Gallery: One of These Trucks Will Be the Army's New $14B Ride
01lockheed-jltv-3
Lockheed JLTV ------------- Lockheed built its JLTV prototypes in several variants, including a cargo model with a flatbed. *Photo: Lockheed Martin*
02oshkosh-l-atv-2
Oshkosh L-ATV ------------- The L-ATV has the appearance of a scaled-down M-ATV and shares the larger vehicle's high-tech TAK-4 suspension design. *Photo: Oshkosh*
03oshkosh-l-atv
Oshkosh L-ATV ------------- Oshkosh, best known for its heavy trucks, entered the armored vehicle field with its successful all-terrain version of the MRAP bomb-resistant ride. The company dubbed its JLTV prototype the [Light Combat All-Terrain Vehicle](http://www.oshkoshdefense.com/products/24/l-atv), or L-ATV. *Photo: Oshkosh*
Daniel Rude04lockheed-jltv
Lockheed JLTV ------------- Aerospace giant Lockheed is not widely known as a [manufacturer of ground vehicles](http://www.lockheedmartin.com/us/products/jltv.html) and was a surprise finalist in the JLTV competition. *Photo: Lockheed Martin*
05am-general-brv-o-2
AM General BRV-O ---------------- Unsurprisingly, the BRV-O shares some design qualities with the older Humvee, including the rounded body. *Photo: AM General*
06am-general-brv-o
The U.S. Army just took a big step closer to getting a brand-new, high-tech ride. [Yesterday the Army announced](https://www.fbo.gov/index?s=opportunity&mode=form&id=5a300ecfecf3e0c400aec31b310d48d5&tab=core&_cview=0) the three companies that will continue to develop the new [Joint Light Tactical Vehicle](http://stag-komodo.wired.com/dangerroom/2008/10/sizing-up-the-w/), a sort of blend between today's workhorse Humvee and the [bomb-resistant MRAP trucks](http://stag-komodo.wired.com/dangerroom/2009/07/the-militarys-new-monster-truck-for-afghanistan/) that have saved so many lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. Lockheed Martin, AM General and Oshkosh Defense each received around $30 million to refine their JLTV prototypes ahead of a final selection 27 months from now. At stake in the seven-year-old competition: up to 50,000 trucks for the Army and another 5,000 for the Marines, at a cost of $250,000 apiece. The nearly $14 billion program is one of the few big, near-term prizes in Pentagon budgets squeezed by war costs and the economic downturn. Some have questioned why the ground combat branches even need a new vehicle. After 11 years of war the Army and Marines are flush with fresh up-armored Humvees and no fewer than 20,000 of the hulking MRAPs, the latter costing $1 million apiece. There are so many surplus MRAPs that the Pentagon gives them away to allies and is [planning to park thousands of them](http://security.blogs.cnn.com/2012/05/02/a-savior-for-many-u-s-troops-struggles-to-find-a-home-in-a-changing-military/) in overseas warehouses, where they will await the next major ground war. But the JLTV is special, the military argues. Thanks to its blast-deflecting shape and classified armor mix, the seven-ton new truck will have the same level of underside blast protection as an MRAP, but at half the weight. Though roughly the same dimensions as the Humvee, the JLTV ["has so much more payload and so much more capability,"](http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RS22942.pdf) the Marine Corps said. The Pentagon hopes a JLTV-equipped force will be light enough to deploy quickly but tough enough to survive in the era of the improvised bomb. AM General BRV-O ---------------- As the maker of the stalwart Humvee, the Pentagon's standard truck since the mid-'80s, AM General was expected to field a strong JLTV candidate. The company calls its new vehicle the [Blast Resistant Vehicle – Offroad](http://amgeneralbrv-o.com/), or BRV-O. *Photo: AM General*
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