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When the U.S. military sought bids for light tactical vehicles, Ford didn't have a ready product that met the specifications and didn't want to get into the modification business. RMA got a major boost when it stepped in, delivering the first one to Afghanistan in 2005. Tyack says that detailed groundwork is done on customer requirements and the invariably punishing environments in which the vehicles will operate. For Afghanistan, the dark green Rangers need heater blocks to withstand temperatures that can plunge to minus 30 degrees Centigrade (minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit), higher ground clearance given the rock-strewn roads and better suspension to take heavy loads (Tyack recalls seeing one carry a baby camel). Better filters are needed since fuel in Afghanistan is usually high in sulfur content. Standard tires are replaced by virtually puncture-proof, non-radial ones. "You don't want to be on patrol and suddenly find you have a flat tire," he says. You also don't want to be hit with a roadside bomb because most of the Rangers are not armored, given the high cost of such conversions. The plant also can come up with more than 100 adaptations beside the battlefield versions. A Land Rover Defender at the plant had been turned into a field ambulance. In 2008, on urgent request from the Vietnamese government, the plant configured vehicles for workers investigating the possible outbreak of Asian bird flu, providing separate driver and health worker compartments and isolated storage for hazardous specimens. Elsewhere at the factory, pickups geared for working in mines, sometimes underground, were readied for shipment after being beefed up with extra protection against falling rocks and rollovers. Customers include gold mines in South Africa and the Freeport mine, one of the world's largest, in Indonesia's Papua province. With an ongoing separatist insurgency in the latter nation, some of the pickups destined for Freeport are armored. Quality control testing is done on factory grounds, with the vehicles driven through a ford, under a shower, around a steeply sloped curve, over a patch of rock-strewn road and into a deep freezer. One piece of equipment - a machine gun - doesn't get bolted on until the truck reaches Afghanistan. The company is not in the weapons business. Tyack says RMA, with 1,600 of its 4,000 employees in Afghanistan, sees itself as part of the transition from U.S. to Afghan security control, providing not only the hardware but servicing and training. Since up to 5,000 of its road warriors will need to be replaced every year, it may well be around after the last American troops have gone home.
[Associated
Press;
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