Engineering:AMX 10 RC

From HandWiki
AMX-10 RC
AMX-10-RC.JPG
AMX-10 RC
TypeArmoured car
Place of originFrance
Service history
In service1981–present
WarsWestern Sahara War
Gulf War
War in Afghanistan
Operation Serval
Production history
Designed1970
No. built457
Specifications
Mass15 tonnes (17 short tons; 15 long tons)
Length9.15 m (30 ft 0 in) (gun forward)
6.24 m (20 ft 6 in) (hull only)
Width2.78 m (9 ft 1 in)
Height2.56 m (8 ft 5 in)
Crew4

ArmourFrontal armour resistant against 23 mm API from 300 m
Main
armament
105 mm BK MECA (F2) L/48 gun (38 rounds) (Vo 800 m/s)
Secondary
armament
1× 7.62 mm NF1 co-axial machine gun (4,000 cartridges)
1× 12.7 mm M2HB AA machine gun (Optional)
4× smoke dischargers
EngineBaudouin Diesel Model 6F11 SRX
280 hp (208.8 kW)
Power/weight18.7 hp/tonne
Suspensionhydropneumatic wheel
Operational
range
800 km (500 mi)
Speed85 km/h (53 mph)
25–30 km/h (16–19 mph) off road

The AMX-10RC is a light reconnaissance vehicle built by GIAT. Over 240 are in service in the French Army. In addition, 108 vehicles were sold to Morocco and 12 to Qatar. RC stands for Roues-Canon, or wheeled gun.

The AMX-10RC should not be confused with the AMX-10P; they share automotive components but otherwise have completely different battlefield roles. The AMX-10RC is usually used for reconnaissance missions in dangerous environments or for fire support.

Design and characteristics

Initial work on the AMX-10RC began in 1970; production began in 1976, and the first production vehicle was delivered in 1981 to the 2nd Regiment de Hussards in Sourdun. The vehicle features a powerful GIAT 105 mm gun mounted in a welded aluminium turret. The turret also serves to house three crew members, while the driver sits in the front of the hull; the COTAC fire control system is provided for gun aiming. All six wheels are driven, and the AMX-10RC uses skid steering to turn the hull.

Qatari AMX-10RCs in the desert during multinational combined-arms exercises, 2013

The 105 mm rifled gun fires four types of ammunition: APFSDS, HE, HEAT and smoke. The APFSDS, which uses the penetrator from the GIAT 90 mm APFSDS round, is capable of penetrating a NATO triple heavy tank target at a range of 2,000 metres.

The AMX-10RC has been the recipient of numerous upgrades over its lifetime. Most notably, newer systems include battlefield-management system terminals. For its part in the 1991 Gulf War, the AMX-10RC was provided with extra add-on armour and anti-tank missile decoy systems. One improvement considered was the installation of a NATO 105 mm gun, as the GIAT model was not compatible with NATO munitions, but this was ultimately not done. Thermal imaging systems have also been installed, using units taken from decommissioned AMX-30B2 MBTs. A central tyre-inflation system is available for added traction over soft terrain. The AMX-10RC is equipped with an NBC (Nuclear/Biological/Chemical) protection system and may conduct reconnaissance in a radioactive environment.

The AMX-10RC is no longer in production by GIAT.

AMX-10RCR modernisation

In 2010, Nexter completed the modernisation of 256 AMX-10RC vehicles to the RCR (Rénové) configuration, a programme that consisted of integrating various systems and additional armour, active self-protection by Sagem, LIRE (Leurre Infrarouge) / Eirel, the combat management system SIT (Système d'Information Terminal) V1, ASP device Galix smoke grenades, changes in the NBC protection and improvements in the suspension, and the speed gearboxes and tactical communications completed with Thales Communications & Security PR4G VS4. The integration was done by DCMAT (Direction Centrale du Matériel de l'Armée de Terre).[1]

EBRC Jaguar

The AMX 10 RC will be replaced by the EBRC Jaguar.

Operators

Map of AMX 10 RC operators in blue

Current operators

  •  France – 248[2]
  •  Morocco – 198[3]
  •  Qatar – 12[3]

Missions

  • Armoured reconnaissance
  • Armoured support
  • Flanking security

References

  1. [1]
  2. International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) (2016). The Military Balance 2016. London: IISS. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-85743-835-2. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Trade Registers". Armstrade.sipri.org. http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/page/trade_register.php. Retrieved 2015-01-01. 

External links