| |
General Dynamics Awarded $55 Million to Reset Stryker
Vehicles
STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. –
General Dynamics Land Systems, a business unit of General Dynamics (NYSE:
GD), has been awarded a contract by the U.S. Army Tank Automotive Command
(TACOM) to reset 330 Stryker infantry combat vehicles. The contract has
a maximum potential value of $55.2 million.
Through this contract, General
Dynamics will service, repair and modify Stryker vehicles that are returning
from Operation Iraqi Freedom, restoring them to a pre-combat, like-new condition
in advance of reissuing the vehicles prior to their next deployment.
To
date, General Dynamics has delivered 2,852 new vehicles for seven separate
Stryker brigades to the Army. With more than six million miles accumulated
through two completed Operation Iraqi Freedom rotations since October 2003,
the Stryker vehicle has demonstrated a combined fleet operational-readiness
rate of 96 percent.
The Stryker is an eight-wheeled vehicle, which is lighter,
smaller and more readily deployable than other Army combat vehicles and
can travel at speeds up to 62 mph on roads with a range of 312 miles. There
are 10 configurations of the Stryker: Infantry Carrier Vehicle; Anti-tank
Guided Missile; Mobile Gun System; Mortar Carrier; Command Vehicle; Reconnaissance
Vehicle; Engineer Squad Vehicle; Medical Evacuation Vehicle; Fire Support
Vehicle; and Nuclear, Biological, Chemical and Reconnaissance. The variants
have 85 percent parts commonality, which simplifies logistics. Strykers
operate with the latest electronic equipment and an integrated armor package
to protect soldiers against improvised explosive devices, rocket propelled
grenades and a variety of infantry weapons.
General Dynamics, headquartered
in Falls Church, Virginia, employs approximately 92,900 people worldwide.
The company is a market leader in business aviation; land and expeditionary
combat systems, armaments and munitions; shipbuilding and marine systems;
and information systems and technologies. More information about the company
is available on the Internet at
www.generaldynamics.com.
|
|