US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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OSCSSW
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US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

Post by OSCSSW »

Was a time, that a cargo truck was a relatively simple, straight forward, militarized version of a standard 'truck". Now that seems to be just the starting point for the high tech beasts being developed to meet the US Army's Common Tactical Truck Program. Judging by the past whatever the Army decides to use will eventually, maybe with some kicking and screaming, become the standard for the entire DOD and more than a few other nations militaries.

The unsuccessful "Punitive Expedition" to catch "Pancho" Villa brought the US Army into the automotive age with the adoption of 1915 GMC model 15, three-quarter-ton trucks. The civilian GMC Model 16 was purchases as the "Class AA military truck" for the duration of World War I.

In 1939-1940 the US Army Ordnance Corps was developing 2+1⁄2 short tons (2,300 kg) load-rated 6×6 tactical trucks that could operate off-road in all weather. In 1940 General Motors, was supplying the US Army with modified commercial VEHICLE designated 1939 6×4 CCKW. The Army used General Motors design as the basis of the venerable Deuce and a half.

The ACK-353 (A for 1939 design, C for conventional cab, and K for all wheel drive) 1+1⁄2-ton 4×4 truck was the smaller brother of the 6×4 CCKW. called the Weapons carrier.

Another example was the 1 and a quarter ton AKA "Five quarter (ton)", was a Military version based on the Jeep Gladiator pickup became the M715 and M725, of the late '60's.


4 teams tasked with building Army Common Tactical Truck prototypes
The service plans to host another “open” competition before crowning a winner for this multi-billion-dollar contract in 2026.
By Ashley Roque on January 30, 2023 at 9:55 AM

WASHINGTON — The Army has selected four teams to participate in the prototyping phase for its coveted $5.1 billion Common Tactical Truck (CTT) contract, but there will be a window for other competitors to jump in before a production contract is awarded, according to the service.

On Jan. 27, the service announced that Mack Defense, Navistar Defense, Oshkosh Defense, and the American Rheinmetall Vehicles/GM Defense team have received Other Transaction Authority agreements “totaling” $24.25 million for the CTT initiative. Each team is now tasked with delivering three CTT prototypes — a M915 Line Haul Tractor and M1088 Medium Tractor, a Palletized Load System (PLS) and Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck (HEMTT).

“This approach allows the Army to modernize at the pace of industry, integrating new technologies as they are developed,” Wolfgang Petermann, the project manager for transportation systems with the Program Executive Office Combat Support & Combat Service (PEO CS&CSS) said in a press release. “Additionally, commonality in the CTT family of vehicles will enable open modular designs and interchangeable repair parts across the fleet, resulting in streamlined supply chains and reduced total lifecycle costs.”
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Companies submitted their CTT competition proposals last year based, in part, on their commercially available trucks and technologies with the goal of providing the Army with a vehicle that could “address the increasing age” of its Heavy Tactical Vehicle fleet with a single line of vehicles. Although the service is only asking for the four teams to produce the three prototype variants — the on-road tractor, off-road tractor, and load handling system — they will also provide digital designs of tanker and cargo variants and a wrecker design study, Alvin Bing, the product lead for the program, explained in an August email. He noted that this study is aimed at helping the Army decide if industry is able to build the wrecker variant.

As for the schedule, each team has just over seven months to deliver its three prototypes to the service. Then in 2024, the service will begin evaluating them at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland, according to Bing.

American Rheinmetall Vehicles and GM Defense Team to Pursue U.S. Army's Common Tactical Truck Program
August 17, 2022·6 min read

WOULD YOU LIKE TO KNOW A WHOLE LOT MORE? :roll:

WASHINGTON and STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich., Aug. 17, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- American Rheinmetall Vehicles, a leading developer of tactical wheeled and tracked combat vehicles and systems has formed a strategic collaboration with GM Defense LLC, to compete in the U.S. Army's Common Tactical Truck (CTT) program. The CTT program seeks to identify a replacement platform for the Army's Family of Heavy Tactical Vehicles.
American Rheinmetall Vehicles and GM Defense are offering the U.S. Army the HX3-CTT, a derivative of the HX3 (pictured), in response to the first phase of the Army’s Common Tactical Truck program.

