
FV 102 Striker ATGM
Description
Remixed FV102 Striker. Remix from Lava8080, iluvlabs, bigwig Mark and also stowage from Berlin 1945. Country: British Entered Service: 1975 Crew: 3 Weight: 8.2 tons Dimensions: Length – 4.83m Armament: Main – 10x Swingfire Wire-Guided Missiles Secondary – 7.62../0.3 machine-gun Armour: Classified Powerplant: Jaguar J60 No.1 Mk 100B 6-cylinder 142kW/190hp Performance: Speed – Approx – 50mph. It’s History… Crew: 3 Main Armament: 5 swing fire ATGMs (5 reloads); Coaxial 7.62mm GPMG Maximum speed: 50mph[1] The FV102 Striker anti-tank missile carrier is a member of the British CVR (T) family of tracked armoured vehicles, produced by Alvis Vehicles. The FV102 is a version of another CVR(T). Its primary role is to defeat enemy armour. The first production vehicles were delivered in 1975. These anti-tank missile carriers are employed by anti-tank guided missile batteries and reconnaissance regiments. The FV102 Striker is fitted with Swing fire anti-tank wire guided missiles. The name of the missile comes from the ability to make a rapid turn of up to 90° after firing. This missile has a HEAT warhead and an effective range of 4 km. It penetrates up to 800 mm of armour. The missile is controlled either by a direct optic or thermal sight. Missiles can be launched remotely from the vehicle. A special optical sight with a 100 m cable allows the crew to engage enemy targets from a safe cover. Missiles were originally controlled by a joystick controller. Later the FV102s were updated with semi-automatic control systems. Five Swing fire missiles are carried in the tilt-up launcher at the rear of the hull and are ready to use. A full set of reload missiles is stored inside the hull. Missiles are reloaded manually from outside the vehicle.[2]
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