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More Logistics Support Bridges

The Bailey bridge built at Lenggong, Perak in March 2021, by the 2 Skn RAJD . RAJD

SHAH ALAM: The Procurement Division of the Defence Ministry has issued a tender for the supply and delivery of five Logistics Support Bridges (LSB) for the Army. The tender was published June 11 and closes on July 4, a period of twenty-three days. The LSBs are British Bailey-style prefabricated and quick built bridges which are already in service with the Army and the Public Works Department.

Sappers from 91 RAJD installing a Bailey bridge in January, 2021. BTDM

According to the public specifications of the tender:

The Logistic Support Bridge is required by
the Malaysian Army as a line of communication for single-span range 40 m up to 80 m with a road width of 4.2 m to ensure the movement of troops, combat supplies, and other logistical support to the forward troops from and within the Communication Zone are not hindered by enemy actions

A tender for two LSB was published in 2021 and the contract was awarded to Stare Resources Sdn Bhd with a LOA of RM17.2 million. As there is no cost estimates for the tender, I believed the winning bid should be around RM45 million to RM50 million. This is based on the LOA for Stare Resources which sourced the two LSB from China.

A model of the Logistics Support Bridge supplied by Stare Resources Sdn Bhd. BTDM

The LSBs were delivered last year.
A PT-91 Pendekar road engineering vehicle with a dozer blade attachment at an exercise with 11 Rejimen KAD in May 2023. RAJD picture.

Meanwhile, a tender for five skid steer loaders was also published on June 6 and closes on July 4. The specifications called for:

Skid Steer Loader (Light) Complete with Accessories is a small, rigid-frame, engine-powered machine with lift arms that can attach to a wide variety of buckets and other attachments that are required primarily in confined-space work areas. This machine shall also be used for terrain handling, shaping, and levelling with the installation of a variety of
specialized buckets or attachments.

A Caterpillar skid steer loader. Used for illustration only.

From Wikipedia:

A skid loader, skid-steer loader, SSL, or skidsteer is any of a class of compact heavy equipment with lift arms that can attach to a wide variety of buckets and other labor-saving tools or attachments.

I have not seen an Army skid-steer loader before in person or otherwise, so I have no idea whether these five being sought are the first ones to be in service with the Army’s sapper units. Do note that both the LSB and skid-steers are designated as the Army’s main assets as with the NVG.

— Malaysian Defence

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Marhalim Abas: Shah Alam

View Comments (11)

  • In USA wilderness, skid steers are quite popular for those who wants to do a lot of ground moving but not resorting to a full sized backhoe.

  • Marhalim,

    On another very different issue. Years ago BAE Systems entered a risk clause factor due to the decision to construct the Lekiu Batch 2 a in Labuan. In the event this was agreed upon and the ships were delivered on schedule would BAE Systems have had to repay the amount agreed upon? Also, instead of a risk clause factor - which played a part in killing the deal - why didn’t BAE Systems just insist their the contract absolved it of any blame/liability in the event the ships were delivered late?

  • These humanitarian and disaster relief assets should be parked under Pertahanan Awam. Army to provide services only. Otherwise quite a hefty sum can be misconstrued as defence spending.

    • The bridges are part of Army requirements so it cannot be sent off to another agency which do not have the capability nor capacity to do the same thing. As I mentioned in the story PWD also maintained such bridges for emergencies.

      The Army however from time to time are also involved in such endeavours as part of the HADR commitment.

  • Bailey bridge is the prime example of the saying " There's nothing more permanent than a temporary solution". A bridge that is supposed to last 1,2 years ended up being in use for more than 50 years and the only upkeep is replacing the wooden surface every 5 years or so

    There's a story about a Bailey bridge in Sabah that was stood up before being incorporated into Malaysia and was only replaced with a permanent bridge in mid 90s when some idiot driver broke the bridge with his overloaded truck. Even in Sabah there were dozens of old bailey bridges still dotting the state

  • Has anyone seen the scene in “A Bridge Too Far” when they construct a Bailey?

    We had previously sourced Bailey bridges from a Brit company.

    • Yup, I saw that. I think the China made LSB will be much cheaper than the ones from UK.

  • Marhalim,

    What do you know about a local company called OpenAps? Has it replaced Sapura as the main contractor for the NCO programme or is it only a vendor? As you mentioned previously another company Sieman Systems is involved in the NCO programme.

    Also, am I correct in saying that the Adnan and AV-8 share the same Thales BMS but that the PT-91 has a different BMS from a different manufacturer? Another question; is the FFS programme dead or is it still ongoing despite funding and other priorities? Personally whilst I see the value of it I’m still a sceptic; from the operational perspective.

  • Hasnan - “humanitarian and disaster relief assets should be parked under Pertahanan Awam”

    Why on earth when such assets also have a military utility. Sorry but this is silly; like saying the armed services should not have a fire fighting capability and should only rely on BOMBA.