AMU Cyber & AI Homeland Security

DARPA’s Ground-X Vehicle Technology Program

By Brett Daniel Shehadey
Special Contributor for In Homeland Security

Whatever comes after military-grade Humvees will be something more akin to the popular video game known as HALO. The early October concept video release of the Ground-X Vehicle Technology Program (The GXV-T Program) shows a futuristic ground vehicle design that has more of a look and feel of a small and fast space rover than an earthbound military vehicle.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has stated that the GXV-T Program’s main purpose is to replace the “more armor” paradigm that currently exists within the U.S. Army.

DARPA Program manager Kevin Massey said, “GXV-T’s goal is not just to improve or replace one particular vehicle—it’s about breaking the ‘more armor’ paradigm and revolutionizing protection for all armored fighting vehicles.”

The GXV-T Program has a start date of award next April and is set to last a duration of two years.

The Program will seek to accomplish:

  • Greater usability- intended for all soldiers with little or no training on its operation.
  • Auto-pilot, terrain classification and mapping system features.
  • Layered protection system to defend against IEDs and other threats.
  • Less armor, more threat detection avoidance, evasion and superior agility.
  • Extreme speed.
  • Adaptive wheel configurations and omnidirectional movement changes in 3 dimensions.
  • Active repositioning of armor.
  • Reduction of detectable signatures, including: visible, infrared, acoustic and electromagnetic.

As of now, the Humvee is threatened by the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) Project, which provides a new in-service capability of a light rapid armored vehicle with greater combat survivability than the Humvee. Nevertheless, the principle is one of armoring a Humvee-like design in size, shape, appearance and armor (even with light weight aims). In some ways they are similar projects but the GXV-T Project appears to be a next step process—much more ambitious.

DARPA GXV-T technical goals include:

  • Reduce vehicle size and weight by 50 percent
  • Reduce onboard crew needed to operate vehicle by 50 percent
  • Increase vehicle speed by 100 percent
  • Access 95 percent of terrain

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