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Published on December 23rd, 2022 📆 | 4341 Views ⚑

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New $135 million Advanced Munitions Technology Complex at Eglin


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The Air Force Research Lab’s Munitions Directorate marked the official completion of a new $135 million Advanced Munitions Technology Complex at Eglin Air Force Base with a ceremonial ribbon cutting Dec. 15.

The safety briefing before the event spoke to the dangerous work done by the lab, which is responsible for the research, design, development and testing of all explosive weapons technologies for the U.S. Air Force. Currently, the lab has approximately 850 airmen, Defense Department civilian employees and defense contractors working at its facility.

Years in the making, the AMTC is designed to consolidate the directorate's operations at one location and modernize the 1960s-era explosive-testing infrastructure.

The Air Froce Research Lab unveiled a new $135 million Advanced Munitions Technology Complex at Eglin Air Force Base Thursday.

“What it really does is pull people together that are in disparate facilities, including facilities not located here in Northwest Florida,” said Mike Lindsay, technical adviser of the Energetic Materials Branch, Ordnance Division of the AFRL’s Munitions Directorate. “A lot of the capability we have here doesn’t exist (anywhere else) in the Department of Defense today.”

Mike Lindsay, technical adviser of the Energetic Materials Branch, Ordnance Division, Munitions Directorate of the U.S. Air Force Air Force Research Lab, credits Allen B. Beach with helping to make AFRL's new Advanced Munitions Technology Complex a reality.

That capability includes being able to make explosives from scratch, press and mill them into whatever shape necessary and then test them in a controlled indoor environment. Previously, explosive tests would have to be conducted on the Eglin reservation and subject to scheduling, weather conditions and environmental regulations. The controlled indoor blast chambers allow researches to gather data on explosive tests with much more sophistication than previously possible.

Dr. Ben Wilde with the Air Force Research Lab's Munitions Directorate gives a tour of one of the blast testing chambers at AFRL's new, $135 million Advanced Munitions Technology Complex at Eglin Air Force Base Thursday.

Blast test chambers can be fitted with a wide variety of sensors, and researchers will be able to conduct multiple blast-testing experiments at the same time. The chambers are designed to be able to accommodate a test of up to a 10 kilogram explosive charge.





“It’s designed in principal that you could stand right next to that tank and set off 20 pounds (of explosives) and be safe,” Lindsay said. “I wouldn’t recommend it; that’s going to be a loud thump, but you would be protected.”

One of the main goals of the new complex is to allow for the collaboration of multiple branches of the military, scientific experts and military contractors.

Heavily reinforced walls and doors protect researchers who will be working with explosive testing at the Air Force Research Lab's new, $135 million Advanced Munitions Technology Complex at Eglin Air Force Base Thursday.

“This is a national asset,” Lindsay said. “It’s built by the department of the Air Force, but it’s an asset for the entire defense enterprise to come here. “We envision this as a gathering place of the top minds in the country to be able to advance weapons technology faster than we’re able to at this time.”

And this need to be able to rapidly meet current and future threats by adversaries was echoed by AFRL Munitions Directorate Deputy Director Segrid Harris, who spoke during Thursday's ceremony.

Segrid Harris, deputy director of the Air Force Research Lab's Munitions Directorate, speaks during a ceremony Thursday unveiling a new $135 million Advanced Munitions Technology Complex at Eglin Air Force Base Thursday.

“Things that we did not have the capacity to do before, we will have the capacity to do now,” Harris said. “And capacity is the key; capacity allows you to go further; capacity allows you to accelerate; and capacity allows you to change, so that none of us has to pay the price of losing.”

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