American Rheinmetall Vehicles and GM Defense are offering the U.S. Army the HX3-CTT, a derivative of the HX3 (pictured), in response to the first phase of the Army’s Common Tactical Truck program.

The Army expects to execute multiple Prototype Projects before determining whether to proceed to initial production that could entail purchase of approximately 5,700 vehicles at a value of around $5 billion. A Request for Prototype Proposals for the first phase was issued in late June with an expected Contract Award in December 2022.

Rheinmetall, with its subsidiary Rheinmetall MAN Military Vehicles (RMMV), is a global leader in tactical military truck development and manufacturing. The Group's HX family of trucks have been sold to 20 customers globally including an active Allied user group consisting of Germany, Australia, United Kingdom, Austria, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Rheinmetall recently unveiled its HX3, next-generation series of truck with advances in power, mobility, advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), and an open systems architecture with pathways to hybrid technology incorporation, leader follower driving, and autonomous operations. The militarized HX3 series incorporates substantial commercial technologies reflecting Rheinmetall's joint venture with MAN Truck & Bus which streamlines logistics and sustainment burdens and provides benefits in vehicle upgrades. An Americanized HX3 forms the basis of what the American Rheinmetall Vehicles and GM Defense team will offer the Army in the first phase of the CTT program. Combined with an open architecture, the commercial backbone of the HX3 will support persistent modernization and allow for increases in capability as technologies mature. This will reduce obsolescence issues and overall lifecycle costs.

GM Defense is a rapidly expanding, wholly-owned subsidiary of General Motors — one of the largest automotive producers in the world, delivering 2.2 million vehicles in 2021 alone, and remains the largest commercial provider of military vehicles in history. As GM's purpose-built government-facing entity, GM Defense will bring its formidable manufacturing capabilities and technological excellence to the CTT team, leveraging GM's innovation and portfolio of commercial technologies to advance customer capabilities. Having been selected to deliver the Infantry Squad Vehicle (ISV) to the Army under an Other Transaction Authority (OTA) contract, GM Defense understands rapid prototyping, agile design and engineering, and rapid delivery.

The CTT Program is a rapid prototyping effort that uses a middle tier acquisition strategy and OTAs to enable the Army to quickly procure and test tactical truck prototypes to replace its family of heavy tactical trucks. The Army is seeking a modern platform featuring advanced driver safety systems, increased off-road mobility, cybersecurity, machine learning, artificial intelligence, improved survivability, and fuel efficiency among other emerging technologies. The program will enable the Army to replace legacy vehicles like the Palletized Load System (PLS), Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck (HEMTT), M915 Line Haul Tractor, and other platforms in the current heavy and medium tactical wheeled fleet. A truck with maximum commercial elements, able to perform military missions, and that can bring commonality among mission roles are top priorities for the Army in the program.

"American Rheinmetall Vehicles is a committed partner to the Army, bringing next-generation capability, technology and competition to high priority Army modernization programs like CTT. GM Defense shares our commitment, and together our team will provide a transformational truck to support the Army and its Soldiers," said Matthew Warnick, managing director for American Rheinmetall Vehicles. "General Motors has a century of experience supporting the Department of Defense with a remarkable heritage in design, engineering and manufacturing. GM Defense continues that heritage with the ability to rapidly develop and deploy advanced technologies, bringing an important capability to the American Rheinmetall Vehicles team and our exceptional CTT offering."

"On the heels of successfully delivering the ISV to our Army customer, GM Defense is excited to join American Rheinmetall Vehicles on the CTT program to deliver another exceptional mobility solution for our Soldiers," said Steve duMont, president of GM Defense. "This strategic collaboration enables GM Defense to continue showcasing our advanced capabilities, leveraging GM's innovation and proven commercial technology. With American Rheinmetall Vehicles' HX3 as the starting point, I'm confident that together we will deliver a winning solution that meets or exceeds the Army's requirements and provides a platform for growth and technology insertion to support our warfighters well into the future."

