Author: Brenda Marie Rivers|| Date Published: October 22, 2019
The U.S. Army has chosen four companies to each submit a prototype as part of the light Robotic Combat Vehicle development competition the National Advanced Mobility Consortium manages for the service branch.
Defense News reported Monday QinetiQ NA teamed up with Pratt & Miller to compete for the program and Textron partnered with FLIR Systems (Nasdaq: FLIR) to offer the Ripsaw M5 platform to the service branch.
The Army could issue up to two contracts by the end of fiscal 2020s second quarter for the procurement of four non-developmental RCV-L units and evaluate surrogate vehicles for one year through various tests such as manned-unmanned teaming exercises.
The Defense Information Systems Agency’s Defense Information Technology Contracting Organization has awarded Modern Technology Solutions Inc. a potential $416 million contract,…
L3Harris Technologies has secured a potential $200 million follow-on contract from Lockheed Martin to supply insensitive munition propulsion units for…