New Zealand Army

ngatimozart

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
New Zealand pollies pull their heads out of the sand. that won't happen soon as they are to deeply buried, and probably cemented in place anyway. It will take a major shock to achieve that , or the formation of a completely new part with guts.
Unfortunately you are right there Rob.
Exactly Ngati, it's sad (not to mention dangerous) that it needs to take a wake up call for them/us to seemingly need to take action, especially with timeframes involved for any decent capability, wether that be maitaining, renewal or aqquisition.

With the bear in the room constantly poking the elephant it's only a matter of time before something breaks and we'll be stuck in the corner with no where to go.
Yep and as in 1939 and especially 1941 / 42 them chooks will come home to roost really painfully.
 

steve33

Member
Inside the NZSAS: creating the elite soldier

I was reading this article and in the NZSAS and in 4 years 31 people made the regiment out of 243 that tried out which is a failure rate of 87%.

I remember watching the doco from about 15 years ago where only 5 made it out of 52 that was one selection cycle which is a failure rate of 90% and you find most tier 1 special ops have a failure rate of 90% or more.

I can't imagine the NZSAS have lowered standards they are ruthless in regards to that and pass rates can differ for each group selected to try out for the regiment they will all vary in quality of personnel.

I was wondering are people going into NZSAS selection better prepared these days than in the past is the military helping people to prepare physically before they go in.?
 

ngatimozart

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
Inside the NZSAS: creating the elite soldier

I was reading this article and in the NZSAS and in 4 years 31 people made the regiment out of 243 that tried out which is a failure rate of 87%.

I remember watching the doco from about 15 years ago where only 5 made it out of 52 that was one selection cycle which is a failure rate of 90% and you find most tier 1 special ops have a failure rate of 90% or more.

I can't imagine the NZSAS have lowered standards they are ruthless in regards to that and pass rates can differ for each group selected to try out for the regiment they will all vary in quality of personnel.

I was wondering are people going into NZSAS selection better prepared these days than in the past is the military helping people to prepare physically before they go in.?
I think that people are going to the selection better prepared now than maybe say 20 - 30 years ago.
 

ngatimozart

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
I thought that must be the case because the NZSAS are ruthless with their standards they know where they need to be and don't compromise.
Yep and I never tried when i was in the mob, because I wouldn't have survived the first morning let alone the first day :D My old man and uncles drilled into me before I signed up as a teenager: "Don't volunteer for anything" :D:D
 

htbrst

Active Member
Linton Army base is finally getting it's perimeter fence replaced with something fit for purpose as opposed to fit for keeping the guard sheep (and a few goats and cows) off the road. You can compare the quality of the current fence in this Google street view picture - Manawatu Prison on the left, Linton Camp on the right: Google Maps

Construction of Linton Military Camp fence set to start in March

Currently, all that separates the camp from the rest of the world is a fence made out of a post and wire stock fence, a portion of deer fencing, and a residential profile aluminium fence.

This is set to be replaced by an 8.6-kilometre long, 2.9-metre high fence as the base looks to ramp up security.
The fence is expected to take between a year and 18 months to build, and will enclose the land area of about 212 hectares.
 

John Fedup

The Bunker Group
Once under construction take pictures and produce a brochure. Use wall instead of fence in the description and you have an exportable product to you know where.:D:D
 

Todjaeger

Potstirrer
Once under construction take pictures and produce a brochure. Use wall instead of fence in the description and you have an exportable product to you know where.:D:D
Not funny. If one were to be exposed to some of the sh*tshow I have been which parts of the US political scene has become, and the level of discourse where not just differences of opinion are put on exhibition both also what I would describe as bigotry and xenophobia, one likely not find the situation amusing either.

