Navy asks Hydroid to upgrade MK 18 unmanned underwater vehicle

Sept. 2, 2017
Unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) experts at Hydroid Inc. in Pocasset, Mass., will upgrade the company's MK 18 family of unmanned submersibles under terms of a $27.3 million contract.

INDIAN HEAD, Md. - Unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) experts at Hydroid Inc. in Pocasset, Mass., will upgrade the company's MK 18 family of unmanned submersibles under terms of a $27.3 million contract.

Officials of the Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) Indian Head Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technology Division in Indian Head, Md., are asking Hydroid for additional engineering to develop, test, and install preplanned product improvements for the MK 18 family of unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) systems.

Hydroid is upgrading the Navy MK 18 unmanned submersibles to enhance system performance and mitigate the effects of subsystem or component obsolescence.

Preplanned product improvement, also called P3I, involve periodic systems and technology upgrades during development to enhance system performance or mitigate the effects of subsystem or component obsolescence.

The Navy Hydroid MK 18 UUV is a variant of the Hydroid REMUS 600, which Hydroid originally developed through funding from the Office of Naval Research (ONR) in Arlington, Va., to support the Navy's UUVs with extended endurance, increased payload capacity, and greater operating depth. REMUS is short for Remote Environmental Measuring Unit S.

The Mk 18 Mod 1 Swordfish UUV can perform low-visible exploration and reconnaissance in support of amphibious landing; mine countermeasures operations such as search, classification, mapping, reacquire, and identification; and hydrographic mapping at depths from 10 to 40 feet.

The UUV can navigate via acoustic transponders in long-baseline or ultra-short-baseline mode, or via P-coded GPS. Its upward- and downward-looking acoustic digital velocity log improves dead-reckoning accuracy.

The MK 18 Mod 1 Swordfish UUV achieved full operational capabilities in 2008. Follow-on block upgrades will combine two separate UUV programs into the MK 18 family of systems to deliver improved detection capability against buried mines in high clutter environments.

The REMUS 600, on which the MK 18 UUV is based, can dive to depths of nearly 2,000 feet, and can operate on one battery charge for as long as 24 hours. The UUV is for mine countermeasures; harbor security; debris field mapping; search and salvage; scientific sampling and mapping; hydrographic surveys; environmental monitoring; and fishery operations.

The torpedo-shaped REMUS 600 UUV is nearly 13 feet long and two feet in diameter. The unit weighs 622 pounds. It has dynamic focus side look sonar (SLS), a Neil Brown conductivity and temperature sensor (CT), WET Labs beam attenuation meter (BAM) optical sensor, Imagenex 852 pencil beam sonar for obstacle avoidance, and a WET Labs ECO fluorometer and turbidity measurement sensor.

Its communications suite consists of a long baseline acoustic communications, Wi-Fi, Iridium satellite communications, and radio modem via gateway buoy. The UUV navigates by up- and down-looking acoustic Doppler current profiler; Doppler velocity log; Kearfott inertial navigation unit; compass; and GPS.

The REMUS 600 has a modular design to meet a variety of payloads. The UUV has a series of hull sections that can be separated for vehicle reconfiguration, maintenance, and shipping. IT uses the Hydroid Vehicle Interface Program (VIP) for maintenance, checkout, mission planning, and data analysis.

Hydroid will do the work in Pocasset, Mass., and should be finished by November 2018.

Hydroid is a subsidiary of Kongs- berg Maritime AS in Kongsberg, Norway.

FOR MORE INFORMATION visit Hydroid online at www.km.kongsberg.com/hydroid, and the NSWC Indian Head Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technology Division at www.navy.mil/local/nswciheodtd.

About the Author

John Keller | Editor

John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.

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