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View Full Version : The ugliest vehicle in the world can take a punch



dwasson
11-26-2005, 09:29 PM
From: http://www.navyseals.com/community/articles/article.cfm?id=8321
http://graniteglobalservices.com/automotive/images/newbig5.jpg

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While in Florida, Berman stopped by a Ford dealership. There he took a close look at the Ford F-550, realized the truck had the heavy-duty chassis he needed for a fully armored urban-combat vehicle. It was not to be a Humvee replacement – perhaps a replacement for soft-skinned SUVs – but surely a vehicle that – had it been in Blackwater service in the spring of 2004 – would have saved lives.

“A Humvee is a rough terrain vehicle designed to go in the dirt, and it has some other great capabilities,” says Berman. “However, we’re no longer in a land-grabbing front-line war. We’re now in an urban warfare situation where we’re spending a lot of time working in-and-around cities.”

In the days following Helvenston’s funeral, Berman formed Kuwait-based Granite Global Services (graniteglobalservices.com). His first truck went into production at his Kuwaiti plant in June 2004 (less than three months after the Fallujah ambush). The first deployable truck rolled off the line in June 2005.

In the current operating environment, U.S. and coalition troops – including Iraqi security forces – and civilian contractors are having to defend themselves against organized ambush teams, suicide bombers on foot, car bombs, IEDs (improvised explosive devices), snipers, and random shooters.

That’s exactly the type of environment Berman’s vehicles are designed to operate in.

Riding around in pickup trucks or SUVs is nothing less than suicidal. And “armoring Humvees is like trying to put a band-aid on a sucking chest wound,” says Berman. “The spirit of it is fantastic. The application of it is ridiculous.”

Berman calls his new urban warfare vehicle, The Rock, and his clients run the gamut from private construction firms to U.S. Defense Department agencies. Talks also are ongoing with the Iraqis, and that’s where the vehicle-name comes in.

Initially, Berman’s truck was known as The Warthog. “As you can imagine, pigs are not popular animals with the Iraqis,” says Berman. After the first three Warthogs were deployed and returned for service, the company ground off the nameplates. Currently, the trucks are branded Granite Automotive Group. But the name for this particular model will soon officially become known as The Rock. “I don’t think we’re going to insult any culture or religion with The Rock.”

The vehicle is unlike anything on the ground in Iraq.

Built on a Ford 4X4 truck chassis with “street tires,” The Rock weighs approximately 15,500 lbs. (depending on an individual vehicle’s armor and armament configuration), but it’s fast. “It’s governed at 94 mph, but – at 15,000 pounds - we can comfortably do 80,” says Berman.

The vehicle’s armor is comprised of three layers: First is the outer Polyeurea coating. This is followed by the actual armor. Then there is a blanketing insulator. These three layers surround the entire vehicle – roof, sides, front, rear, and below the floorboard. “It is 100 percent armored,” says Berman.

Moreover, the outer skin of the vehicle has a “bolt-on” feature that permits additional layers of armor to be attached to the existing armor. An RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) screen may also be added, similar to the screen/cage on the U.S. Army’s Stryker.

The Rock can haul a four-man crew and six-to-eight passengers depending on its configuration.

And it can fight!

During an urban combat operation, two combatants would be positioned topside in two roof turrets manning belt-fed machineguns. Six windows with spring-loaded gun ports would add to The Rock’s firepower. Consequently, when “this porcupine comes down the road,” as Berman says, it will be bringing eight guns to bear on any bushwhackers. That fact alone serves as a deterrent.

Two such vehicles equals sixteen guns, four of which “are big belt-feeders on the roof,” says Berman. “Anyone who wants to attack that is slapping at the wrong person.”

So the optimum question might be, has The Rock saved lives? “I’d like to think so,” says Berman. “They currently are not shooting any guns in Iraq that will penetrate our body. We also have a poly liner on it so you’re really not going to see where the bullets hit. A 7.62X39, which is an AK-47 round, does not do anything against our armor but dissipate energy. If your eyes are closed you cannot feel the bullet impact of an AK-47 round against our vehicle.”

The Rock is fully air-conditioned and is equipped with an on-board auxiliary generator, similar to an RV.

“Let’s say you’re going to be sitting someplace for eight hours,” says Berman. “Instead of idling the engine in 130 degree temps to cool the guys down, you turn on the generator and make everything like a great big cooler.”

Cooler indeed: With its 360-degree armor, roof-turrets, gun ports, and auxiliary power; The Rock is a mini-fortress.

Granite Global currently has 10 vehicles in service, nine in production. Berman believes he would have had more on-line, but production was initially so rapid, some of the vehicles were recalled for minor glitches. “We moved so fast that some of our R&D [research and development] took place in the field,” laughs Berman.

Today with 32 employees, Granite Global is capable of producing 10 trucks per month. Other manufacturers – like stateside-based Force Protection (that produce the Buffalo and Cougar); General Dynamics (which produces the RG-31) in South Africa, and Textron Systems (which produces the Dingo-2) in Germany – are manufacturing their armored vehicles for service in Iraq and elsewhere. Yet none of those companies, according to Berman, are as closely deployed as his to the battle theater. A maintenance center is currently being built in Baghdad. And mechanical access points – Ford dealerships and those that service Ford trucks – are available globally.

At $200,000 per vehicle, The Rock is moderately priced. But Berman contends he’s not out to make a lot of money. He was a professional soldier before becoming a businessman, and he entered the business world “to make a better way for guys not to die,”

Berman says he’s dealt with over 40 deaths in Iraq: Most of those were killed by highway mines or in ambushes, and most were doing nothing more transporting food from one site to another. It’s a new phase of warfare in the 21st century, and that’s what The Rock has been designed to support.

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Geo
11-26-2005, 10:41 PM
that's my new van!

merc6
11-26-2005, 10:51 PM
Is it as dangerous as the XM1114 or XM1116 if it rolls over after being hit by a burried road mine or directional charge?

Donny Carlson
11-27-2005, 09:27 AM
http://graniteglobalservices.com/automotive/images/newbig5.jpg


DON"T SHOW THIS TO TODD!!!

He'll be racing it next year at SSHS-6 if you do!!

AND whupping an Impala's ass doing it!!