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U.S. Marine Corps uses its newest ACVs during exercise in Twentynine Palms

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Photo by Sgt. Courtney White

The United States Marine Corps has announced that the long-awaited Amphibious Combat Vehicles (ACV) are being used during exercise.

For the first time, the 1st Marine Division fielded its new ACVs during Marine Air Ground Task Force Warfighting Exercise (MWX) 2-21 at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms, Calif.

MWX is the culminating event of the service-level training exercise, challenging Marines to fight against a free-thinking adversary with similar capabilities in a force on force environment.


The details were given in a Marine Corps media release, to announce that MWX 2-21 was the first time ACVs have been employed in a 1st Marine Division training exercise.

The ACV is an eight-wheeled vehicle that will provide protection akin to the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle, with landward maneuverability and mobility that is superior to that of the legacy Assault Amphibious Vehicle.

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Photo by Sgt. Courtney White

The Assault Amphibious Vehicle, or AAV, has been in service for more than 40 years, and many of its components and parts are obsolete and no longer manufactured. Because of this, the vehicles are becoming increasingly costly and difficult to maintain. That, and the changing environment in which Marines find themselves plagued by the improvised explosive device threat, has produced a need for a new, more survivable combat vehicle that can maneuver from ship to shore and beyond.

Expeditionary and modernized in design, the ACV integrates with naval shipping and ship-to-shore connectors. The ACV’s ability to use the ocean and waterways to carry Marines and equipment make it well-suited for various operating environments, including Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations.

In the future, the Corps intends to develop, procure and field three additional variants that specialize in command and control, recovery operations and increased firepower.

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Photo by Sgt. Courtney White

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U.S. Marine Corps uses its newest ACVs during exercise in Twentynine Palms (defence-blog.com)
 
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@PanzerKiel
Any luck for these in southern marshes?
Yeah of course, but they'll be under utilised there....

Their main effect is from the sea... Getting really deployed, opening a sea flank anywhere against the enemy, being able to defend itself by destroying vehicles similar to itself.... Ability to transfer 17 men in combat gear....
 
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What has happened to EFV?
Too expensive and they are still many technical issue like stability, limited space and short range due to the sheer engine size of these vehicle.
 
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