FV438 Swingfire | |
Origin: | United Kingdom |
Type: | Anti-tank missile carrier |
Is Vehicle: | yes |
Length: | 5.1m (16.7feet) |
Width: | 3m (10feet) |
Height: | 2.7m (08.9feet) |
Weight: | 16.2 t |
Suspension: | torsion-bar, 5 road wheel |
Speed: | 52km/h |
Vehicle Range: | 480km (300miles) |
Primary Armament: | Two Swingfire launchers with 16 missiles |
Secondary Armament: | 7.62 mm L7 GPMG, smoke dischargers |
Armour: | 12.7 mm max |
Engine: | Rolls-Royce K60 multi-fuel |
Crew: | 3 |
Engine Power: | 240hp |
Pw Ratio: | 15.7 hp/tonne |
The FV438 Swingfire was an armoured anti-tank vehicle of the British Army.
It was derived from the FV430 series of vehicles by converting the FV432 to accommodate a launcher for Swingfire anti-tank guided missiles.
It had two firing bins and could carry fourteen missiles, which could be reloaded from inside the vehicle. Instead of using the vehicle mounted Hensoldt 1x & 10x Military Periscope Monocular Guided Missile Sight, firing satiation and guidance system a remote separated "Barr & stroud" thermal imaging sight and control unit could be deployed and the missiles aimed and fired from up to 75 metres away and 15m above or below the vehicle, allowing the vehicle to remain camouflaged, completely hidden from the enemy in dead ground; the Swingfire missile was capable of making a ninety-degree turn immediately after firing into the controllers line of sight.
When FV438s entered service in the 1970s, they were operated by specialised anti-tank units of the British Infantry and Royal Armoured Corps. In 1977, the anti-tank role was transferred to the Royal Artillery, which formed the FV438s into four independent Royal Horse Artillery batteries, one for each Armoured Division in the British Army of the Rhine. In 1984, the Royal Artillery relinquished the anti-tank role and the FV438s were formed into guided-weapon troops (each of 9 vehicles), one for each Armoured Regiment.[1] [2] [3] [4]