HX3 Common Tactical Truck (HX3-CTT)

Technology for the future: The HX3-CTT features an advanced, interchangeable protected cab design, advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), and drive by wire operation. The new open systems electrical architecture allows rapid integration of leader follower and autonomous capabilities that focus on protecting our most valuable combat asset – the Soldier.

Common Platforms and parts to support a family of vehicles: The HX3-CTT is the new, next-gen variant of the globally successful HX family of military-off-the-shelf tactical trucks. It possesses an extremely high level of commonality and modularity across variants: cargo, load handling systems, tankers, and line haul tractors. With an HX family that can scale from 4x4 to 10x10, the HX can meet any military need.

Commerciality in its DNA: The HX3-CTT leverages best-in-class advances in commercial truck technology, safety, fuel efficiency, and emissions reduction. Ruggedized for the stresses of military service, the HX family provides an "off the shelf" capability. This commercial backbone reduces obsolescence risk/cost, expands parts availability, and reduces sustainment demands.

Allied Interoperability: The HX family of trucks have been sold to 20 customers globally including an active Allied user group consisting of Germany, Australia, United Kingdom, Austria, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, creating common global supply chains, training opportunities, and integrated operations among key allies operating around the world.

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The US Army's Navy

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With Indo-Pacific in mind, Army eyeing heavy support ship prototyping competition
With an Maneuver Support Vessel - Heavy competition on the horizon, the service is also working on the smaller MSV-L but is rebaselining the program to address design changes and increasing costs.

By Ashley Roque on March 01, 2023 at 5:04 PM

Columbus, Ohio — US Army plans to field two new watercraft variants to ferry troops and equipment around in the Indo-Pacific region are taking shape with a possible upcoming prototyping competition for a heavy vessel and a program “rebaseline” of the service’s lighter vessel, according to service officials.

Under the Maneuver Support Vessel initiative, the Army is testing out a new light (MSV-L) watercraft to replace the Vietnam-era Landing Craft Mechanized-8 (LCM-8) and has now drawn up tentative requirements for a larger, heavy fleet (MSV-H), according to Brig. Gen Samuel Peterson, the program executive officer for Combat Support & Combat Service Support.

“We’ve worked very hard to make sure we understand what it is the Army needs for this type of capability, partnered with our Navy and Marine Corps partners as well, to make sure that we’ve got the right requirement going forward, and we are on the cusp of taking those recommendations forward,” the one-star general said today at a National Defense Industrial Association conference. He noted that the Army’s acquisition head will be briefed on this plan next week.

Wolfgang Petermann, the project manager for transportation systems within the PEO CS&CSS, later told reporters that that vessel may be up to 400 feet in length, reach a speed of 18 knots while carrying up to 175 soldiers and their equipment payloads right up to shore.

RELATED: Inside the Marine Corps’ project to automate the journey through key ‘last mile’

If senior leaders greenlight the program in the coming weeks, Petermann said the service plans to issue a white paper between July and September this year. Then, based on feedback, in early 2024 it will select three shipyards to participate in a virtual prototyping competition similar to the Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle program.

“[We want to] keep that competitive pressure as long as we can,” Petermann added.

Throughout the design process, the service will work with the shipyards on evolving requirements and eventually make a final downselect in time for the winning team to begin “bending metal” in 2028. The ultimate goal is to have the first vessel launched in 2030, before the program reaches the initial operational capability (IOC) benchmark in 2031.

As Army leaders finalize MSV-H plans, they are also poised to make a low-rate production decision on the smaller 117-foot RSV-L program in the coming weeks, according to Petermann. However, that decision comes as the service rebaselines the program to address design changes and cost increases.

Vigor, LLC, a marine fabrication facility in Vancouver, secured the 10-year contract for the MSV-L development and the production of up to 36 of the new watercraft in 2017. By late 2022, the service began builder trials with the new vessel, an effort that will run through late March. However, program officials have already determined that Vigor will need to make changes.

“The boat was incentivized for speed, which they’ve achieved, but also as a result of that we [need] reinforcements in the design to withstand the G-forces. That, in turn, drove more complexity in the build process,” Petermann explained. This has, in part, increased the vessel’s cost (a point still under negotiation) and led the Army to rebasline the program.

A new schedule has not been finalized yet, but Petermann said there should only be a delay in testing and the Army wants to maintain its first unit equipped date in 2027, with IOC in 2028.

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The Army’s little-known boat fleet is getting a big upgrade
BY Hope Seck | November 7, 2022

LOTS OF PICTURES :D :D :D
https://www.sandboxx.us/blog/the-armys- ... g-upgrade/

OK THE CORPS OF ENGINEER SOJERS ARE COMPETENT SHIP HANDLERS, UP TO A POINT
BUT
WE USN SAILORS ARE MUCH BETTER LOOKING AND WE DO IT WITH STYLE! :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

Post by Drunknsubmrnr »

Not a fan of the ACE ship-handling based on their NY Harbor activities.

I’m not saying they’re oxygen-thieving wastes of skin that are a danger to everyone else on the water, but I’m strongly hinting at it.
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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When was the last time ACE hit another vessel?
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

Post by Drunknsubmrnr »

Not sure when they’ve actually hit someone, but they nearly hit me and that’s all it takes.
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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Drunknsubmrnr wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 9:52 pm Not sure when they’ve actually hit someone, but they nearly hit me and that’s all it takes.
Fair point.

So far it seems the Coast Guard is the outfit with smart ship handling. :cry:
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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jemhouston wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 7:53 pm When was the last time ACE hit another vessel?
OUCH, OUCH, OUCH that really hurt this old Navy man. Much to close to the truth Jemmy old son! :cry:
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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Drunknsubmrnr wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 9:52 pm Not sure when they’ve actually hit someone, but they nearly hit me and that’s all it takes.
Kevin as an old sailor, even a sewer pipe one, YOU must never forget what your old chief taught you. To with Rule of the Road #1 that has come down to us from St. Peter," In extremis Tonnage always is the STAND ON Vessel. :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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jemhouston wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 10:16 pm
Drunknsubmrnr wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 9:52 pm Not sure when they’ve actually hit someone, but they nearly hit me and that’s all it takes.
Fair point.

So far it seems the Coast Guard is the outfit with smart ship handling. :cry:
Always was.
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

Post by Drunknsubmrnr »

OSCSSW wrote: Fri Mar 03, 2023 2:33 pm
Drunknsubmrnr wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 9:52 pm Not sure when they’ve actually hit someone, but they nearly hit me and that’s all it takes.
Kevin as an old sailor, even a sewer pipe one, YOU must never forget what your old chief taught you. To with Rule of the Road #1 that has come down to us from St. Peter," In extremis Tonnage always is the STAND ON Vessel. :lol: :lol: :lol:
Definitely. I got the Hell out of their way.

I do still tell them they’re “Number 1” in my book every time I go past them though.
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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I have to ask. Does anyone know where the following image comes from? Or maybe more importantly what year this picture was taken? I must admit I laugh every time I look at the black sailor just over the left shoulder who has just a hint of a grin on his face. Probably for the same reason that Full Metal Jacket is my favorite war movie for all of the scenes with R Lee Ermey. Not so much for seeing people being beaten down but for the sheer artistry and inventiveness of the insults.
Nasty CPO.png
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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Glad you like it. I never was a company commander for recruits. The folks at BuPers must have known I don't have the temperament for that important job. :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:

Maybe you'll like this one
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

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I did a reverse image search on it, never did find where it came from. Funny thing, one related image that came up was a certain Marine DI from Full Metal Jacket. :lol:
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Re: US Army conceptual rendering for its CTT program.

Post by Craiglxviii »

jemhouston wrote: Thu Mar 02, 2023 7:53 pm When was the last time ACE hit another vessel?
While handling a ship? Only on land ;)
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