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Trojan
Trojan AVRE - Tankfest 2009
A Trojan AVRE on display at Bovington Camp
Type combat engineering vehicle
Place of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Service history
In service 2007–present
Used by Royal Engineers
Wars Operation Moshtarak, Afghanistan (since 2010)
Production history
Manufacturer BAE Systems Land Systems
Unit cost ~£4,217,000
~$6,694,400
~€5,338,860[1]
Produced 2004–
No. built 33
Specifications
Mass 62.5 tonnes (61.5 long tons; 68.9 short tons)
Length

8.3 m (27 ft 3 in)

11.50 m (37 ft 9 in)
Width

3.5 m (11 ft 6 in)

4.2 m (13 ft 9 in) with appliqué armour
Height 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in)
Crew 3 (commander, operator, driver)

Armour Chobham/Dorchester Level 2 (classified),
Main
armament
7.62 mm L94A1 (remote controlled)
Engine Perkins CV-12 Diesel
1,200 hp (890 kW)
Power/weight 19.2 hp/t (14.2 kW/t)
Transmission David Brown TN54 epicyclic transmission (6 fwd, 2 rev.)
Suspension Hydropneumatic
Operational
range
450 km (280 mi)
Maximum speed

59 km/h (37 mph)

40 km/h (25 mph) off road

The Trojan Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers (AVRE) is a combat engineering vehicle of the British Army. It is used to breach minefields and for many other tasks. It is currently in use with the Royal Engineers.

Design[]

Trojan is based on a Challenger 2 tank chassis, but lacks the main armament. In place of the turret, it has a large hydraulic excavator arm, which can be used to excavate areas, move obstacles, and deposit the fascine that the Trojan carries at its rear. The Trojan is usually also fitted with a plough on the front, which enables it to clear mines, either detonating them on contact, or pushing them out of the way to clear a safe channel for following vehicles.

For self-defence only, it carries a 7.62mm machine gun.

For rapid mine-clearing purposes, the Trojan can also tow a trailer carrying the Python, a rocket-propelled hose similar to the Giant Viper. This allows for a much quicker way of clearing a path for ground forces. The hose, packed with explosive, is launched across a minefield, and detonates after it hits the ground, clearing a 7-metre wide path for 230 metres.

History[]

The vehicles were built at BAE Systems Land Systems plant in Newcastle upon Tyne. The contract was awarded in 2001 to Vickers Defence Systems, who were bought by BAE Systems in 2004. The project was known as the Future Engineer Tank. 33 have been built.

It was first used on exercise in May 2007 with the 1st Battalion (Mechanised) of the Duke of Lancaster's Regiment. A number of Trojans are permanently based in Canada at British Army Training Unit Suffield in order to allow the Royal Engineers to support Armoured Battle Groups on major exercises. Trojans were first deployed operationally by the British Army to Afghanistan in 2009 engaging in their first advance under contact in 2010.[2] During Operation Moshtarak 28 Engineer Regiment operated the Trojan attempting to use its traditional mine clearance equipment in the Counter-IED role in support of a major British Army advance.[3] Its companion vehicle, developed at the same time, is another variant of the Challenger 2, the Titan armoured bridge layer, of which 33 have also been built.

References[]

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Trojan Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineers and the edit history here.
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