IMI CombatGuard

Triton

Donald McKelvy
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Published on Jun 3, 2014

http://defense-update.com/20140603_co... - IMI (Israeli Military Industries) will unveil the CombatGuard - a light, agile off-road armored vehicle at the Eurosatory. Adapted to asymmetric and high intensity warfare, IMI claims it offers unprecedented protection, speed and mobility even in the most rugged terrain for an armored vehicle of its class.

http://youtu.be/w6XTTfUr6I4
 
"IMI's Combat Guard May Be The Most Extreme Armored 4X4 Ever Built"
by Tyler Rogoway

Source:
http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/imis-combat-guard-may-be-the-most-extreme-armored-4x4-e-1595753182

Israeli Military Industries might have created the most extreme wheeled armored vehicle ever with their unveiling of the Combat Guard. This baby packs 54-inch tires, close to three feet of ground clearance, weighs eight tons and can go just about anywhere. Think rock crawler meets Stryker meets Lamborghini LM002 in Halo.

My recent piece on Panhard's innovative CRAB showcased a rugged buggy-like scout/recon vehicle with state of the art electronics and an optional big ass cannon. Well, IMI's Combat Guard is like a CRAB that has been shooting roids and working in a crude outdoor gym for months while living on nothing but red meat, raw eggs and Red Bull. This thing is really wild, and the engineers over at IMI are fully aware that it takes the armored personnel and scout vehicle concept to a whole new extreme.

Although the Combat Guard's armored roots come from IMI, its incredible off-road capabilities come from the Ido Off-Road Center, which developed the Zibar racer and other less extreme off-road military scout vehicles. The collaboration between these two well respected and forward thinking firms resulted in an incredible all terrain vehicle in its own right, regardless of the fact that it is also a configurable battle wagon.

The Combat Guard is powered by a 6.5L GM Cobra Diesel that puts out 300 hp, although up-rated versions may also be offered in the future. None-the-less the Cobra power-plant can propel the truck up to about 95 mph on-road and 75mph off-road on her massive 54-inch tires.

On the slower side of the envelope, Combat Guard features 90 degree approach and departure angles, can climb 70 degree slopes and can wade through five feet of water. It can also clear a two-and-a-half foot vertical obstacle, which was a key requirement for fighting in urban areas.

IMI is pushing that the concept is a clean-sheet design and that it won't suffer from frame cracking and other wear issues that adapted commercial and logistical vehicle chassis that were never designed for prolonged off-road combat suffer from today.

As much APC is a scout vehicle, the Combat Guard's cabin seats up to eight fully armed soldiers and the floor is elevated high above the truck's bottom which indicates the use of a "v" shaped underbelly, or a multiple tiered collapsible composite blast absorbing structure. This would give the occupants a decent shot at surviving a mine of IED strike from below, which has become an all to popular and deadly tactic among insurgents in Israel's part of the world.

The Combat Guard concept is a modular one, with different cabin configurations and designs available for different missions. For instance, a heavily armored version that sacrifices internal volume, speed and range for survivability in urban environments, and a stripped down version that packs offensive punch for scouting operations over open terrain. Other variants optimized for command and control, peace keeping and border patrol are also being developed.

Multiple remote controlled weapons systems are being offered with Combat Guard, from heavy machine guns to mortars and automatic grenade launchers, all controlled within the protected confines of the vehicle's cabin.

Currently, the promising IMI/General Dynamics "Bright Arrow" weapons and active protection system turret is integrated with the vehicle. This system includes a medium or light machine gun, along with optics for aiming and surveillance, tied to a flat panel display and joystick. Attached to it is an active and passive protection system. The passive part of the system uses an electro-optical jammer, which blinds enemy FLIR targeting systems, while the active "hard kill" part of the system uses an array of radars mounted around the vehicle that detect incoming RPGs and missiles. This system cues the turret to fire a mortar-like projectile at the incoming threat, and this projectile flies downrange and detonates when it gets within lethal range of the RPG, rocket or missile.

http://youtu.be/GduLj65DwNM

Although active protections systems sound like science fiction, Israel has paved the way for their use, and their Trophy system, mounted on the IDF's Merkava tanks is known to be highly effective.

Apparently, IMI has been very smart about how they source the parts and electronic components for their new promising combat vehicle as the majority of them are said to be produced in the USA. This means America's foreign aid can be used to purchase the majority of the vehicle.

