General Dynamics Land Systems has produced more than 10,000 M1s through its factory in Lima, Ohio. Though its basic design hasn’t changed much in four decades, this is not the same tank that dominated in the Persian Gulf War in 1991. It has gone through dozens of upgrades and the latest Abrams M1A2 SEPv3 is safer for crewmembers, more survivable and even more lethal than previous versions.
Like every Abrams tank ever built, the M1A2 SEPv3 relies on the Honeywell AGT1500 to take it anywhere it needs to go under the most grueling of conditions. “We’ve implemented many engine upgrades over the years to improve fuel efficiency, reliability and maintainability,” Paulus said. “But the transformational change for the AGT1500 was the TIGER program, which launched in 2005.”
TIGER Takes Maintenance to a New Level
The Honeywell AGT1500 Total InteGrated Engine Revitalization (TIGER) program is a continuous improvement program that has enhanced engine quality, durability and readiness, all while reducing operation and support costs through an integrated lifecycle management approach.
The TIGER process uses field data to more accurately tailor maintenance needs and repairs, both in the field and at the depot. By enabling more maintenance to be performed in the field, tank commanders have additional flexibility to plan deployments and missions with increased confidence.
“The TIGER process allows us to improve engine sustainment and durability using a data-driven approach,” Paulus said. “We have more than doubled the mean time between depot return (MTBDR) through condition-based overhaul practices, focused field maintenance actions called TIGER Tasks, and incremental engine design improvements.”
Honeywell also made engine sustainment easier with the introduction of an engine memory unit (EMU), which acts like an aircraft flight data recorder. The EMU keeps track of engine operational history, including number of starts, time spent at various power and temperature levels, fault codes and many other engine parameters. Stored on the engine itself, this data provides vital information to maintenance specialists at the depot and in the field.
“The Abrams is an amazing machine with a long and proud history and a promising future,” Paulus said. “We’re extremely proud of the AGT1500 engine’s contribution to the Abrams’ capabilities and the success of the warfighter. Our Advanced Reliability and Cost Savings (ARCS) improvements will make the engine even more reliable and fuel-efficient, further improving the vehicle’s range, mission effectiveness and the tactical overmatch it provides to Abrams users around the world.”