Bridge Armor Vehicle (avlb) - Model M60a1 Parts

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NSN
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10-35528 Electrical Contact
007716523
10-35531 Electrical Contact
007716526
572930 Electrical Contact
009256495
5940000572930 Electrical Contact
009256495
5999007716523 Electrical Contact
007716523
5999007716526 Electrical Contact
007716526
5999009256495 Electrical Contact
009256495
609456 Electrical Contact
009210630
7716523 Electrical Contact
007716523
7716526 Electrical Contact
007716526
A-A-52536 Electrical Contact
009256495
A2288 Electrical Contact
009256495
AA52536-1 Electrical Contact
009256495
DM-2456 Electrical Contact
009210630
MS27148-1 Electrical Contact
009256495
SM-B-542008 Electrical Contact
009210630
SMB542008 Electrical Contact
009210630
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Bridge Armor Vehicle (avlb) - Model M60a1

Picture of Bridge Armor Vehicle (avlb) - Model M60a1

The M60 AVLB is an armored vehicle based on the M60 Patton main battle tank chassis used for the launching and retrieval of a 60 feet (18 m) scissors-type bridge. The AVLB consists of three major sections: the launcher, the vehicle hull, and the bridge.

The M60 AVLB is based on a M60 Patton tank chassis, but instead of the tank's gun turret, it is equipped with a bridge launcher integrated into the chassis and mounted on top. When emplaced, the bridge is capable of supporting tracked and wheeled vehicles with a military load bearing capacity up to Class 70. The bridge can be retrieved from either end. The roadway width of the AVLB is 12 feet 6 inches (3.81 m). During deployments, bridge emplacement can be accomplished in 2 minutes, and retrieval can be accomplished in 10 minutes under armor protection.

As of 1996, the U.S. Marines had an inventory of 55 bridges and 37 launchers.

The U.S. Army and Marine Corps are planning to replace the AVLB with the DRS Technologies Joint Assault Bridge (JAB), which is an M1 Abrams tank chassis combined with an 18.3 metres (60 ft)-long scissor bridge. The M60-based AVLB was found to be slower and unable to keep pace with Abrams tanks and M2 Bradley armored vehicles, and its age was making it difficult to maintain and sustain with parts becoming obsolete. The JAB also has a faster deployment time, with a set-up of three minutes compared to AVLB’s six-minute set-up. First deliveries are planned in mid-2017, with low-rate initial production expected to be reached in 2019.

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