I have to say, although the name sucks (it's actually called "Bodyguard" in Hebrew), the Combat Guard really is amazing when you take into account where it can go and what it can do. The fact that it was purpose designed and built by masters in the off-road racing industry to traverse mud, rocks, rubble, sand and dirt lends confidence that it may be actually able to reliably do all that it claims. Also, the fact that it can hold eight troops in a scalable, armored cocoon and features an active protection system based on a proven technology is really a plus.

Although the vehicles are superficially similar in looks, IMI went a different direction than Panhard's CRAB, focusing on extreme mobility, occupancy and survivability over offensive punch and a low profile. Then again, the CRAB is not an APC at all, but it is nice that the Combat Guard can be either an APC or a scout vehicle, and hey more room is never a bad thing in a combat zone.

The rumor is that Israel will be buying and testing these armor encrusted 4X4s out in the near future, but the real question is will these extreme off-road fighting vehicles make their way into other nations' arsenals, especially the USA's? Considering that the majority of the vehicle and its weapon systems are built right here in the land of the free and the home of the brave it may actually have a shot.
 
IMI CombatGuard on display at Eurosatory 2014 in Paris.

Source:
http://www.autobild.de/bilder/g-klasse-und-co-in-uniform-5166066.html#bild36
 

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Photos of IMI CombatGuard.

Source:
http://defense-update.com/20140603_combatguard.html#.U6sOC7En8fw
 

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Explaining the rationale for the vehicle's design, Dan Ze'evi, director for marketing communications within IMI, told IHS Jane's : "We have a lot of retired officers from the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) who are very close to the needs of the army. We concluded there is a need for a special vehicle - not just for the IDF - that can bring soldiers from one point to another in very difficult terrain. The idea is to have a highly protected platform that moves very quickly and can travel in terrain where you wouldn't expect a vehicle to operate."

Source:
http://www.janes.com/article/39559/eurosatory-2014-imi-reveals-combatguard
 
The Rally Paris-Dakar look won't help.
(1) 6 kg TNT underbelly protection rating is unimpressive, and worse than for example Dingo.
(2) The thing may have the proportions of a rally car, but it is huge.
(3) spare tire logistics will be ridiculous
(4) war of occupation are running out of steam anyway
 
Yeah, that has been done already, a real, full-size Halo 'Warthog based on a Humvee..see the 'ultimate technical' thread..
 
"IMI Unveils Self-Defending Armored Troop Transport"
Jun. 14, 2014 - 12:34PM |
By BARBARA OPALL-ROME

Source:
http://www.defensenews.com/article/20140614/DEFREG/306140015/IMI-Unveils-Self-Defending-Armored-Troop-Transport

TEL AVIV — State-owned Israel Military Industries (IMI) has concluded initial prototype testing of an armored, actively protected, wheeled vehicle designed to defend maneuvering ground troops against anti-tank missiles and rocket-propelled grenades.

The 6-ton, four-wheel-drive CombatGuard is built to deploy up to six infantrymen while Bright Arrow, the active protection system (APS) mounted on top of the vehicle, independently searches and responds to incoming threats.

IMI plans to unveil the Bright Arrow-equipped CombatGuard vehicle this week at the international Eurosatory exhibition in Paris, executives here say.

“As far as we know, it’s unique in the world because it was designed from the very beginning for optimum operational performance in harsh, high-threat conditions,” said Alon Fridman, manager of IMI’s Infantry and Special Forces Directorate.

“It’s built to rapidly deploy protected forces into and across theaters … and to transition seamlessly from routine border control and stability operations to high-intensity warfare,” said Fridman, a brigadier general in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) reserves.

In a June 2 interview, Fridman said the APS-equipped CombatGuard embodied central, hard-learned lessons from Israel’s 2006 Lebanon War, where he served on theater command staff of the IDF’s Northern Command.

“It’s a very flexible vehicle that allows forces to come in from different directions despite the threat and without having to be concerned about terrain obstacles.”

Israeli forces in the 34-day war against Lebanese-based Hezbollah suffered significant setbacks due to poor maneuvering capabilities in the face of anti-tank missiles and other threats.

Bright Arrow, he said, is now in final phases of developmental testing. It combines hard-kill and soft-kill active protection with a stabilized, automatic 7.62mm machine gun all integrated in a single pedestal and mounted atop the armored off-road vehicle.

