Army receives six new M88 HERCULES

Defence has bought, received and deployed six new M88A2 HERCULES armoured recovery vehicles.

CAPTIONTwo new M88 HERCULES in Townsville.

Minister for Defence Industry Christopher Pyne said the delivery of the HERCULES (Heavy Equipment Recovery Combat Utility Lift and Evacuation System) vehicles was critical to ensure the safe and effective operation of Australia’s Abrams main battle tank capability.

“HERCULES is a 64 tonne tracked vehicle used primarily for the repair and recovery of tanks and other vehicles whilst under fire and will complement the seven currently in operation,” Minister Pyne said.

“Valued at more than $58 million, the six new HERCULES will support armoured units based in Darwin and Townsville, and operator and maintenance training at Puckapunyal and Bandiana in Victoria.

“Pleasingly the maintenance, servicing and engineering support for this equipment will be delivered regionally by Broadspectrum, with four new jobs to be created in Darwin.”

Since their delivery to Defence, all six vehicles have been accepted into service, painted in Australian camouflage and sent to their units.

HERCULES features overlay armour protection, ballistic skirts, a 35-ton boom, a 63-tonne constant-pull main winch with 85m cable, and an auxiliary 3-tonne winch to aid main-winch-cable deployment.

 

Specifications

Gross vehicle weight 63,500kg
Personnel capacity 7
Gross horsepower 1050@2400 rpm
Speed 42-48km/hr
Estimated cruising range 480km
Slope 60%
Trench crossing 2.6m
Vertical wall crossing 1m
Overall length 8.5m
Width 3.6m
Height 3.1m
Ground clearance 400mm

.

.

.

.

.

.


.

.


.


.


.

40991 Total Views 2 Views Today

Posted by Brian Hartigan

Managing Editor Contact Publishing Pty Ltd PO Box 3091 Minnamurra NSW 2533 AUSTRALIA

2 thoughts on “Army receives six new M88 HERCULES

  • 23/04/2017 at 6:38 pm
    Permalink

    *armour. If I wanted to read American language, I’d visit their sites. I wasn’t going to say anything, but apparently, a simple correction isn’t permitted.

    Reply
    • 23/04/2017 at 6:53 pm
      Permalink

      Simple spelling error Shane – now fixed.

      Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *