M1064 mortar carrier
The M1064 mortar carrier is an American tracked, self-propelled artillery vehicle, consisting of the M121 mortar - a version of the M120 mortar - mounted on an M113 chassis.
M1064 mortar carrier | |
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M1064 mortar carrier, Iraq April 25, 2009 | |
Type | Mortar carrier |
Place of origin | United States |
Service history | |
In service | 1990- |
Used by | United States, Egypt, Thailand |
Specifications | |
Mass | 14.1 short tons (12.8 t) |
Length | 17.45 feet (5.32 m) |
Width | 9.92 feet (3.02 m) |
Height | Chassis top:6 feet (1.8 m) Overall:8.19 feet (2.50 m) |
Crew | 4[1] |
Armor | 5083 Aluminum |
Main armament | M120 mortar |
Secondary armament | M2 Browning |
Engine | Detroit Diesel 6V53T |
Transmission | Allison X200-4 series |
Ground clearance | 17 inches (43 cm) |
Fuel capacity | 95 US gallons (360 L) |
Operational range | 300 miles (480 km) |
Design
The design consists of the M298 Cannon, M191 Bipod, M9 Baseplate, and the Carrier Adaptation Kit. With the use of an auxiliary M9 Baseplate and extension feet for the M191 Bipod, the M121 can be dismounted from the vehicle and emplaced for ground-mounted operations. The first M1064s were converted from M106 mortar carriers, whose 107mm mortar had been replaced by the 120mm mortar.[1]
Operators
Current operators
Former operator
gollark: I think lots of people *don't* like it but it just gets shoved in.
gollark: "integrations"
gollark: "Ahahahaha I'll just add a boss which INSTANTLY KILLS YOU but then make my armor protect from that"
gollark: It's just stupid oneupmanship.
gollark: Yes, a bad one.
References
- Foss, Christopher F. (27 November 2001). "United Defense LP M113 armoured personnel carrier family". Jane's Armour and Artillery 2002-2003.
- International Institute for Strategic Studies (February 2016). The Military Balance 2016. 116. Routlegde. p. 324. ISBN 9781857438352.
- The Military Balance 2016, p. 293.
External links
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