Marauder (vehicle)
Marauder | |
---|---|
300px | |
Type | Armoured personnel carrier |
Place of origin | South Africa |
Service history | |
Used by | Azerbaijani Armed Forces African Union |
Production history | |
Manufacturer | Paramount Group |
Produced | 2008–present |
Number built | ~250 |
Specifications | |
Weight | Curb: 9,900 kg (21,780 lb) Combat: 15,000 kg (33,000 lb) |
Crew | 2 + 8 passengers |
|
|
Armor | Ballistic protection: STANAG 4569 level III (7.62 × 51 mm AP WC Core at 30 meters) and mine blast protection: STANAG 4569 3a and 3b (single anti-tank mine (8 kg of TNT under the hull and under any wheel) |
Engine | Cummins ISBe4-300 Diesel (221kW/300hp @ 2500rpm, 1100Nm @ 1200-1800rpm) MAN D0836LOH Diesel (176kW/240hp @ 2300rpm, 925Nm @ 1200-1800rpm) |
Payload capacity | 6,000 kg (13,227 lb) |
Suspension | 4x4 or 6x6 wheeled[1] |
Ground clearance | 420 mm |
Operational
range |
700 km (435 mi) |
Speed | 100–120 km/h (tyre dependent) |
The Marauder[1] is an armoured, mine-protected vehicle that is produced by Paramount Group in South Africa. It was launched during the 2007 International Defence Exhibition (IDEX) and Conference in Abu Dhabi, the largest arms exhibition in the Middle East.[2][3][4]
Contents
Design and Specifications
The Marauder was developed for reconnaissance and peacekeeping missions. It carries a crew of up to ten, including a driver and commander.
Originally designed to operate in urban, built-up and confined areas it is smaller in both size and weight than the Matador, a similarly armoured vehicle. Vehicle configuration is either 4x4 or a 6x6. The Marauder has a cruising speed of around 100 to 120 km/h (62–75 mph), and a maximum range of 700 kilometres (430 mi).
The Marauder’s double-skin monocoque hull provides protection against projectiles up to STANAG 4569 Level III for the crew compartment.[5]
The Marauder’s payload capacity allows for the fitting of various defence and weapons systems, including light and medium-calibre machine guns, cannon weapon installations, and missile launchers, as well as command, surveillance, and control systems. The vehicle can be configured such that mortars may be fired from the payload platform.[6]
Production
In 2008, for the manufacturing and production of the Marauder, the Paramount Group entered into an agreement with the King Abdullah Design and Development Bureau (KADDB), Jordan’s primary governmental military agency that develops and manufactures defence systems,[7] and which serves as an independent technical advisor to the Jordanian Armed Forces (JAF). As well as being a manufacturer, Jordan was the first customer for the Marauder.[8] The Marauder is also manufactured in Azerbaijan.[9]
In popular culture
In June 2011, the civilian version of the Marauder was featured in British motoring program Top Gear,[10] with Richard Hammond. Among the activities tested were ordering fast-food from a drive-through restaurant, driving off-road, through/over obstacles (solid brick walls and parked cars, respectively) and testing how well it could withstand an explosion (seven pounds of plastic explosives) directed at its underside.[11]
Operators

Current operators
Algeria: According to SIPRI only 2 were delivered in 2009[12]
Azerbaijan: 85 delivered in total between 2009 and 2014. Local production of the vehicles was established under an agreement between the Paramount Group and the Ministry of Defence Industry of Azerbaijan.[12][13]
Congo: 52 delivered in total between 2010 and 2012[12]
Jordan: An initial batch of ~50 Marauders and Matadors were ordered in March 2008. Local production of the vehicles was established under an agreement between the Paramount Group and the King Abdullah Design and Development Bureau.[14]
Kazakhstan: An unknown amount of a new winterized variant, called Arlan (Wolf), was ordered in 2013 and delivery is scheduled to take place in 2016. Local production of the vehicles was established under an agreement between the Paramount Group and Kazakhstan Paramount Engineering (KPE).[15][12]
Malawi: 6 ordered in 2013[12]
Oman: 1 ordered in 2013[12]
Singapore: 12 ordered in 2013[12]
See also
References
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External links
Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
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- ↑ http://bookmark.dac.co.jp/story.php?title=marauder-mine-protected-vehicles
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Use British English from December 2011
- Armoured fighting vehicles of the post–Cold War period
- Armoured personnel carriers of South Africa
- Military equipment of Azerbaijan
- Military light utility vehicles
- Sport utility vehicles
- Full-size sport utility vehicles