- Source: FV106 Samson
FV106 Samson was a British Army armoured recovery vehicle, one of the CVR(T) family. The main role of this vehicle was to recover the CVR(T) family of vehicles, but could also recover other light tracked vehicles such as the FV430 series.
Design and features
The Samson was conceived in the early 1970s with the final design entering production in 1978. The hull is an all-welded aluminium construction. It usually carries a crew of three operating a 3.5T capstan winch that can also be utilised in a lifting configuration. It carries suitable equipment to enable a 4:1 mechanical advantage with 228m of winch rope. This winch is capable of recovering up to 12 Tonnes of vehicle. A manually operated earth anchor is situated at the rear to anchor the vehicle while operations are carried out.
The Samson can be fitted with a flotation screen so it can be operated amphibiously using its own tracks at 6.5 km/h or at 9.6 km/h if also fitted with a propeller kit. The Samson can also be fitted with a full NBC protection unit.
Operators
A single Samson accompanied the two troops of Blues and Royals CVR(T)s to the Falklands War.
= Current operators
=Togo One in service.
Belgium
Brunei Darussalam – 2 vehicles in service.
Latvia
Oman – 3 vehicles in service.
Philippines – 6 vehicles in service.
Thailand
United Kingdom – No longer in service with the British Army and Royal Air Force.
Ukraine - 5 vehicles from the United Kingdom in 2022.
Examples on display
= Philippines
=FV106 Samson retired Philippine Army is on outdoor static display at Fort Bonifacio in Taguig, Philippines.
= United Kingdom
=The REME Museum has an example of a Samson on display in The Prince Philip Vehicle Hall.
See also
Armoured recovery vehicles
CVR(T)
REME
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- FV106 Samson
- FV101 Scorpion
- Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked)
- ASCOD
- Samson (disambiguation)
- List of FV series military vehicles
- List of equipment of the Royal Thai Army
- Alvis Car and Engineering Company
- List of Gulf War military equipment
- Guy Innes-Ker, 10th Duke of Roxburghe