The file 'FV 102 Striker ATGM 3D Printer Model' is (stl) file type, size is 23.8MB.
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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