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The FV721 Fox Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Wheeled) (CVR(W)) was a 4 × 4 armoured car manufactured by ROF Leeds, deployed by the British Army as a replacement for the Ferret scout car and the Saladin armoured car. The Fox was introduced into service with B Squadron, 1st Royal Tank Regiment (Aliwal Barracks, Tidworth) in 1975 and withdrawn from service 1993–94.

FV721 Fox
FV721 Fox in Ursel, Belgium
TypeArmoured car
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Production history
No. built325 (180 for UK, 145 exported)[1]
Specifications
Mass6.75 tonnes (7.44 short tons; 6.64 long tons)
Length5.08 m (16 ft 8 in)
Width2.13 m (7 ft 0 in)
Height2.2 m (7 ft 3 in)
Crew3

ArmorAluminium
Main
armament
30 mm L21 RARDEN cannon
Secondary
armament
Co-axial 7.62 mm L37A2 machine gun
EngineJaguar J.60 No 1 Mk 100B Petrol
190 hp (142 kW)
Power/weight28.1 hp/tonne
SuspensionWheel
Operational
range
434 km (269.675 mi)
Maximum speed 104 km/h (64.6 mph)

Development of the Fox began in 1965 and the following year the Daimler company of Coventry, which was building the Ferret scout car at the time, was awarded a contract to build 15 prototype vehicles. The first was completed in November 1967 and the last in April 1969. User trials began in 1968 and the first official announcement concerning the Fox was made in October 1969.

The following year the Fox was accepted for service with the British Army and a production order was placed with Royal Ordnance Leeds.

Production began in 1972 and the first vehicle was completed in May 1973. Production of the Fox has been completed at Royal Ordnance Leeds.


Description


FV721 at Monmouth Regimental Museum
FV721 at Monmouth Regimental Museum

It had a crew of three and had a low profile rotating turret armed with a 30 mm L21 RARDEN cannon, which was manually fed with three-round clips; 99 rounds were carried. A coaxial L37A2 7.62 mm machine gun was mounted with 2,600 rounds. The weapons were not stabilised. This turret was also equipped with a set of two 4-barrelled smoke dischargers. The vehicle had a combat weight of 6.75 tonnes and was designed to be air-portable.[2] The Fox had aluminium armour and was fitted with a flotation screen. It lacked protection against nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. Powered by a Jaguar 4.2-litre 6-cylinder petrol engine, the Fox was one of the fastest vehicles of its type.

The all-welded aluminium armour hull and turret protected against small arms fire and artillery splinters but not from heavy (.50 calibre) machine gun fire. The driver sat at the front and had an integral periscope/hatch cover that lifted and opened to the right. The centre mounted turret held the commander-loader on the left and gunner on the right. They each had a rear-opening hatch cover.[2]

Without preparation, the Fox can ford one metre of water and a flotation screen can be erected in two minutes. Drive when floating was solely from the road wheels, giving poor performance and the screens were removed from most UK vehicles early in their service life. Air portable, three Foxes can be carried by one C-130 Hercules aircraft, two of which can be parachute dropped.[2]

The Fox was principally used by the Royal and Queen's Own Yeomanry, the brigade reconnaissance regiments in 2 Div, BAOR's rear area formation. Small numbers were also attached to air mobile, armoured and mechanized infantry battalions to form a reconnaissance platoon.


Variants


FV722 Vixen prototype at Bovington Tank Museum
FV722 Vixen prototype at Bovington Tank Museum

Operators


Map of Fox operators in blue with former operators in red
Map of Fox operators in blue with former operators in red

Current operators



Former operators



References


  1. Staff Writer, "Alvis FV721 Fox: 4x4 Armored Car (1973)", Military Factory, retrieved 11 October 2021
  2. "FV721 Fox Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Wheeled)". Inetres.com. 20 July 2006. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  3. "Written Answers to Questions [4 July 2006] Defence Military Vehicles". House of Commons Hansard. Parliament of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 16 January 2009.
  4. "Janes armor and artillery upgrades, Alvis Vickers 30 mm turret (United Kingdom), AFV TURRETS AND CUPOLAS". Jane's. Retrieved 17 October 2010.

Sources





На других языках


- [en] Fox armoured reconnaissance vehicle

[ru] Фокс (бронеавтомобиль)

«Фокс» (англ. Fox — лиса) — британский лёгкий разведывательный бронеавтомобиль 1970-х годов, также обозначается как «боевая (колёсная) разведывательная машина» (БРМ) (англ. Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Wheeled)) или CVR(W). По внутренней сквозной системе обозначений британской бронетехники имеет индекс FV721. Создан в 1965—1967 годах как дальнейшее развитие лёгкого бронеавтомобиля «Феррет» и предназначался на роль разведывательно и аэротранспортабельной машины, для замены как «Феррета», так и более тяжёлого «Саладина» в Британской Армии. Разработка «Фокса» велась параллельно с гусеничной разведывательной машиной — лёгким танком «Скорпион» (CVR(T)), с которым бронеавтомобиль имеет многие общие компоненты. В Британской Армии, «Фокс» оставался одной из основных разведывательных машин вплоть до 1994 года, когда он был снят с вооружения. Также «Фокс» экспортировался в ряд других стран, в некоторых из которых он, по состоянию на 2007 год всё ещё остаётся на вооружении[1].



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