
The
cannon will be able to move rapidly, stop quickly and almost
instantly deliver lethal first round effects on target. The
cannon will have a Multiple Round Simultaneous Impact (MRSI)
capability, to maximize the effect on a target, from a single
gun or a small number of firing units. The NLOS-C system mounts
an ultra-lightweight 38-caliber, fully automated 155-mm howitzer.
A fully automated ammunition handling system is installed,
holding 155-mm projectiles and Modular Artillery Charge System
(MACS) propelling charges in ready to load racks. The automation
eliminates the physical handling of ammunition and provides
the system to fire rounds at sustained rates with minimal
physical effort. The system will enable rapid rearming and
refueling.
As
a fully automated system, NLOS-Cannon integrates all crew
operations - firing, moving, training and maintenance - into
a digitized two-man cockpit, providing automated handling
of all gun systems, real-time situational awareness, and effective
protection from battlefield conventional and unconventional
threats, including nuclear, biological and chemical environments.
The NLOS Cannon, as with all FCS Manned Ground Vehicles (MGV),
incorporates active and passive protection systems to enhance
crew and platform survivability against all types of battlefield
threats.
The NLOS Cannon chassis will feature highly durable, lightweight
band track that provides a smoother ride over conventional
steel track. The track is propelled by a diesel engine and
hybrid-electric propulsion system designed to improve system
mobility and reduce fuel consumption.
In
September 2006,
BAE Systems completed the integration of the NLOS-C first
Firing Platform, to be used for firing tests through 2008,
when the NLOS-Cannon prototype was delivered on May 30, 2008.
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.
The firing platform uses a 38-caliber length, fully automated
155-mm howitzer, developed at BAE Systems’ Minneapolis
System Integration Facility. The Firing Platform’s howitzer
is integrated with a fully automated ammunition handling system.
The platform, made of a combination of high-strength steel
and aluminum, incorporates a cannon assembly that is 1,200
pounds lighter than the M777 cannon previously tested on the
NLOS Cannon Concept Technology Demonstrator.
The prototype of the NLOS Cannon is the first vehicle destined
for the FCS program to utilize the new hybrid-electrical proplusion.
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.

Much of the advanced technology being developed for the NLOS
Cannon is being incorporated into the design and development
of other vehicles in the MGV family, such as the NLOS Mortar.
The NLOS Mortar is being designed by BAE Systems to have
an estimated 80 percent commonality with the NLOS Cannon chassis
and mission equipment to reduce maintenance and logistics.
A NLOS Mortar Firing Platform is expected to be delivered
for testing and qualification in spring 2007.