurately engage targets on the move.[2] As secondary armament the ASCOD carries a 7.62 mm machine gun, which is depending on the user nation. The Spanish Pizarro is fitted with a MG-3 machine gun, whereas the Ulan is fitted with a FN MAG. The Ulan carries 200 rounds of 30 mm and 600 rounds of 7.62 mm rounds in the turret, a further 205 rounds for the 30 mm gun and up to 1,290 for the 7.62 mm machine gun are stored inside the hull.[2] The Pizarro only carries 300 rounds of main gun ammunition.[14] This armament is comparable to that of the M2 Bradley and the CV90, and performed well in a Norwegian vehicles trial, although it ultimately lost to the Swedish CV90.

Optics and fire control system

The Ulan is fitted with a digital fire control system built by Kollsman,[7] which uses some components of the Kürassier A2's fire control system.[2] The gunner's sight is manufactured by Elbit and provides 8X magnification in the day channel. The integrated thermal imager has 2.8X and 8.4X magnification, which can be accessed by both the gunner and the commander. The commander has a fixed daysight with 8X magnification.[2] The Pizarro uses the Mk-10 fire control system from Indra, which has a full solution digital ballistic computer, day channel, thermal channel and laser rangefinder. Future versions of the Mk-10 will be fitted with a new VC2 thermal imager.[7]

Protection

Smoke grenade launchers of the Ulan IFV
Ulan IFV fitted with the SAAB Barracuda MCS

The ASCOD is constructed of several rolled steel armour plates. The armour provides protection against 14.5 mm armour-piercing ammunition fired from distances of 500 meters or more along the frontal 60° arc,[15][16] with all around protection against 7.62 mm ammunition.[7] Furthermore, the turret is fitted with two banks of 76 mm Wegmann multi-purpose grenade launchers, which can fire smoke grenades for self-protection as well as high-explosive grenades with fragmentation warhead to a maximum range of 50 metres (160 ft).[2]

The Pizarro is additionally fitted with limited amounts of SABBLIR explosive reactive armour along the frontal arc and might be upgraded with more later.[3] The SABBLIR reactive armour increases protection against shaped charge warheads as used on rocket propelled grenades. The Ulan has been fitted with MEXAS composite armour,[17] which increases ballistic protection against up to 30 mm APFSDS rounds fired from a 1,000 m range over the forward 30° arc, and all round protection against 14.5 mm armour piercing incendiary (API) rounds from a range of 500 m.[2] The Ulan is also fitted with spall-liners in order to decrease casualties in case of armour penetration.[2]

Mobility

ASCOD Ulan in an army exercise

In terms of mobility, the Spanish Pizarro is fitted with a 600 horsepower (450 kW) MTU SV-183 TE22 engine, while the Austrian Ulan includes a 720 horsepower (540 kW) MTU 8V-199-TE20 engine. The smaller Spanish engine gives it a power-to-weight ratio of 21, and the larger engine one of 25, offering both vehicles excellent mobility. Both versions use a Renk HSWL 106C hydro-mechanical transmission, and suspension based on torsion bar[7] and rotary dampers; designed and manufactured by Piedrafita. The ASCOD uses Diehl type 129 tracks.[18] The Pizarro can go a maximum speed of 70 km/h, and a maximum reverse speed of 35 km/h.[2][3] The ASCOD has a ground-clearance of 450 millimetres (18 in). The Ulan can accelerate from 0 to 50 kilometres per hour (31 mph) in 14 seconds. It can cross 2.3 metres (7 ft 7 in) ditches, climb 950 millimetres (37 in) walls and ford through 1.2 metres (3 ft 11 in) deep rivers. It is able to drive at 75% gradient and 40% side slope.[2]

Variants & Derivatives

Scout SV
Spanish Pizarro IFV fitted with ERA
Austrian Ulan
Ulan driver training vehicle

The ASCOD chassis has been used for a number of vehicles in Spanish service and numerous private ventures developed for the export market. Aside from the IFV version, the ASCOD has been offered as light tank and scout vehicle.[19][20] The ASCOD Direct Fire light tank can mount a number of different commercial turrets with 105 or 120 mm tank gun. It is expected to weigh about 30 tonnes.

Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeuge has developed an improved version called Ulan 2, which however never was ordered by the Austrian government[21]

An improved version of the ASCOD, called ASCOD 2, has been developed by General Dynamics and was presented in 2004. The ASCOD 2 uses the more powerful MTU 8V 199T21 engine, which provides an output of 600 kilowatts (800 hp), together with a Renk HSWL 256 B transmission and Diehl 1028 tracks.[18] It has an increased gross vehicle weight of 38 tons with a growth potential to 42 tons. The ASCOD 2 has been presented as IFV (with the SP-30 turret of the original ASCOD), as APC with raised roof and armed with a M2 machine gun (in a BAE Lemur remote weapon station)[22] and as specialized APC for urban combat (designated ASCOD PSO).[18]

In June 2008, GDELS, in conjunction with KMW, announced Donar, a medium-weight 155 mm self-propelled artillery system based on the KMW' Artillery Gun Module (AGM) autonomous artillery system integrated with the ASCOD 2 chassis. A prototype has begun mobility and firing trials in Germany.[23][24]

In March 2010, the UK MoD announced that the ASCOD 2 will be used as based for the Scout Specialist Vehicle of the FRES program,[25] which later was renamed to "Ajax".

National variants

Ajax

Main article: Ajax (Scout SV)

The ASCOD vehicle was chosen by the UK MoD as the common base platform of which the Ajax would be developed. This selection was the result of the UK's Specialist Vehicle Programme. Around 300 British engineers at General Dynamics UK's Oakdale facility began developing the Scout from the ASCOD after being awarded the contract in 2010.[9][10]

These vehicles are the replacements for the CVR(T) family vehicles: FV107 Scimitar (armoured reconnaissance), FV103 Spartan (specialist personnel carrier) and FV106 Samson (recovery vehicle).

Recce Block 2 is expected to include ambulance, engineer reconnaissance and command & control replacements for CVR(T) FV104 Samaritan (armoured ambulance) and FV105 Sultan (command vehicle)

The Ajax is planned to include the following upgrades:[27]

The vehicle normal combat weight is 34 tonnes.

Pizarro

ASCOD Pizarro is built by Santa Bárbara Sistemas. It has multiple variants:[3]

Ulan

ASCOD Ulan is built by Steyr-Daimler-Puch Spezialfahrzeuge. It includes a more powerful 530 kW engine, and a different fire control system built by Kollsman.[7]

Operators

Map of ASCOD operators in blue

Current operators

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Quod Vadis Armour?
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Kosar, Dipl.-Ing. Franz. ""Ulan" - Der neue Schützenpanzer des Österreichischen Bundesheeres". http://www.bundesheer.at. Truppendienst magazine. Retrieved 17 September 2015. External link in |website= (help)
  3. 1 2 3 4 Santa Bárbara Sistemas website on ASCOD
  4. Candil, pg. 42
  5. Principales Programas de Armamento de DGAM
  6. Ministry of Defence
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Army Technology website on ASCOD
  8. Ministerio de Defensa (September 2011). "Evaluación de los Programas Especiales de Armamento (PEAs)" (PDF) (in Spanish). Madrid: Grupo Atenea. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  9. 1 2 "Britain to buy GD UK Vehicles", Defense News.
  10. 1 2 General Dynamics UK team awarded contract to deliver Specialist Vehicle for British Army, UK.
  11. de Larrinaga, Nicholas. "Denmark selects Piranha V, halts artillery buy". janes.com. Jane's IHS. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  12. http://www.janes.com/article/42735/update-uk-places-gbp3-5-billion-scout-sv-order
  13. "Schützenpanzer "Ulan"". bundesheer.at. bundesheer.at (Austrian army). Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  14. 1 2 "MATERIALES - Armamento Pesado Vehículo Combate". http://www.ejercito.mde.es/. Spanish Army. External link in |website= (help)
  15. "Der Schützenpanzer Ulan.". doppeladler.com. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  16. Article (in Spanish) on Revistanaval.com
  17. "References". rheinmetall-chempro.com. Rheinmetall Chempro. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  18. 1 2 3 4 5 "Superior performance in any environment - ASCOD" (PDF). General Dynamics European Land Systems (gdels.com). General Dynamics European Land Systems. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  19. 1 2 "ASCOD / SCOUT/RECCE" (PDF). gdels.com. General Dynamics European Land Systems.
  20. 1 2 "ASCOD / DF" (PDF). gdels.com. General Dynamics European Land Systems. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  21. Military Today website on the Ulan
  22. Foss, Christopher F. "Eurosatory 2014: GDELS-SBS displays latest ASCOD 2". janes.com. Jane's IHS. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  23. General Dynamics European Land Systems Press Release
  24. "DONAR - The revolution of artillery". kmweg.de. Krauss-Maffei Wegmann. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  25. "THE HOUSEHOLD CAVALRY & ROYAL ARMOURED CORPS - Future Rapid Effect System Specialist Vehicles (FRES SV)". http://www.armedforces.co.uk. armedforces.co.uk. Retrieved 22 September 2015. External link in |website= (help)
  26. LMT 105, ZA: Denel Land Systems.
  27. ASCOD 2 data, Army Recognition.
  28. http://www.janes.com/article/53167/scout-sv-to-be-assembled-in-uk

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.