. 24/7 Space News .
United Defense Demonstrates Course Correcting Fuze For Cannon Artillery

The CCF makes projectiles more accurate by integrating G-hardened, military GPS with proven flight control technology. Before a CCF-equipped round is fired, the target's GPS coordinates are programmed into the fuze.

Minneapolis MN (SPX) Jun 10, 2005
United Defense Industries recently demonstrated a cost-effective system to improve cannon artillery accuracy with the successful firing of inert M795 155-mm cannon projectiles equipped with a two-directional Course Correcting Fuze (CCF).

United Defense has developed this new system with teammates Bofors Defence, Rockwell Collins and BT Fuze Products.

The CCF is a revolutionary, GPS-based innovation that dramatically improves the effectiveness of existing cannon artillery ammunition and provides near-precision accuracy that is critical in combat environments.

It can be employed on all types of U.S. 155-mm and 105-mm projectiles in the U.S. Field Artillery inventory, and is ready for a fast track full scale development and early fielding.

United Defense successfully fired M795 rounds equipped with the CCF from a M109A6 Paladin to ranges of 14.5 kilometers at Yuma Proving Ground. Preliminary analysis from the demonstration confirmed United Defense's laboratory analysis and the projectiles equipped with the CCF achieved a precision error of less than 50 meters - three times more accurate than the control rounds.

"Urban conflict in Iraq has re-validated the need for accurate and responsive cannon fired artillery," said Jim Unterseher, director of Army Programs at United Defense.

"This successful CCF demonstration proves an affordable solution for dramatically improving the accuracy of cannons has arrived and can be quickly fielded. With CCF, we're doing for cannon artillery what JDAM did for air delivered munitions - we're making existing iron projectiles 'smart'."

The CCF makes projectiles more accurate by integrating G-hardened, military GPS with proven flight control technology. Before a CCF-equipped round is fired, the target's GPS coordinates are programmed into the fuze.

After the round is fired, the CCF guides the projectile to the target by deploying three different types of brakes (deployable fins) that adjust the projectile's range and deflection.

During the projectile's flight, satellites communicate with the fuze to ensure the brakes deploy at the right time and continually adjust the projectile's trajectory to guide the round to its intended target.

United Defense's successful demonstration of the two-directional CCF prototype in a gun-fired environment is an industry first and it places the system at Technology Readiness Level 6.

"United Defense is pleased to be teamed with the premier munitions and fuze experts at Bofors Defence and BT Fuze Products, and munition GPS experts at Rockwell Collins to develop and produce the CCF," said Keith Howe, vice president and general manager, United Defense Armament Systems Division.

"With more than five years already invested by this team in the CCF program, we are positioned to deliver this new capability to the Army in less than 12 months."

Building on the success of these latest CCF demonstrations, the United Defense-led team will continue to enhance its preliminary CCF design and research a broader range of applications for the technology.

Related Links
The CCF
United Defense
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


LockMart Successful In Additional Dual Mode Guided Bomb Tests For US Navy
Archbald PA (SPX) Jun 10, 2005
Lockheed Martin successfully completed additional flight tests of its Dual Mode Guided Bomb (DMGB) at the U.S. Navy's China Lake test range recently. The weapons were released from Navy aircraft and maneuvered through controlled flight and target impact as planned, achieving mission success.







  • NASA Exec Resigns As Part Of Shakeup
  • NASA: Earth And Space Sciences At Risk
  • Further Steps Towards A European Space Policy
  • Canadian Scientists Contribute To European Study Of The Body At Rest

  • A Thousand Sols Combined, The Mars Rovers Keep Rollin On
  • MPs Attack British Space Program
  • Mars Has An Aurora, And It's Like None Other In The Solar System
  • ESA: Green Light For The Deployment Of The Second MARSIS Boom

  • Russians Ratify Baikonur Agreement
  • Baikonur Seen As Critical To Russian Military
  • Atlas V Team Perform First Propellant Loading And Simulated Countdown On West Coast
  • Satellite Hitch Causes Launch Scrub For Europe's Ariane Rocket

  • China To Boost Scientific Observatory Networks
  • Ozone Levels Drop When Hurricanes Are Strengthening
  • Meteorologists Urged To Improve Forecasting
  • DMTI Spatial To Offer Mapping Solution Depicting Canadian City Features

  • Planners Eye Next Stage Of New Horizons Pluto Mission
  • Preperation For Mission To Pluto And Beyond Continues
  • Ball Aerospace Delivers Imaging Instrument For NASA's Mission To Pluto
  • Case Of Sedna's Missing Moon Solved

  • Observations Reveal Aspherical Supernova Explosion As Possible Source Of GRB
  • Leading Theories Of Cosmic Explosions Contradicted In A Flash
  • Astronomers Hot On The Trail Of Nature's Exotic Flashers
  • Core Collapse In Naked Carbon/Oxygen Stars May Be Source Of Gamma-Ray Bursts

  • Florida Tech Receives $430,000 From NASA For Lunar Oxygen Project
  • Lunar "Dark Spots" Point To An Upheaval In Planetary Orbits
  • A Hitchhiker's Guide To The Moon
  • NASA Announces New Centennial Challenge

  • iSECUREtrac Awarded GPS Monitoring for Illinois DOC
  • LockMart Successful In Additional Dual Mode Guided Bomb Tests For US Navy
  • United Defense Demonstrates Course Correcting Fuze For Cannon Artillery
  • Galileo Test Satellites Six Months From Launch

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement