Textron Shows Off Mine-Hunting Drone Boat Armed with Hellfire Missiles

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  • A Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV) equipped with a box-style launcher holding two Hellfire Missiles and a .50 caliber machine gun to make a mine-hunting mission package. Textron Systems displayed the proof-of-concept, surface-warfare mission package Modern Day Marine 2019. (Matthew Cox/Military.com)
    A Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV) equipped with a box-style launcher holding two Hellfire Missiles and a .50 caliber machine gun to make a mine-hunting mission package. Textron Systems displayed the proof-of-concept, surface-warfare mission package Modern Day Marine 2019. (Matthew Cox/Military.com)
  • Close-up image of the box-style launcher from the Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV) holding two Hellfire Missiles and a .50 caliber machine gun. (Matthew Cox/Military.com)
    Close-up image of the box-style launcher from the Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV) holding two Hellfire Missiles and a .50 caliber machine gun. (Matthew Cox/Military.com)

QUANTICO MARINE CORPS BASE, Virginia -- Textron Systems is working with the Navy to turn a mine-sweeping unmanned surface vessel designed to work with Littoral Combat Ships into a mine-hunting craft armed with Hellfire missiles and a .50-caliber machine gun.

Textron displayed the proof-of-concept, surface-warfare mission package designed for the Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV) at Modern Day Marine 2019.

"It's a huge capability," Wayne Prender, senior vice president for Applied Technologies and Advanced Programs at Textron Systems, told Military.com on Tuesday.

Textron is developing the mine-hunting package with the Naval Surface Warfare Center (NAVSEA) Dahlgren Division and Solutions Development Corporation at Dahlgren. The CUSV was originally intended to carry mine-sweeping packages for LCS vessels.

Related: Here's What the Marines Want in the Navy's Fleet of Unmanned Drone Ships

The Navy continues to test the CUSV and work toward a Milestone-C, full-rate production decision, Prender said.

"It was designed to be deployed and recovered from the Littoral Combat Ship to perform the mine-sweeping mission," Prender said. "Since that initial concept, it has grown legs."

This new effort pairs the CUSV with NAVSEA's Battle Management System and a remote weapons station that features a box-style launcher that holds two vertical-launched Hellfire missiles, as well as a .50-caliber machine gun, he said.

The system is designed to "operate autonomously, identify potential targets and threats, and then pass that to the remote weapons station," Prender said.

Textron demonstrated the system in July at the Navy's Advanced Naval Technology Experiment at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.

"We would certainly like to see the Navy take what we have worked on and move that into a longer-term exercise," Prender said.

The system is also being tested for use with Navy expeditionary-based vessels, he said.

"It was originally envisioned to be an LCS mission module; it has proven itself to be far more than just that," Prender said.

-- Matthew Cox can be reached at matthew.cox@military.com.

Read more: Read all about Modern Day Marine 2019

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