Willys FAMAE Corvo

Motor vehicle
Corvo
Overview
ManufacturerFAMAE / Willys
Production2 (one confirmed)
Body and chassis
ClassFast Attack Vehicle / Reconnaissance
RelatedWillys MB
Chronology
SuccessorVespek Land Rover Toqui A-2 (as a Chilean made jeep)

The Willys FAMAE Corvo was a prototype off-road multipurpose vehicle intended for use with the Chilean Armed Forces. Its chassis was from a Willys MB and was capable of carrying various types of mounted weapons, such as a 106mm recoilless anti-tank launcher.

It was designed in 1977 by Fábricas y Maestranzas del Ejército (FAMAE), to address the shortage of military equipment in Chile, caused by the Kennedy Doctrine. A single prototype was confirmed produced (another was tested in other place by the Armada), which underwent trials in desert conditions for several months. It eventually was forgotten in a barn for many years.

Sales engineer René Inostroza acquired and restored it. It has since been offered for sale for 2.5 million pesos.

See also

  • Ñandú (jeep)
  • IAME Rastrojero
  • Citroën Yagan, a Chilean version of the Mehari. It was intended to use it in the Army, after the coup d'état
  • MOWAG Piranha, an armored vehicle produced under license in Chile, also under FAMAE during the military government of Pinochet

References

  • [1] Archived 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine
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FAMAE
Pistols
  • FAMAE revolver
Submachine guns
  • FAMAE SAF
Rifles
  • FAMAE CT-30
  • FAMAE FD-200
Infantry fighting vehicles
  • Willys FAMAE Corvo
Multiple rocket launchers
  • SLM FAMAE
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Modern wheeled infantry fighting vehicles and armoured personnel carriers
Overviews
4×4
6×6
8×8
10×10
Related


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