Based on the firm’s Iron Fist APS, Bright Arrow uses electro-optical and radar sensors to search for threats. Once threats are classified and designated, the system’s multi-layered countermeasures determines whether to neutralize threats through electro-optical jamming, deflect them by smoke or destroy them by firing hard-kill projectiles.

“It will give you the ability not only to protect your forces, but to attack the enemy that fired at you,” Fridman said.

According to IMI material, CombatGuard can carry a 1.2-ton payload at maximum road speeds of 150 kilometers per hour. Off-road performance provided by customized 54-inch wheels and its 300-horsepower diesel engine allow it to ford water up to 1.5 meters deep and climb vertical obstacles up to 80 centimeters high while driving forward or reverse.

Fridman said the modular design allows for vehicles customized for multiple missions, including scout, command, combat intelligence and communications support.

“We’re going public with this system; and we’re ready to hear feedback that will help us integrate new requirements and performance specifications for follow-on versions based on customer demand,” the IMI executive said.

Developed with subcontractor Ido Off Road Center of Pardes Hana, Israel, CombatGuard is a self-funded initiative by IMI, Fridman said, with input and feedback provided by the Israel Defense Ministry and IDF Ground Forces Command.

When asked about the system, an IDF officer involved in ground warfare development programs said the vehicle promised “significant operational advantage.”

He noted, however, that IDF budget constraints mean “very low likelihood” of IDF funding before 2017, pending conclusion of higher-priority programs in various stages of downsizing and schedule delays.

In a recent interview, IMI Chairman Udi Adam said the firm’s business portfolio for the coming years will accent systems that are “multipurpose, highly maneuverable, very defended and affordable.”

Adam cited the Iron Fist APS, from which Bright Arrow was based, as a future growth engine for IMI, which, he insisted, continues to invest in research and development and grow its portfolio, despite ongoing privatization plans.

In November, an Israeli government ministerial committee unanimously endorsed a plan to privatize the debt-ridden, yet strategically significant and potentially profitable defense firm.

Aside from classified and critical technologies, such as heavy propulsion for ballistic missiles and launch vehicles, which will remain in government hands, the firm will be sold as a single unit, with an estimated value exceeding 2.5 billion shekels (US $720 million).

The firm has a backlog of some US $1.5 billion extending through 2016 and annual sales of some $550 million.

The government is expected to release a competitive, international bid for the purchase of IMI in early 2015.

“At the end of this process, IMI will operate as a privately owned defense company focused on core capabilities and leading technologies optimized to the dynamic and changing market,” he said.
 
lastdingo said:
The Rally Paris-Dakar look won't help.
(1) 6 kg TNT underbelly protection rating is unimpressive, and worse than for example Dingo.
(2) The thing may have the proportions of a rally car, but it is huge.
(3) spare tire logistics will be ridiculous
(4) war of occupation are running out of steam anyway

I believe that the IMI CombatGuard is more of a fast attack vehicle with the emphasis on speed and maneuverability that has more protection and interior space than the dune buggy-inspired light attack vehicles.
 
The center of gravity is high and the axles are very narrow. This thing is going to have serious rollover problems.
 
sublight is back said:
The center of gravity is high and the axles are very narrow. This thing is going to have serious rollover problems.

Would there be ways to mitigate the rollover risk considering that the vehicle is intended to be highly maneuverable at high speed over uneven terrian?
 
Triton said:
sublight is back said:
The center of gravity is high and the axles are very narrow. This thing is going to have serious rollover problems.

Would there be ways to mitigate the rollover risk....

Ford, GM, and Chrysler would love to know how to do that now. Taking the human driver out of the loop is the easiest way.
 
sublight is back said:
Ford, GM, and Chrysler would love to know how to do that now. Taking the human driver out of the loop is the easiest way.

Then I guess it is up to driver training so that operators know what the vehicle can and can't do.
 
True that, & a 'Baja'-type run over the bloody Negev oughta 'bout do to sort the press-ons from the poseurs..
 
Reminds me on the "moose test" problems encountered by a well knowm European
manufacturer of cherished cars, which were at least alleviated by the use of a electronic
control system. In this case, of course, this could lead to limitations of the off-road performance,
I think, as the threshold for inclination in either direction probably has to be kept well below
the actual tipping angle.
 
Source:
http://warfaretech.blogspot.com/2014/06/eurosatory-2014_8730.html
 

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