Light Strike Vehicle
{{Short description|American light attack vehicle}}
{{about|the military vehicle used primarily by the US military|the Singaporean-built vehicle|Light Strike Vehicle (Singapore)}}
{{Infobox weapon
|is_vehicle=yes
|name= Light Strike Vehicle
| image= Fast-Attack-Vehicle-1.jpg
| image_size = 300
|caption=
|origin= United States
|type= Light Attack Vehicle
|service= unknown–present
|used_by=
|wars= War on Terrorism
|design_date= unknown
|manufacturer= Chenowth Racing Products
|production_date=
|number=
|weight= 960 kilograms
|length= 4.08 m
|width= 2.11 m
|height= 2.01 m
|crew= 1 driver and 1 gunner + 2 passengers
|armour=
|primary_armament= 1 X 12.7 mm M2 caliber HMG, 1 x 5.56 mm M249 SAW LMG, 1 x 7.62 mm M60 or M240 series GPMG
|secondary_armament= 2 x AT4 light Anti-Tank Weapons, or 1 x TOW
|engine= Diesel
|engine_power= ?
|pw_ratio= ?
|suspension= ?
|vehicle_range= 500 km
|speed= 130 km/h on-road; 110 km/h off-road.
}}
The Light Strike Vehicle (LSV) is an improved version of the Desert Patrol Vehicle (DPV), which it was designed to replace. Special operation groups adopted the LSV for its small size and high mobility. It is part of the family of Internally Transportable Light Strike Vehicles (ITV-LSV).[http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/ground/lsv.htm Light Strike Vehicle] As the name suggests, it is used for fast hit-and-run style raids, scouting missions, special forces support, and low intensity guerrilla warfare.
Design
=Countermeasures=
The LSV is entirely unarmored, and thus offers no protection from small arms fire. The driver and passengers sit side by side in front, with the gunner sitting in an elevated rear-central seat in front of the engine. The gunner's seat can spin around to operate the 7.62 mm GPMG.
=Mobility=
=Armament=
Users
File:Light Strike Vehicle operators.png
Unlike the DPV, the LSV has had export success and is marketed as a light attack vehicle. The current generation model is the ALSV, with the "A" standing for "advanced".[http://www.specialoperations.com/Equipment/Vehicles/default.html Advanced Light Strike Vehicle overview] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110525072739/http://www.specialoperations.com/Equipment/Vehicles/default.html |date=2011-05-25 }} It is currently used by the United States Marine Corps, United States Army, United States Navy, and the armed forces of Greece, Mexico, Oman, Portugal, and Spain. The UK retired its LSVs in the mid-1990s.
=Current operators=
- {{flagcountry|Bangladesh}}
- {{flagcountry|Greece}}
- {{flagcountry|Kuwait}}
- {{flagcountry|Mexico}}
- {{flagcountry|Oman}}
- {{flagcountry|Portugal}}
- {{flagcountry|Spain}}
- {{flagcountry|United States}}
=Former operators=
- {{flagcountry|United Kingdom}}
See also
- {{lwc|Chenowth Advanced Light Strike Vehicle}}
- {{lwc|P6 ATAV}}
- {{lwc|VLEGA Gaucho}}
- {{lwc|Chivunk}}
- {{lwc|Fabrique Nationale AS 24}}
- List of land vehicles of the U.S. armed forces
- List of U.S. military vehicles by model number, (M1040 and M1041)
- {{lwc|Willys FAMAE Corvo}}
- {{lwc|FMC XR311}}
- {{lwc|Saker LSV}}
References
{{reflist|2}}
- Jane's Special Forces Recognition Guide.{{specify|date=June 2016}}
- [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/ground/lsv.htm Light Strike Vehicle] at GlobalSecurity.org