U.S. Army engineers prep Multi-Mission Launcher prototype, designed to defeat UAS, missiles, rockets

September 2, 2015

Intelligent Aerospace:

REDSTONE ARSENAL, Ala., 1 Sept. 2015. Personnel at the Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development, and Engineering Center (AMRDEC) will transfer the first prototype of the Multi-Mission Launcher (MML) to Program Executive Office, Missiles and Space (PEO MS). Both AMRDEC and PEO MS call Redstone Arsenal in Alabama home.

More than 150 subject matter experts, assembled by AMRDEC, with representatives from six directorates and more than 20 functional areas designed, manufactured, procured, assembled, and tested the MML, the U.S. Army’s newest Air Defense launcher. The MML Product Team also leveraged more than 85 industry partners to assist with design and manufacturing.

Army officials are calling the MML prototype “the first development of a major acquisition program by the government in more than 30 years.”

The MML is part of the U.S. Army’s Indirect Fire Protection Capability Increment 2-Intercept (IFPC Inc 2-I) program. IFPC Inc 2-I is a mobile ground-based weapon system designed to defeat unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), cruise missiles, and rockets, artillery, and mortars. The IFPC Inc 2-I system will combine: the MML, the Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System as the command and control unit, Sentinel radar system, and existing interceptors to provide 360-degree protection with the ability to engage simultaneous threats arriving from different azimuths.

The MML is mounted on a medium tactical truck. The launcher can rotate 360 degrees and elevate from 0-90 degrees. It consists of 15 tubes, each of which can hold either a single large interceptor or multiple smaller interceptors. Developed using an open systems architecture, the launcher will interface to the IBCS Engagement Operations Center via radio. The truck will also pull a trailer that has a missile data link to communicate to interceptors in-flight, and an Army standard 60-kilowatt (kW) generator to power the system while emplaced.

In 2012, the IFPC Inc 2-I Product Office came to the AMRDEC to conduct an engineering feasibility study to support an Analysis of Alternatives excursion for a Multi-Role, Common Launcher. A white paper published in April 2012 concluded that such a launcher was feasible from an engineering standpoint. The launcher groundwork continued with a deeper dive into key performance goals and performance trade studies leading to a Conceptual Design in October 2012. The Conceptual Design leveraged the M1157 Dump Truck, an existing member of the Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles (FMTV), and a M1095 five-ton trailer. The FMTV frame reinforcements, cradle, and azimuth geared bearing were leveraged from the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System along with significant hardware and software architecture experience from AMRDEC engineers…

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