Defense Career
Military VideosNaval Warfare

L3 Mustang Technology to Provide MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) for US Navy

526
×

L3 Mustang Technology to Provide MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) for US Navy

Share this article


L-3 Mustang Technology L.P., Plano, Texas, is awarded a $23,409,000 fixed-price incentive modification to previously awarded delivery order N00024-19-C-5313 for the procurement of MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) cartridges. The HE-4G is being developed by L3 Mustang’s Advanced Low-Cost Munitions Ordnance (ALaMO) program. Work is expected to be completed by January 2023. Fiscal 2021 procurement of ammunition (Navy and Marine Corps) funding in the amount of $23,409,000 will be obligated at the time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting activity.

MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) cartridges

The MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) is a low-cost 57 mm guided smart ammunition intended for use on the Navy’s Littoral Combat Ship and new Fast Frigate, as well as the U.S. Coast Guard’s National Security and Offshore Patrol Cutters. The ALaMO Program qualifies the 57 mm MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive, 4-Bolt Guided (HE-4G) Cartridge for the United States Navy (U.S. Navy ). Completion of the (Critical Design Report) (CDR) phase allows the program to progress to qualification testing, munition certification and transition to production. L3 Mustang was competing against BAE Systems and its ORKA 57 mm guided smart ammunition.

511 Tactical
MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) cartridges
MK 332 Mod 0 High Explosive 4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) cartridges

ALaMO is designed to help surface vessels fitted with the BAE Systems Mk110 defend against asymmetric threats, such as swarming small boats and Unmanned Aircraft Systems. L3 Mustang’s ALaMO program has successfully demonstrated this capability in tests at the U.S. Navy’s Potomac River Test Range in Dahlgren, Virginia, by hitting a moving surface target at significantly longer ranges than possible with unguided projectiles. This improved accuracy allows for a significant reduction in cost and adds depth to the ship’s magazine by requiring fewer rounds per target.

Leave a Reply