The 'Amphibious Assault Vehicle' ('AAV')—official designation 'AAV-7A1' (formerly known as 'LVT-7') is a fully tracked
amphibious landing vehicle manufactured by
FMC Corporation.
The AAV-7A1 is the current amphibious troop transport of the
United States Marine Corps. It is used by USMC
Assault Amphibian Battalions to land the surface assault elements of the landing force and their equipment in a single lift from assault shipping during amphibious operations to inland objectives and to conduct mechanized operations and related combat support in subsequent mechanized operations ashore. It is also operated by other forces.
Development
The LVT-7 was first introduced in
1972 as a replacement for the
LVT-5. In
1982, FMC was contracted to conduct the LVT-7 Service Life Extension Program, which converted the LVT-7 vehicles to the improved AAV-7A1 vehicle by adding an improved engine, transmission, and weapons system and improving the overall maintainability of the vehicle. The Cummins VT400 diesel engine replaced the GM 8V53T, and this was driven through FMC's HS-400-3A1 transmission. The hydraulic traverse and elevation of the weapon station was replaced by electric motors, which eliminated the danger from hydraulic fluid fires. The suspension and shock absorbers were strengthened as well. The fuel tank was made safer, and a fuel-burning smoke generator system was added. Eight smoke grenade launchers were also placed around the armament station. The headlight clusters were housed in a square recess instead of the earlier round type. The driver was provided with an improved instrument panel, a night vision device, and a new ventilation system was installed. These upgraded vehicles were originally called LVT-7A1, but the Marine Corps renamed the LVT-7A1 to AAV-7A1 in 1984.
Another improvement was added in the form of a Cadillac Gage weapon station or Up-Gunned Weapon Station (UGWS) which was armed with both a .50 cal (12.7 mm)
M2HB machine gun and a
Mk-19 40 mm grenade launcher.
Enhanced Applique Armor Kits (EAAK) were developed for the AAV-7A1, and the added weight of the new armor necessitated the addition of a bow plane kit when operating afloat.
The Assault Amphibious Vehicle Reliability, Availability, Maintainability/Rebuild to Standard (AAV RAM/RS) Program has provided for a replacement of both the engine and suspension with US Army
M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicle (BFV) components modified for the AAV. The ground clearance has returned to 16 inches and the horsepower to ton ratio has changed from 13 to 1 back to 17 to 1. The AAV RAM/RS rebuild encompassed all AAV systems and components in order to return the AAV back to the original vehicle's performance specifications and ensure acceptable Fleet Marine Force (FMF) AAV readiness ratings until the EFV is operational. Introduction of the BFV components and the rebuild to standard effort is expected to reduce maintenance costs for the remaining life of the AAV through the year 2013.
Variants
Three types of AAV-7A1s exist;
★ AAVP-7A1 (Personnel)
★ AAVC-7A1 (Command)
★ AAVR-7A1 (Recovery)
The P-7A1 is by far the most common type. The P-7A1 has the capacity to carry
25 combat-equipped Marines. AAVP-7A1s are operated by three crewmen; the crew chief, driver, and rear crewman.
AAVP-7A1s have also been modified to carry the Mk 154 MCLC, or Mine Clearance Line Charge. The MCLC kit can fire three linear demolition charges to breach a lane through a minefield. MCLCs were used in the
1991 Persian Gulf War and again in
Operation Iraqi Freedom in
2003.
In the
1970's, the US Army used a LVT-7 as the basis for their Mobile Test Unit (MTU), a ground-based antiaircraft high energy laser. After several successful test firings at Redstone Army Arsenal, the laser was reportedly transferred to
NASA.
Combat History

Marine Amphibious vehicle destroyed near
Nasiriyah, March 2003
Twenty U.S.-built LVTP-7s were used by
Argentina during the
1982 invasion of the Falkland Islands with all of them returning to Argentina mainland before the war ended. It was heavily used in the
conflict in Iraq and has been criticized for providing poor protection for the crew and passengers compared with other vehicles such as the
M2 Bradley. Several of them were disabled or destroyed during the
Battle of Nasiriyah, where they faced RPG, mortar, tank and artillery fire. Eighteen Marines were lost.
[1] As a result, an applique armor kit to protect against weapons such as RPGs was developed by
Rafael, however on August 3rd 2005 14 Marines were killed in Haditha when their AAV was destroyed by a stack of three
anti-tank mines.
[2] AAV-7A1s were also used extensively in the
Persian Gulf War and in
Operation Restore Hope.
The AAV is still used by the
United States Marine Corps, although it is slated to be replaced with the
Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle starting in
2015
Replacement
The
Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle (EFV) is designed to replace the aging AAV, and is the Marine Corps' number one priority ground weapon system acquisition. It has three times the speed in water and about twice the armor of the AAV, and superior firepower as well. The EFV is intended for deployment in 2015.
[3] It was renamed from the Advanced Amphibious Assault Vehicle in late 2003.
The designed is an amphibious armored personnel carrier; launched at sea, from an amphibious assault ship beyond the horizon, able to transport a full Marine rifle squad to shore. It will maneuver cross country with an agility and mobility equal to or greater than the
M1 Abrams.
Operators
★
United States Marine Corps - 1311
★
Infanteria de Marina (
Argentina) - 21 LVTP7s, around 10 upgraded locally
★
Corpo de Fuzileiros Navais do Brasil (
Brazil)- 13 AAV-7A1 ,9 LVTP-7A1, 2 LVTC-7A1 and 1 LVTR-7A1
★
Italian Army - 35 LVPT7s, 25 of which have been upgraded to AAV-7A1 standard.
★
Republic of Korea Marine Corps (
South Korea) - 162
★
Republic of China Marine Corps (
Taiwan) - 54
★ Spanish Marine Brigade (BRIMAR) - 16
★ Royal Thai Marine Corps - 24
★
Venezuelan Navy - 11 AAVT-7s, (1 AAVTC-7 +1AAVTR-7 +9AAVTP-7).
Notes
1. Final Roll Call
2. Defense Link
3. U.S. Marine EFV Delivery Delayed to 2015 and Costs Double - defensenews.com
See also
★
3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion
External links
★
FAS AAV article
★
AAV Fact File at the official USMC website
★
Paper regarding high energy lasers and the MTU
★
Images of the MTU
★
USMC Amtrac Association Website