The showcased FMAV range included three production-ready variants: the X-MAV, M-MAV and L-MAV, each designed to meet different mission demands with scalable autonomy and payload capabilities. According to Oshkosh, these platforms were developed to support long-range precision fires, resilient formations, and autonomous operations in contested environments.
The Oshkosh X-MAV, a heavy autonomous-capable launcher platform, was displayed for the first time with four Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles. Built on a robust chassis and equipped with onboard vehicle power, the X-MAV is designed to support the Common Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher Heavy (CAML-H) programme.
The M-MAV, based on the Oshkosh FMTV A2, was presented with the Multiple Launch Rocket System Family of Munitions (MFOM). It offers optionally manned or fully autonomous operation with capabilities such as advanced navigation, remote control, and automated resupply.
The lightest platform, L-MAV, derived from the USMC’s ROGUE-Fires, featured the AeroVironment Switchblade 600 loitering munition and Titan C-UAS. Its modular build enables rapid reconfiguration for missions including counter-UAS, electronic warfare, or logistical resupply.
“The Army has been clear on the need for autonomous, payload-agnostic platforms that are ready now,” said Pat Williams, Chief Programs Officer at Oshkosh Defense. “The Oshkosh Family of Multi-Mission Autonomous Vehicles are engineered on proven tactical vehicles, with scalable autonomy and payload versatility to deliver what the Army needs today with the flexibility to adapt as the battlefield evolves.”