[RANT] It has (with people I know personally) gotten to the point where if one has a different opinion, discussion of the reasons for the difference in opinion is not just no longer possible, but a bad idea because at least some will automatically assume that the reason for the difference in opinion is that one is ignorant and/or being led by mainstream propaganda and if only one researched "the facts" themselves...[/RANT]

We now return you back to your regular discussion of the NZ Army.
 

ngatimozart

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
Linton Army base is finally getting it's perimeter fence replaced with something fit for purpose as opposed to fit for keeping the guard sheep (and a few goats and cows) off the road. You can compare the quality of the current fence in this Google street view picture - Manawatu Prison on the left, Linton Camp on the right: Google Maps

Construction of Linton Military Camp fence set to start in March
You do realise that those guard sheep are carnivorous and man eaters? The goats and cows also have bad attitudes and are personally trained by the camp RSM.
 

40 deg south

Well-Known Member

While googling some NZ defense-related terms, I stumbled across this lengthy video from an American firearms channel that appears to give an explanation for the firing pin issues with the new NZ rifle.

To be honest, I didn't have the patience to watch the whole thing but others may find it interesting.

I don't know anything about the reviewer and his credibility, but he certainly does seem to love LMT products.


This appeas to be another MARS review from the same guy.
 

Novascotiaboy

Active Member
Shepperd Media is reporting a buy of MAN wreckers. Unfortunately I cant link to the story .If anyone can provide details I would be most appreciative.

I assume they will be this type as already trialed by the NZ Army.
 

ngatimozart

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro

ngatimozart

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
And from another Forum it appears that three MAN wreckers have been ordered. Type not detailed. If anyone can add to this please fill in the blanks. Could these be replacements for the five FMTV 1098s which are 20 years old?
I saw that and the person who posted that also posts here, but has not posted any source to back up the claim. Because they most likely cost less than (IIRC $5 million) they don't need Cabinet approval and CDF can sign off on them. @MrConservative will correct me if I am wrong.
 

40 deg south

Well-Known Member
New radios for the Army from Harris.

And from another Forum it appears that three MAN wreckers have been ordered. Type not detailed. If anyone can add to this please fill in the blanks. Could these be replacements for the five FMTV 1098s which are 20 years old?
www.empl.at

Going back to the original link posted above (great find, by the way), it was put on Youtube by EMPL Fahrzeugwerk - evidently an Austrian engineering firm that fits out specialist trucks. The small description underneath the video reads

EMPL Heavy Recovery Vehicle Demonstration - New Zealand EMPL Heavy Recovery Vehicle BISON on MAN HX77 Chassis

This video, also from EMPL, provides some detail on the Bison recovery vehles in German service, immediately prior to being deployed to Afghanistan. Interestingly, these are clearly built on on a Mercedes base. Presumably the 'Bison' designation refers to the recovery fit-out, which can evidently be built onto different truck chassis.

Bison Recovery Vehicle | Military-Today.com

This on-line description of the Bison also has it built on a Mercedes chassis, but it seems reasonable to assume the capabilities will be similar.
 

RegR

Well-Known Member
New radios for the Army from Harris.

Mobile Tactical Network Boost for the Army

And from another Forum it appears that three MAN wreckers have been ordered. Type not detailed. If anyone can add to this please fill in the blanks. Could these be replacements for the five FMTV 1098s which are 20 years old?
I heard the bison trialed was found to be too large which I thought strange since it would have the same footprint as the 8×8 EPLS variants and seemingly any future fleets would no doubt increase in size and/or weight at least, be it replacement or upgrade.

Maybe the full armoured version will be too heavy for our roads? Was an issue with the single steers under armour to remain "officially" compliant under our rules. Minor problem IMO considering armour would be for overseas missions and if needed here than NZTA would have bigger problems anyway and I'm sure any restrictions would be out the window.

They could have been after a suitable smaller 6x6 like the current fleet, lighter 8x8 or maybe the smaller buy now of 3 points to a split buy ie 8x8/6x6, mil/civil, armoured/soft skin with another purchase to follow as I was under the impression they were looking at 6 wreckers to replace the current 5.
 

KiwiRob

Well-Known Member
I saw that and the person who posted that also posts here, but has not posted any source to back up the claim. Because they most likely cost less than (IIRC $5 million) they don't need Cabinet approval and CDF can sign off on them. @MrConservative will correct me if I am wrong.
I asked on the NZ Army facebook page and they sent me the answer, 3 units.
 
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