Combat Vehicle 90

The Combat Vehicle 90 (CV90) (Swedish: stridsfordon 90, strf 90) is a family of Swedish tracked armoured combat vehicles designed by the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration (FMV), Hägglund & Söner and Bofors during the mid-1980s to early 1990s, before entering service in Sweden in the mid-1990s. The CV90 platform design has continuously evolved from the Mk 0 to the current Mk IV with technological advances and changing battlefield requirements.

Combat Vehicle 90
A strf 9040C in Swedish service
TypeInfantry fighting vehicle
Place of originSweden
Service history
In service1994–present
Used bySee Operators
Wars
  • War in Afghanistan
  • United Nations Mission in Liberia
  • Russo-Ukrainian war
Production history
DesignerHägglunds/Bofors
Designedlate 1980s
ManufacturerBAE Systems AB
Produced1993–present
No. built1,400
Specifications
Mass23–38 tonnes (Mk 0 to Mk IV)
Length6.8 m (22 ft)
Width3.2 m (10 ft)
Height2.8 m (9 ft 2 in)
Crew
  • 3 (commander, gunner, driver)
  • 7–8 troopers

Armorfront against 30 mm APFSDS, all-round protection against 14.5 mm AP rounds, integration of Iron Fist APS
Main
armament
Secondary
armament
EngineScania DS14 14 litres diesel I6 or DC16 16 litres diesel V8 engine
550–1000 hp (410–750 kW) 3,055 Nm max
Power/weight20.3 kW (27.2 hp)/t
TransmissionAutomatic Perkins X300
Suspensiontorsion bar or active suspension
Operational
range
offroad 320 km (200 mi), onroad 900 km (560 mi)
Maximum speed 70 km/h (43 mph)

The Swedish version of the main infantry fighting vehicle (IFV) is fitted with a turret from Bofors equipped with a 40 mm Bofors autocannon. Export versions are fitted with Hägglunds E-series turrets, armed with either a 30 mm Mk44 or a 35 mm Bushmaster autocannon. Over time, the involvement of Hägglund & Söner has been superseded by Alvis Hägglunds (from 1997) and BAE Systems Hägglunds (from 2004).

Developed specifically for the Nordic subarctic climate, the vehicle has very good mobility in snow and wetlands while carrying and supporting eight, and in later versions six, fully equipped soldiers. Other variants include forward artillery observation, command and control, anti-aircraft, armoured recovery vehicle, electronic warfare versions and so forth. Currently, 1,400 vehicles in 17 variants are (or will be) in service with ten user states, seven of which are part of the NATO alliance.

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