The Puma infantry fighting vehicle has been certified
for full
deployment with the German Army.
Photo courtesy of
Rheinmetall
|
Rheinmetall's Puma
infantry fighting vehicle has won government approval for full deployment with
the German Army.
The certification
was issued by the Federal Office of Bundeswehr Equipment, Information
Technology and In-Service Support following months of field trials and
technological reviews of the IFV.
"Nothing now
stands in the way of the Bundeswehr fielding the new IFV," Rheinmetall
said. "The Puma will gradually supersede the Bundeswehr's Marder IFV,
whose original version first entered service with German mechanized infantry
units over 40 years ago."
The Puma IFV, which
can carry six soldiers in addition to its three crew members, is a tracked
armored vehicle with a 30mm auto-cannon and machine guns. It has a top speed of
nearly 44 mph and a range of 372 miles.
Rheinmetall said
the new certification means that personnel to be trained in the use of the Puma
can begin with an initial seven vehicles, with more vehicles to come. Germany has
ordered 350 Puma IFVs.
A fielding
organization will outfit the vehicles following their manufacture with special
German Army equipment. Maintenance and technical and logistical support for the
German Army vehicles will be conducted by Projektgesellschaft PSM GmbH, a joint
venture company of Rheinmetall and Krauss-Maffei Wegmann.
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