Colucci Norman
Digg icon reddit icon Stumbleupon icon
Print Email     Print Edition Stories
General Dynamics grenade launching machine guns

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Army awards area General Dynamics units $66M for grenade launchers

By Mass High Tech Staff

General Dynamics Corp. reports its Armament and Technical Products unit has landed two contracts worth $66 million from the U.S. Army to produce grenade launching machine guns.

The MK19 can fire up to 400 grenades per minute and is intended to be more accurate than other grenade launchers, the company said.

Under the deals, General Dynamics’ (NYSE: GD) Burlington, Vt., and Saco, Maine, facilities will share the management of the project. Work will be performed at the Saco site, which General Dynamics said has produced more than 36,000 MK19 systems for the U.S. government and its allies since 1984. Deliveries are expected to begin in 2009 and continue through late 2012.

Last week, General Dynamics’ Groton, Conn.-based Electric Boat subsidiary landed $268 million from the U.S. Navy for design services for nuclear-powered attack submarines. Under the contract modification, Electric Boat will maintain and update design drawings and data for all Virginia-class submarines, including technology insertions. In addition, Electric Boat will perform Virginia-class development and design studies.

Last month, Bath Iron Works Corp., a ship-building division of General Dynamics, won a $7.36 million contract modification for technical assistance for the DDG-51 class of Aegis destroyers. Also last month, the defense giant’s IT division in Needham landed $6 million from the Army for IT modernizaton services at the Pentagon.

General Dynamics, which employs about 83,500 workers, reported profits of $2.07 billion on $27.2 billion in revenue for 2007.

 

Digg icon reddit icon Stumbleupon icon
Contact Editor Latest News

Comments

Please Login/Register to post comments.

No comments have been added or approved.

On the MHT blog now

Despite World Series, local algorithm helps jobless New Yorkers

NPR's Morning Edition reports on job counseling efforts at the state of New York's Department of Labor, and finds it's using an algorithm developed by Burning Glass Technologies, which is based in Quincy Market. Burning Glass develops algorithms that parse resume information and try to match job seekers with companies that will actually hire them. The job seeker in the story, a publishing i...

Read More

Boston University - MS MBA
Most Popular Stories
EmailedViewed
Stay Informed
Check which newsletter you'd like to receive.
TechFlash (Daily)
FinanceFlash (Daily)
BioFlash (Daily)
GreenFlash (Weekly)
Startup Report (Weekly)
Breaking news, MHT events, local announcements
RSS feeds
Your email:

Affiliate publications: ACBJ.com, Boston Business Journal, Bizjournals.com, Portfolio.com, Wired.com

Web Site Developed by Neptune Web, Inc.

Use of, registration on, this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement. Please read our Privacy Policy (updated) A publishing partner with Portfolio