GDELS Details Latest Variant of M3 Amphibious Bridge Order for a Customer in Southeast Asia
06 Februari 2017
M3 Amphibious Bridge (photo : GDELS)
GDELS awarded a contract for latest variant of M3 Amphibious Bridge and Ferry System
MADRID/ KAISERSLAUTEN - General Dynamics European Land Systems announced that it has signed a contract for the production and delivery of the latest variant of the M3 Amphibious Bridge and Ferry System for a customer in Southeast Asia. The deliveries will also include an ILS package consisting of a simulator system, training, special tools and manuals.
NATO and mon-NATO nations use the M3 in different roles, from combat operations to civil defense missions.
“The award of the contract once again underlines the quality and superior performance of General Dynamics European Land Systems’ mobile bridge systems and the high reputation our company and products have in the defense market as the most modern and most powerful amphibious bridge and ferry system,” said Dr. Thomas Kauffmann, VP International Business & Services for General Dynamics European Land Systems.
M3 Amphibious Bridge (photo : fit-koblenz)
M3Amphibious Bridge and Ferry System can carry payloads of up to MLC85 tracked vehicles and MLC 132 wheeled vehicles and can build a 100m (330 ft) floating bridge in less than 10 minutes.
Watching the 350-meter floating bridge built with German and British M3s during the NATO exercise Anakonda in June 2016, Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, the U.S. Army Europe commander, was quoted in Defense News as saying, “This is the best bridge I´ve ever seen in my live. You´ve got a wonderful example of interoperability. This is a great example of an ally providing the capability that everybody else needs”.
German Brig. Gen. Markus Laubenthal, who is the chief of staff for US Army Europe, also told Defense News on the way back from Chelmno to Warsaw after the exercises, which operated the longest M3 floating bridge ever built to cross the Vistula river, that the capability is “unique” in NATO provided by just the German and British armies. “It differs from the traditional military bridging equipment because it also can function as a ferry,” he said. “This is a very speedy, fast way to cross the river.”
(GDELS)
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