M901 ITV explained

Is Vehicle:yes
Type:Anti-tank missile carrier
Origin:United States
Wars:Persian Gulf War
Iraq War
M901 ITV
Length:4.86 m (15 ft 11½ in)
Width:2.69 m (8 ft 9¾ in)
Height:2.94 m (9 ft 8 in) targeting head stowed, 3.41 m (11 ft 2 in) head extended
Weight:12 tons
Crew:4 (squad leader, gunner, loader, driver)
Speed:40 mph (64 km/h) on road
Vehicle Range:300 mi (480 km)

The M901 ITV (improved TOW vehicle) is an American armored vehicle introduced into service in 1979, and designed to carry a dual M220 TOW launcher. It is based on the M113 armored personnel carrier chassis. The M901 ITV is no longer in service with the United States Army, its primary user.

Equipment

The M901 ITV provides the crew and weapon system protection from small-arms fire and artillery fragments. The squad leader has a 270-degree range of view through the squad leader's periscope (SLP). The turret launcher has the capability for day and night acquisition and tracking of targets, and it provides firing coverages of 360 degrees in azimuth and +35 to -30 degrees in elevation. The ITV has stowage provisions for tripod-mounted TOW components configured so the ground system can be dismounted and set up in three to five minutes. In addition, the ITV is completely amphibious and is air transportable. It has the following characteristics:

The system is capable of firing two missiles without reloading and carries ten TOW rounds in the missile rack. Reloading is performed under armor protection and is accomplished by tilting the launching apparatus back so that the crew can reach the turret through the carrier's rear roof hatch. The missile launcher targeting head is at the end of a pivoting arm which raises the launcher assembly for firing. When stowed, the turret is aimed down and to the rear of the vehicle. A major limitation of the M901 is that it is practically unable to move while the turret is in firing position and unable to fire while it is in the stowed position. A common workaround is to move the vehicle while the turret is in the loading position, thereby reducing the amount of time to get the turret in a fire position as opposed to the stow position. Moving from the firing to the stowed position is a procedure that takes several seconds and some skill on the part of the operator.

Variants

Operators

Current operators

Egyptian Army

Hellenic Army

Jordanian Armed Forces

Kuwait Army - 58

Royal Moroccan Army

50 in service with the Pakistan Army.

Portuguese Army: 4 in service since 1993.

Royal Thai Army

Tunisian Army

Former operators

Captured from Kuwait and fielded during 2003 invasion[2]

United States Army

Similar vehicles

The M981 FISTV (fire support team vehicle) armored vehicle is based on the M901 ITV and closely resembles it, in a deliberate effort to make it less conspicuous on the battlefield.

The M901 is similar to the NM142 used by the Norwegian Army and the ZT3 Ratel IFV variant used by South African National Defence Force.

The YPR-765 PRAT uses the same turret as the M901 but on the hull of the AIFV, an improved M113.

The M1134, based on the Stryker, is the current armored tank destroyer of the U.S.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Excess Defense Articles . Defense Security Cooperation Agency . 2011-12-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120114174201/http://www.dsca.mil/programs/eda/search.asp . 2012-01-14 .
  2. Book: Debay, Yves. Operation Iraqi Freedom: Victory in Baghdad. Yves Debay. Concord Publication. 962-361-067-X. 2003. Special Obs 27. 50.