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Hanwha Defence Australia (HDA) has welcomed the first three Australian-made AS9 Huntsman Self-Propelled Howitzers (SPH) made at the Hanwha Armoured Vehicle Centre of Excellence (H-ACE) in Victoria. Joining the three vehicles (Batch 1 consisting of two AS9s and one AS10, made in South Korea) announced in February last year, these new vehicles represent high technology vehicle manufacturing coming back to the Geelong region.

Thanks to HDA’s supply chain of local and international partners, the vehicles will now go through further testing and training activities as the capability prepares to come into service. HDA is working with soldiers from the Australian Army in the H-ACE training wing, preparing operators and maintainers.

“Seeing the first Australian made AS9s come off the production line and drive their first laps around our test track is a milestone that we’re all very proud of,” HDA and UK/Europe CEO Mr Ben Hudson said. “This program will see a game changing capability introduced to the Australian Army underpinned by a strategic partner in Hanwha Defence Australia. With the K9 User Community now 11 nations strong, the AS9 variant pushes the boundaries of the platform.”

The Batch 1 vehicles have been undertaking driver and maintainer training alongside further testing and verification including firing trials for the past 12 months, ensuring that operators are familiar with the vehicles. New vehicles are being added to this training program as they become available.

The AS9 and AS10 Huntsman have been developed to incorporate learnings and experience from the global fleet of over 2,400 K9s and K10s, the most popular SPH globally. With the AS9 Huntsman, Hanwha has a proven 52-calibre 155mm gun system that is in service with multiple nations around the world, including the NATO alliance. The AS10 Huntsman Armoured Ammunition Resupply Vehicle (AARV) is highly protected and manoeuvrable, with a unique loading system that reduces risk to soldiers from enemy fire while protecting the long-term health and fitness of soldiers operating the vehicle.

Manufactured with Australian supply chain partners like AME, Aurizn, Axalta, Bisalloy Steel, CBG Systems, Defcon, and DVR, Elphinstone, Eylex, HIFraser, Kongsberg Defence Australia, Maser, MMCLD, Redline Engineering, Rojone, Safran Electronics and Defence Australasia,

Stahl Metal, TEi, Thales Australia, and Thomas Warburton working alongside the international supply chain base, Hanwha has made a significant ongoing investment in the Australian market. “The technology transfer on the LAND 8116 program between South Korea and Australia has been a pilot program in many ways, demonstrating the deepening relationship between the two nations,” Mr Hudson said. “This experience provides the foundation to succeed on our other Defence vehicle programs. Celebrating this milestone with our government, Defence, supply chain partners and our own exceptional team in our purpose-built facility is an honour,” Mr Hudson concluded.

The first Australian-made AS10 is scheduled to come off the H-ACE production line this year.

Aurizn delivers critical secure comms capability for Hanwha Defence Australia
Aurizn has successfully delivered a critical secure communications capability for Hanwha Defence Australia under Australia’s LAND 8116 Phase 1 program for the Huntsman family of vehicles. Aurizn partnered with Hanwha Defence Australia to design and integrate a secure communications solution that enables sensitive information to move safely between different onboard networks, ensuring operational information can be shared without compromising security.

The capability was developed and rigorously tested at Aurizn’s ITAR-Controlled Systems Integration Laboratory (SIL) in South Australia. Hanwha Defence Australia representatives participated directly in acceptance testing activities at the facility, validating performance prior to a staged rollout across vehicle platforms.

Rebecca Humble, Chief Executive Officer, Aurizn said, “Modern defence capability relies on secure, resilient digital connectivity. This milestone reflects the strength of Australia’s sovereign engineering expertise and the trust placed in local industry to support the Australian Army’s future force.”

Aurizn’s contribution drew on its core strengths in:

  • Advanced software development.
  • Systems engineering and architecture design.
  • End-to-end hardware and software integration and verification in controlled environments.
  • Disciplined program delivery and risk management.

Aurizn continues to work with Hanwha Defence Australia to support ongoing rollout and sustainment activities. LAND 8116 Phase 1 will deliver the Australian Army’s AS9 Huntsman self-propelled howitzers and AS10 armoured ammunition resupply vehicles, providing protected mobile fires capability to the manoeuvre system of armoured vehicles and contributing to Australia’s evolving defence posture.

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3 COMMENTS

  1. Gee I am so excited. We have needed an SP gun in WW2, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afganistan. Those that say different don’t know.
    So finally we are going back to the future.

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Yeramba self-propelled 25 Pounder

    The prototype Yeramba in 1949
    Type Self-propelled artillery
    Place of origin Australia
    Service history
    In service 1950–1957
    Used by Australia
    Production history
    Designed 1949
    Produced 1950–1952
    Specifications
    Mass 28.5 long tons (29.0 t)
    Length 18 feet 11 inches (5.77 m)
    Width 8 feet 11 inches (2.72 m)
    Height 8 feet (2.4 m)
    Crew 6 (Commander, Driver, and 4 gun crew)
    Armour 1.5 inches (38 mm)
    Main
    armament
    QF 25 pdr (87.6 mm) Mk II
    Secondary
    armament
    Two 0.303 (7.7 mm) Bren light machine gun
    Engine Twin GM 6-71 diesel
    375 horsepower (280 kW)
    Power/weight 13 hp/ton
    Suspension Vertical Volute Spring
    Operational
    range
    125 miles (201 km)
    Maximum speed 25 miles per hour (40 km/h)
    The Yeramba was an Australian self-propelled howitzer built after the end of the Second World War in the late-1940s. They were produced by mounting the 25 pounder gun-howitzer on an American M3A5 Grant tank hull, and were converted by the Ordnance Factory in Bendigo from 1950 to 1952.[1] The Yeramba was withdrawn from service in 1957 after becoming obsolete.[2] The name is from the yeramba, an Aboriginal instrument for throwing spears.[2]

  2. I agree with PMR. The Ukraine War has demonstrated that drone guided artillery is still very useful, but also that towed guns are now very vulnerable. Huntsman should replace the towed howitzers ASAP.

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