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{{Short description|British logistics vehicle family}}
[[File:British military trucks.jpg|thumb|MMLC near [[Catterick Garrison|Catterick]], 2009]]
The '''Demountable Rack Offload and Pickup System''' ('''DROPS''')
* [[Leyland DAF]]
* [[Edwin Foden, Sons & Co.|Foden]]
Both
The DROP system was designed to meet the very high intensity battles in Central Europe in the last decade of the [[Cold War]]. However, it entered service after the collapse of the Warsaw Pact, but nevertheless proved a versatile vehicle system on operations completely different from those originally envisaged.
==The Operational Requirement==▼
The DROPS system developed fro the revaluation of readiness and firepower requirements of [[British Army of the Rhine]] (BAOR) in the mid-seventies. This was driven by three principal developments in the Warsaw Pact and, in particular, [[Group Soviet Forces Germany]] (GSFG). These were:▼
The capability for rapid mobilisation and deployment rought about by increased mechanisation and communications in the Soviet Army.▼
▲The
▲*The capability for rapid mobilisation and deployment
This was linked to a doctrine of much more rapid and decisive attack designed to dislocate NATO defences by highly concentrated and massive penetration.
*The development of improved tank designs such as
To counter these developments a decision was made to make all divisional artillery 155mm and phase out the [[FV433 Abbot SPG|105mm Abbot]].
The BAS confirmed that [[I Corps (United Kingdom)|1 (BR) Corps]] could resist and contain a Soviet attack of the type predicted but that over eight days of high-intensity warfare would suffer massive casualties. However it was imperative for a follow-on capability to exist and there should be sufficient manpower, materiel and ammunition for 1 (BR) Corps to fight on at 40% of mobilisation strength for a further two days.
The RARS identified that the previous ammunition scales for the NATO 30
It became clear on trials in the late
A work study<ref>A Man S (WS) Project 226</ref> showed that a truck of large capacity, ideally built to
This novel concept was agreed within the [[Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom)|Ministry of Defence]] (MOD) in
==Specification and procurement==
Leyland and Foden vehicles
The provisionally selected vehicles were extensively trialled for a year by a specially-formed trials unit, before both the unit and the MOD were completely satisfied that they met the
== MMLC ==
Introduced in early
In February 1987 the company
During the [[Gulf War|
== IMMLC ==
Production of the Foden IMMLCs began in January 1994. 404 were introduced. These vehicles were primarily supplied to the Royal Artillery in support of the [[AS90]]
==Replacement==
As both vehicles are now out of commercial production, resulting in vastly reduced and resultantly higher cost spares provision, and taking into account the wider geographic nature of modern British Army deployment, the MOD
==See also==
* [[Palletized
==External links==
<references/>
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20101229122534/http://www.army.mod.uk/equipment/engineering/1501.aspx British Army DROPS Vehicles]
[[Category:British Army equipment]]
[[Category:
[[Category:Military vehicles of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Military equipment of NATO]]
[[Category:Military vehicles introduced in the 1990s]]
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