W/e (m88a1) Full-tracked Medium Recovery Vehicle Parts

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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
11671581-1 Cable Assembly
006147543
11671581-2 Cable Assembly
006158737
11671581-3 Cable Assembly
006147544
2590006147544 Cable Assembly
006147544
818222 Cable Assembly
008890757
818222-7 Cable Assembly
008232837
CX-4723/VRC(20FT0IN) Cable Assembly
008890757
CX-4723/VRC20FT Cable Assembly
008890757
CX4723VRC10FT Cable Assembly
008232837
SM-D-415553 Cable Assembly
008890757
SM-D-415553-20FT Cable Assembly
008890757
SMD415553-10FT Cable Assembly
008232837
TR4723-8FT Cable Assembly
008232837
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Recovery Vehicle, Full-tracked Medium, W/e (m88a1)

Picture of W/e (m88a1)  Full-tracked Medium Recovery Vehicle

•M88/M88A1: Continental (now L-3 Combat Propulsion Systems) AVDS-1790-2DR V12, air-cooled Twin-turbo diesel engine

The M88 Recovery Vehicle is one of the largest armored recovery vehicles (ARV) currently in use by United States Armed Forces. There are currently three variants, the M88, M88A1 and M88A2 HERCULES (Heavy Equipment Recovery Combat Utility Lifting Extraction System). The M88 series has seen action most noticeably in the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War, the Iraq War, and the War in Afghanistan, and to a lesser extent during the Kosovo War, where they were deployed to help recover heavy armored vehicles of the Allied ground units. The current M88A2 replacement cost is around US$2,050,000.

The design of this vehicle was based on the chassis and parts of the automotive component of the M48 Patton and M60 Patton tanks. The original M88 was introduced in 1961, M88A1 in 1977, with the current M88A2 introduced in 1997.

Originally manufactured by Bowen McLaughlin York (later the BMY division of Harsco Corporation) in 1961, the company would later merge with FMC Corp. to form the United Defense Industries in 1994, which was in turn acquired by BAE Systems in 2005 to become BAE Systems Land and Armaments. In February 2008 the company was awarded a $185 million contract modification from the U.S. Army to manufacture 90 Army-configured M88A2s, four United States Marine Corps-configured M88A2s and authorized spares list parts.

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