Terrier Armoured Digger Explained

Terrier Combat Engineer Vehicle
Type:Combat Engineer Vehicle
Origin:United Kingdom
Is Vehicle:yes
Is Uk:yes
Designer:RO Defence
Design Date:2002-2005
Manufacturer:BAE Systems Land (UK)
Production Date:2010-2014
Number:60
Length: overall
Height: overall
Crew:2
Armour:Steel
Primary Armament:7.62mm machine gun
Engine:Caterpillar C18 diesel
Drive:Tracked
Transmission:Allison X300-10 automatic
Suspension:Hydropneumatic
Ref:Janes

The Terrier vehicle is an air-transportable armoured combat engineer vehicle for the Royal Engineers. It was developed as a replacement vehicle for the FV180 Combat Engineer Tractor used by the British Army.

Design

The vehicle weighs about 30 tonnes, light enough to be air transportable by C-17 Globemaster III or Airbus A400M.

A clamshell front bucket and side-mounted excavator arm will allow the vehicle to perform earth-moving and obstacle-removing tasks. It will have mine protection and can be operated by remote control from up to 1000m (3,000feet) in dangerous environments such as mine clearance. In normal operations it will have a crew of two. It has enhanced modular armour and will be faster at up to 70kph and more mobile than the FV180 Combat Engineer Tractor, and has 360-degree day-and-night-vision systems.

The contract to design and build the vehicle was won by BAE Systems Land and Armaments in the UK in July 2002.

Other companies have been subcontracted to provide expertise in specific areas. These companies, together with an indication of their involvement, include:

History

A prototype vehicle was officially unveiled on 28 May 2005.

BAE Systems built four demonstrator vehicles for trials. They went into production in their factory at Newcastle upon Tyne. A re-baselined Terrier programme was on track with reliability growth trials contracted for early 2010. Manufacture of the first TERRIER production hull began on 27 January 2010 at the company's Newcastle plant. The vehicle is in service as of 5 June 2013. A total of 60 vehicles were delivered to the British Army.

The French Military has shown an interest in purchasing Terriers from the UK.

Crew training

Training of the Terrier crews is carried out in the Terrier Mission Crew Trainer (MCT) developed by BAE Systems Integrated System Technologies (Insyte) at their plant in Fife, Scotland. The trainer comprises a high fidelity simulated crew cab, with commander and driver positions, mounted on a motion platform, and surrounded by a 360 degree, rear projection, visual system. The MCT allows crews simulate driving, digging and other vehicle functions. Four MCTs are in development for the British Army.

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