Infantry Fighting Vehicle Article Index for
Infantry
Shopping
Infantry
Website Links For
Infantry
 

Information About

Infantry Fighting Vehicle




An infantry fighting vehicle ('''IFV''') is a type of Armored Fighting Vehicle (AFV) used to carry Infantry into battle and provide fire support for them.

IFVs are similar to Armoured Personnel Carrier s (APCs), designed to transport five to ten infantrymen and their equipment. They are differentiated from APCs ("battle taxis") by their enhanced armament, allowing them to give direct-fire support during an Assault , firing ports, allowing the infantry to fire personal weapons while mounted, and usually improved Armour . They are typically armed with an Autocannon of 20 to 30 mm caliber, and possibly with ATGM s. IFVs are usually Tracked , but some wheeled vehicles fall into this category, too. IFVs are much less heavily armed and armoured than Main Battle Tanks (MBTs), but they sometimes carry heavy missiles, such as the NATO 'TOW' missile and USSR 'Spigot' which offer a significant threat to tanks.

Western powers acted surprised when the Soviet Union paraded the first IFV, the BMP-1 , in 1967. The BMP was a very low-profiled IFV with 73 mm smoothbore gun and mounting an ATGM. Its steeply-sloped front armour was partially proof against NATO's standard .50-calibre Machine Gun in a 60 degree frontal arc, while its smoothbore gun and ATGM were a threat to NATO personnel carriers and even main battle tanks. It was not quite the breakthrough some would make it out to be, as, in practice it performed similar to heavily armed Armoured Personal Carriers which which NATO countries had been working on previously.

Since then, all major military powers have developed or adopted IFVs. Examples include the British Warrior , the American M2 , M3 and the new Stryker , the Spanish Pizarro , the Italian Dardo , the German Marder , the South Africa n Ratel and the Swedish Combat Vehicle 90 .


SEE ALSO