BAE Systems rolled out the Non
Line Of Sight Cannon (NLOS/C) to the Army on May 30, 2008.
NLOS/C is the first prototype of the Manned FCS vehicle. This
prototype was the first of nine vehicles to be delivered to
the Army for engineering, mobility, safety and reliability testing
as well as gun firing, to be conducted at the Army Yuma Proving
Grounds, Arizona, by 2009.
The
five early configuration platforms including the first prototype
currently delivered will be supplied this year and the remaining
three will be configured in a full system development and
demonstration (SDD) design, will be delivered by early 2009.
According to Lt. Col. Robert McVay, product manager for the
NLOS-C, the new vehicle will also provide the army an opportunity
to evaluate the FCS' new and promising propulsion technology,
including the hybrid electric drive, the traction drive subsystem,
the hydroupneumatic suspension, the band track and the new
440kW power generator. All these will be tested on a real
platform for the first time. The testing at Yuma will put
two years of testing on the chassis before a critical design
review for the MGV family is performed in 2010.
The
NLOS-C is introducing a new, lightweight and fully automatic
155mm 38 caliber howitzer gun. This armament system, including
the gun, auto-loader and electrical control systems are being
tested extensively in the past two years at the Yuma proving
grounds. "That is the end-state gun, it has finished
firing over 2,000 rounds since October 2006, as part of the
gun development program," McVay said. "The mission
module is approaching the 90-plus percent threshold. For the
chassis -- this is the first time the Army will take a full
hybrid-electric, independent semi-active suspension system
and mate it with a mission module and run it into tests."
and The system is designed to improve the survivability of
both itself and its two-man crew and can operate in a range
of environmental conditions. McVay said by 2010, the Army
expects to take delivery of the first six "special interest
program platform" NLOS-C vehicles at Fort Bliss, Texas.
There, the Army Evaluation Task Force will begin its testing
and development of tactics, techniques, procedures and doctrine
for the vehicle. The task force is scheduled to receive six
vehicles a year, between 2010 and 2012 -- for a total of 18.
By 2014, NLOS-C is expected to reach full operational capability
status, and will be ready for fielding to combat units.
A BAE System's video depicting the complex ammuniton handling
system developed for the NLOS Cannon. This system enables
the gun to be operated fully automatically, by only two crewmembers.
The NLOS-C is also designed to work in concert with other
FCS manned ground vehicles to include the XM1204 Non Line
of Sight-Mortar; XM1202 Mounted Combat System; XM1208 Medical
Vehicle-Treatment and XM1207 Medical Vehicle-Evacuation; XM1205
Recovery and Maintenance Vehicle; XM1201 Reconnaissance and
Surveillance Vehicles; XM1206 Infantry Carrier Vehicle; and
XM1209 Command and Control Vehicle. The Army expects to see
prototype vehicles for other FCS MGVs beginning in 2011. All
eight of the FCS manned combat vehicles are mounted on nearly
the same chassis -- they share more than 80 percent compatibility
across the family of vehicles. They are unique in that they
are electrically powered. A diesel engine on board turns a
generator, which in turn charges batteries, which in turn
powers electric motors that drive the tracks. In fact, the
entire vehicle is electrically powered.