Raccoon (armoured vehicle)
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Raccoon | |
---|---|
Type | Armoured fighting vehicle |
Place of origin | Banbha |
Service history | |
In service | 2014–present |
Wars | Invasion of Vyzhva (2019) Invasion of Era (2021) |
Production history | |
Designed | 1994-2012 |
Manufacturer | Byrne Heavy Industries |
Produced | 2013 onwards, production as-required |
Specifications | |
Weight | Empty: 11.6 tonnes Payload: 18.4 tonnes GVW: 30 tonnes |
Length | 6m - baseline |
Width | 2.92m - baseline |
Height | 1.9m - baseline |
Crew | 3 (Driver, Co-Driver) - baseline |
Engine | 2x Inline 4-cylinder 4-stroke multi-fuel engines 600 to 800kW (805 - 1,072hp) |
Power/weight | 26.6kW/Tonne max. |
Suspension | Active electro-hydropneumatic |
Ground clearance | 450mm |
Fuel capacity | 1,040 litres |
Operational range | ~>600km On-road |
Speed | >120 km/h (75 mph) On-road (wheeled) 90 km/h (56 mph) On-road (tracked) |
The FAT.14 Racoon (Banbhan: Feithicil armúrtha troda 14 Racún) is the catch all designation for a family of armoured fighting vehicles manufactured by Byrne Heavy Industries (BHI) as a replacement for several legacy platforms operated by the Banbhan Defence Force.
The Raccoon is a hybrid diesel-electric powered vehicle It was brought about by a request from the Banbhan Ministry of Defence for a modular and future proof base vehicle to replace a variety of legacy platforms, including: Marten IFV in some roles, Otter, tracked APC and its derivatives Weasel, reconnaissance vehicle family Mongoose 6x6 platform and Condor 4x4 APC.
In a bid to lower individual development costs, the governments of Crainn and Fóla were invited to join the programme, the former joining in 2001 and the latter in 2005 allowing for distributed development toward a common goal thereafter the programme became a trilateral affair with a 40:30:30 workload share.
Development
Initial development began in 1994 with work beginning on the fundamental core components such as the electric transmission, composite material development for the chassis and development of continuous band tracks.
This then progressed to iterative concept design studies, the result of which being the decision to proceed with 6x6, 8x8 and tracked variants of the core platform.
By 1999 the final concepts had been arrived at the basic concept was ready for testing, three prototype vehicles were manufactured, one for each different type of locomotion. Each of these three vehicles differed slightly from one and other such as in the layout of the crew compartment or their vision systems, primarily as a way to continue to improve the design during the prototype trials.
By 2006 the electric-drive system had been matured to the point where serial production of the power units could be considered and by 2008 the traction control system had been developed to the same standard.
Between 2010 and 2012 a series of mobility enhancing improvements were incorporated to the design including a new fully-independent active electro-hydropneumatic suspension system which would go on to be retrofitted to the Ermin.
Series production began in 2013 after final type approval was obtained by the respective member states with an initial entry to service in 2014.
Design
Hybrid-Drive
The first outstanding feature of the Raccoon is its hybrid electric drivetrain (HED) The prototype systems for both the wheeled and tracked vehicles were designed and manufactured by McGrath Automotive and Magnetic Systems Technologies (MASTEC). The wheeled vehicles were equipped with in-wheel hub-mounted electric drive (HMED) units rated at 100 kW and producing 20,000Nm of torque each whilst in low range. These motors gave the wheeled vehicles individual wheel speed, positional and torque control, as well as an electronic limited-slip differential, torque-vectoring, and most importantly importantly on-demand skid-steering. The system fitted to the tracked vehicles was simpler in terms of motors, featuring two 400kW motors in a cross-drive layout rather than the six or eight individual 100kW motors of the wheeled vehicles, these being either forward or rear mounted depending on the requirements.
Load scheduling of a type more usually found in marine applications and operating points for the generator sets meant that fuel usage could be optimised and performance enhanced, thus reducing the requirement to refuel in the field. The advanced design of these electric drivetrains in both vehicle variants permitted a novel vehicle architecture, optimising crew and payload space and capacity, without compromising on suspension or transmission design.
Construction
The second outstanding feature of the Raccoon are the relatively exotic materials from which it is constructed. Instead of a being constructed from the more usual welded steel or aluminium the Racoon is constructed as a carbon-fibre reinforced polymer monocoque allowing for a reduction in weight of some 30% over a comparable steel-bodied vehicle, additionally it allows for a layer of radar-absorbent material to be incorporated into the base structure to lower the vehicle's EM signature. In places were the use of metals are more favourable than composites, titanium is used in lieu of steel, again to save weight.
Modularity
The third outstanding feature of the Raccoon is the inbuilt modularity with which the platform is designed around. Ostensibly, the vehicles, regardless of method of locomotion consist of three major sub groups, these are: The Base Module, the Crew Module and the Role Module.
The Base Module consists of the lower hull and running gear, this is the only really non-modular part of the vehicle with the bases for 6x6, 8x8 and tracked vehicles all being unique.
The Crew Module consists of the upper front hull section, power-packs and primary vehicle crew positions. This module can be swapped between any of the three variants as required and comes in two variants, low-profile and standard height. The Crew Module can either have access to the role module via an open rear or be fitted with an armoured bulkhead depending on what the role module to be fitted is.
Finally, there is the Role Module, the most important aspect of the modularity in the design. Each role module is fixed to the rest of the vehicle by four points of contact and a service connector which facilitates timely and easy removal and fitment. The Role module has four basic footprints, these being: low-profile, standard height, expanded height and high roof. Additional bespoke modules can be created at the request of a customer whilst still using the basic four plus one point module floor.
Protection
The basic production standard Racoon regardless of additional operator specific packages is proofed against 14.5mm KE threats around the entire vehicle and AT mines up-to 8kg under any wheel / track or the centreline of the vehicle. Additional armour to protect against threats up to 30mm KE over a frontal 30 degree arc, 25mm KE over the sides and rear and 10kg AT mine blasts without substantially degrading vehicle performance have been offered. Additional protection against CE threats and IEDs can be incorporated as required as can hard and soft-kill active protection systems such as the Gauntlet and Veil systems used by the Banbhan Defence Force.
Armament
With such an inherently modular vehicle, a wide variety of possible armament fits can be be incorporated onto the vehicle without requiring major structural changes.
Most Raccoons in service are equipped with a remote weapon station for self-defence rather than a manned turret. Banbhan vehicles are fitted with the R400S RWS from EOS fitted with a 13.2 mm chain gun. Crainnic vehicles are usually fitted with the Midgard from Valhalla, which can be fitted with either a 7mm machine gun, a 13.2mm HMG or a 40mm automatic grenade launcher. Fólan vehicles tend to be equipped with a Protector RS4 or RS2 from Kongsberg.
For vehicles fitted with larger weapons manned and unmanned turrets can be fitted such as the T2000 from EOS or Protector RT60 from Kongsberg or the E30/40 from BHI, the largest weapons fitted to the Raccoon thus far have been 120mm gun-mortars and 120mm smoothbore guns in bespoke turrets.
Service History
Variants
Operators
Current Operators
• Banbha - The Banbhan Army operates...