Nearly 200 Marines and 400 sailors from I Marine Expeditionary Force and Expeditionary Strike Group 3 conducted the drills ...
The new standards outline the use of safety boats to accompany the Amphibious Combat Vehicle during waterborne operations.
“The ceremony was held to officially introduce the Marine Corps’ Amphibious Combat Vehicle, which is meant to supplement and eventually replace the current Amphibious Assault Vehicles,” the ...
As the most feared fighting force in the world, it is imperative Marines advance their capabilities ... The ACV will be replacing the Amphibious Assault Vehicle starting in late 2020.
The US Marine Corps has begun full-rate production of next-generation Amphibious Combat Vehicles armed with a 30 mm cannon.
CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - For more than four decades, the amphibious assault vehicle has been key to getting Marines ashore and into the fight. US Marine Corps AAVs are large, tracked vehicles ...
Matthew Ludlow, the officer in charge of the Transition Training Unit, an entity that oversees the shift from the Corps' decades-old Amphibious Assault Vehicle ... Marine Expeditionary Unit out of ...