Bardick AS1
Beginning development as a private venture in 1982 in response to the Falklands War, the Bardick AS1 was ordered by the Australian Hawke Government in 1986 in the wake of the Dibb Report. Originally intended to be light and small enough to be deployable in the RAAF's C-130H fleet, the resulting design was found to be unsuitable for what Army wanted. As a result, the design was enlarged and development of the RAAF's new jet airlifter - the C-90 Kali with a 35-tonne payload - was accelerated in response.
The vehicle design emphasised crew comfort, range, mobility and mine protection. At the time of its introduction, it was intended to perform rapid reaction and expeditionary taskings in the defence of Australia where even the in-service Leopard AS1 was considered too heavy to be readily deployable in the existing infrastructure across northern Australia. Within this scenario it was expected to fight against foreign landings of battalion strength or less and would operate alongside the Echidna MICV and Bushmaster IMV.
The base vehicle consists of an aluminium hull and steel turret with all round protection against 14.5mm for a weight of 24.8 tonnes. It is designed to be equipped with modular appliqué armour, with the top level coming in at 32 tonnes and providing protection against 30mm APFSDS across the frontal arc.
The Bardick AS1 cavalry tank began entering service in the latter half of 1990 with 10th Light Horse, 4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse, and 3rd/4th Cavalry Regiments. Each troop within the regiment is equipped with two tanks with a 105mm gun and two with a Bofors 40mm and TOW missiles. Further variants include self-propelled anti-aircraft, self-propelled L119 105mm howitzer, bridgelayer, and combat engineer vehicles.
The vehicle has been deployed by Australia to Timor-Leste in 1999 where it had a brief showdown with Indonesian forces, Afghanistan in 2001, and Iraq in 2003.
The vehicle has since entered service with Canada, India, New Zealand, the Philippines, Spain, South Africa, and the United Kingdom. Variants have also been developed for the United States and Indonesia.
Weight: 24.8 tonnes
Length: 7.1m hull, 10.2m overall
Width: 3m
Height: 2.5m to top of cupola
Crew: 4 (commander, driver, gunner, loader)
Main armament: L7 LRF 105mm rifled gun
Secondary armament: 7.62mm MAG 58 coaxial, 12.7mm M2HB pintle-mounted
Engine: 800hp Perkins diesel
Suspension: Hydropneumatic
Power to weight: 32 hp/t at 24.8t
Range: 750km with external fuel tanks
Maximum speed: 75km/h road, 50km/h offroad
Ground clearance: 0.5m