57-mm guided projectiles

AN/AWW-14(V)

ACCESS: Granted
Senior Member
Joined
18 May 2019
Messages
636
Reaction score
1,570

Mustang Technology Group LP, doing business as L3 Mustang Technology, Plano, Texas, is awarded a $14,849,324 contract for 808 rounds of 57mm MK 332 high explosive-4 bolt guided (HE-4G) cartridge ammunition. Work is expected to be complete by March 2021.

 
Last edited:

59835a4399b8f687a9424edcab9de838603aa1d.jpg

bce2552989f76a184b0a117a4d7d1d1d02d966d.jpg

b0935feb96abf70ba5bc4911afc6bfd67c70aef.jpg


BAE Systems ORKA (Mk295 Mod 1)
 
Last edited:

Northrop Grumman to Develop New Guided Ammunition for the US Navy

PLYMOUTH, Minn. – Oct. 4, 2023 – The U.S. Navy has awarded Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) a development contract for the company’s newly designed 57mm guided high explosive ammunition. Designated for use with the Mk110 Naval Gun Mount, the company will test and mature the munition for qualification.

The 57mm guided high explosive ammunition has the unique ability to continuously maneuver in-flight as it moves toward a designated target. Designed to defend against fast moving surface threats, drones and swarming threats, the guided 57mm ammunition features an on-board seeker to acquire moving targets and a fuze with the ability to self-select for either proximity or point-detonation mode to best engage and defeat the intended target.

“Our new 57mm guided ammunition is truly innovative in its ability to identify, track and guide itself to a target,” said Dave Fine, vice president, armament systems, Northrop Grumman. “The Navy will gain a greater capability to defend against moving threats and a new level of accuracy to defeat them.”
 
Interesting. In lieu of the L3 Alamo guided round or in addition to it?

Lines like "the unique ability to continuously maneuver in-flight" and "continuous trajectory guidance no matter how often the target may pivot" are probably digs at Alamo. They are throwing some shade at the 4-bolt course correction approach, which gets only a finite number of impulses for steering.

The nose looks solid, like some sort of RF sensor (MMW radar, probably). No visible fins in that aft-maneuver unit, so maybe some sort of gas thruster?
 
Probably too late, but hope AFSOC is paying attention for the AC-130J.
 
uc1asy2cpr771.jpg 3uo7_310.png

Saw this thread and figured I'd post these pics from a couple years ago. The long one is the guided shell for Russia's short range anti aircraft cannon.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top Bottom