After Stumble, Army to Restart Design Competition for Bradley Replacement

FacebookXPinterestEmailEmailEmailShare
The Bradley Fighting Vehicle is a tracked armored weapons system named for Gen. Omar Bradley
The Bradley Fighting Vehicle is a tracked armored weapons system named for Gen. Omar Bradley, the last five-star general in the Army. It is designed to transport infantry and scout soldiers. In November 2020, nearly 300 troops from the 1st Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, perfected their gunnery skills at the Doña Ana Training Complex in New Mexico –- a sprawling training area located about 30 miles north of Fort Bliss, Texas. (Army photo by Michelle Gordon)

Army modernization officials are preparing to issue a formal invitation to defense firms to enter the design phase for a new armored vehicle that will replace the Bradley Fighting Vehicle.

At a virtual industry day, Army officials discussed requirements for the new Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle Program with defense firms; a request for proposals to design the vehicle will be published later this month.

This is the Army's second attempt at the high-priority modernization effort. The service announced in January that it would restart the OMFV effort since it received only one valid bid, from General Dynamics, for the $45 billion program. A competing bid from Raytheon and Germany's Rheinmetall was disqualified when Rheinmetall failed to ship a prototype of its Lynx KF41 Infantry Fighting Vehicle to the U.S. by the service's deadline.

Read Next: Congress Wants to Beef Up Army Effort to Develop Counter-Drone Weapons

In March, Army acquisition officials told lawmakers that the service may have rushed the prototyping effort, which discouraged many companies from competing.

This time around, the Army is taking steps to maximize industry innovation while also reducing the burden and cost to industry for participation, according to a service announcement.

"We do this by starting the phase with a single requirement document, the OMFV Characteristics of Need, which is a prioritized list of nine broad desired characteristics," Brig. Gen. Ross Coffman, director of the Next Generation Combat Vehicles Cross Functional Team, said in a statement.

This initial design phase allows industry to develop digital designs while requirements mature, before prototypes are required in the following phase, according to the statement. The digital designs will be used to complete the Army's formal requirements document for the OMFV, to be published in fall 2021, Coffman said.

Army officials expect to issue up to five competitive contract awards in 2021 for OMFV design.

The service is also running a parallel competitive effort to develop open-architecture software for OMFV. It's pulling together a "voluntary consortium" for the effort that will include representation from industry, government and academia, according to the statement.

The Army wants OMFV, which is part of the Next Generation Combat Vehicle effort, to be outfitted with the communications, situational awareness gear and weapon systems to "deliver a decisive strike while manned or remote operated," according to a draft RFP released in July.

In battle, the OMFV will be designed to support maneuvering combat units by "detecting and destroying targets at a range beyond the enemy's capability," the draft RFP states.

-- Matthew Cox can be reached at matthew.cox@military.com.

Related: The Army Is Once Again Starting Design for Future Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle

Story Continues