Military T-Shirt
Tamiya Military Model Kits
Ground Warfare

CV90 User Club

918
×

CV90 User Club

Share this article
BAE Systems CV90 MkIV Infantry Fighting Vehicle
BAE Systems CV90 MkIV Infantry Fighting Vehicle

Every year BAE Systems hosts representatives from the group of nations who operate the CV90 to share information that helps continuously evolve the Infantry Fighting Vehicle’s capabilities as an advanced and affordable combat vehicle. The CV90 Club represents the seven countries that operate the CV90 Infantry Fighting Vehicle. Some are part of NATO, others are not. But they take part in two days of intense yet collaborative meetings with one common goal: Working together to help make the CV90 family of vehicles continuously better for warfighters.” This could be anything from cost effectively adding new capabilities for addressing emerging threats and requirements, or ways to pool resources to support lifecycle sustainment like upgrades and spares.

This year’s annual meeting took place earlier this month in Örnsköldsvik, Sweden, where BAE Systems manufactures the CV90. The current users of the CV90 are Denmark, Estonia, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland. The value the CV90 Club and its System Development Board (SDB) bring is not hard to grasp. They simply share the collective knowledge of first-hand experience of actively operating and maintaining the Infantry Fighting Vehicles. Sharing this knowledge in this forum benefits all of the user nations in terms of optimizing CV90 operations while also helping BAE Systems enhance the vehicle’s capabilities over time.

BAE Systems CV90 MkIV Infantry Fighting Vehicle
BAE Systems CV90 MkIV Infantry Fighting Vehicle

This approach takes full advantage of the CV90’s modular systems architecture that gives it the flexibility and adaptability needed to cost-effectively add new technologies and capabilities as seamlessly as possible. There are 15 variants of the CV90. One of the most valuable innovations that arose from these meetings was deploying the vehicles on rubber tracks reducing vibrations and consequently improving reliability and crew comfort. The group studied the potential and helped implement the rubber track system now fielded on the Norwegian Army’s version of the vehicle, and the idea has drawn a great deal of interest from other nations.

A big topic this year was the integration and test firing of an anti-tank-guided missile over the winter using a Rafael Advanced Defense Systems SPIKE-LR for the first time late last year, adding yet another lethal capability to the vehicle’s highly diversified mission sets. This demonstration was welcomed by the group and could lead CV90 operators to add the capability in the years ahead. In addition the modularity of the CV90 was discussed and a walk-though of the wide range of CV90 specialist vehicles was presented. The CV90 is more than an IFV and the strength of variants provides the power of combined arms for current and future users.

BAE Systems CV90 MkIV Infantry Fighting Vehicle
BAE Systems CV90 MkIV Infantry Fighting Vehicle

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from MilitaryLeak.COM

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading