Hatchet: Arming Unmanned Aircraft to Strike as Well as See

Hatchet inside an Unmanned Aircraft Systemin the air

Delivering Persistent Situational Awareness

Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) have proven invaluable to warfighters, delivering persistent situational awareness that makes teams in the field more effective and better protected. Now, Northrop Grumman is showing how even the smaller categories of UAS can be armed with next-generation capabilities to both see threats and defeat them.

Hatchet Integration

In a recent miniature munition drop exercise earlier this month, Northrop Grumman’s Hatchet – a six-pound, precision miniature strike munition with a compressed carriage design – was integrated onto the V-BAT, a vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) Group 3 UAS designed and manufactured by Shield AI.

“Group 3 UAS, such as V-BAT, have traditionally been used for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) missions. Hatchet’s integration brings precision kinetic strike capability to unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), giving ground maneuver forces the ability to find and defeat threats,” said Joe Esler, Combat Systems business development for Northrop Grumman.

three unmanned vehicles flying above cliffs
AI-enabled V-BATs conducting intelligent teaming in a data degraded environment - supporting targeting, maneuver, and delivery of munitions like Hatchet: Shield AI

Arming Unmanned Aircraft

Hatchet, which uses GPS/INS midcourse guidance and semi-active laser terminal guidance, hit dead center of the laser target coming from a sister V-BAT.

This most recent test adds to the multiple successful deployments of Hatchet from various UAS’s, proving the munition is platform-agnostic while retaining accuracy of within two meters. Hatchet was integrated aboard another Group 3 UAS for a demonstration during an exercise last fall.

The Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren Division’s Battle Management System (BMS) operated as the interface between the aircraft, weapon, and ground control station (GCS) providing Hatchet critical targeting information during both live drop tests involving Hatchet. This BMS inputs the coordinates to the Hatchet’s GPS system, sets the fuse parameters, and releases Hatchet from the UAV. 

Next Phase of Innovation Underway

“We have increased our production capacity, inserted cost reduction efforts, and are preparing Hatchet inventory to meet growing DoD and International demands” said Grant McCall, Air-Delivered Portfolio Lead for Northrop Grumman.

Additionally, the next phase of Hatchet innovation is already underway to address advanced miniature precision guided munition emerging requirements. The future of Hatchet will include armor piercing, networked, collaborative, and autonomous capabilities to further advance mission effectiveness.

Media Contact

Krista Alestock