MUST CALL to buy this vehicle.
VERY RARE - Reserve it today.
I found a WMA Ammo round that fell from this Military LTATV, onto my driveway. SEE LAST PICTURE, WMA is Winchester ammo made at their plant in Mississippi, as opposed to the old WCC stamp that came from their East Alton plant which IIRC was shuttered several years ago. If you read Winchester's catalog, they've got 2 separate SKU's for 9mm NATO
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Special Warfare LTATV Training:
https://www.defensemedianetwork.com/stories/special-warfare-atv-training/
Lightweight Tactical All Terrain Vehicles (LTATVs) are small, side-by-side vehicles in use by American Special Operations Forces, including those operating in Afghanistan.
Like the ATV/Quad-bike vehicles also used, the LTATV provides SOF teams with a highly maneuverable and mobile form of transportation that is also low profile.
Models of LTATVs in use by U.S. SOF include militarized versions of Polaris MRZR (2 and 4-seat versions) and the Kawasaki Tyrex 750. LTATVs can be air transported in MH-47/CH-47 and CV-22/MV-22 rotary-wing aircraft.
Other features include 4-wheel drive front differential lock system, four-point shoulder harness, roll over protection and infrared headlamp filters.
Picture: U.S. Army Special Forces pictured on patrol in Farrah Province, Afghanistan, traveling in a Kawasaki Tyrex 750 LTATV. The Tyrex LTATV has a top speed in excess of 48mph.
Picture: While small in size, a SOF-manned LTATV still carries a big punch - the passenger/gunner of a LTATV mans a M240 belt-fed machine gun mounted on a swing mount of a LTATV. Note the buttstock of a M320 grenade launcher which can be seen on the LTATV's dashboard. A number of 40mm grenades can be seen in a ammo belt strung from the vehicles roll cage.
Picture: U.S. SOF operators engaged in combat with Taliban forces in Afghanistan - the LTATV's passenger/gunner engages with a belt-fed machine gun fixed to a swing mount while the driver has dismounted in order to get a line of sight on the enemy.
Picture: U.S. Special Operations Forces transverse the Afghan terrain in a 2-seater Kawasaki LTATV. The LTATV offers little in the way of protection from small arms fire or from IEDs. Its ability to traverse rough ground means, however, that the LTATV can avoid the well-travelled roads where IEDs are likely to be placed.