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9 Rounds in 59 Seconds: Can South Korea’s New K9MH Win the U.S. Army Bid?

Daniel Kim Views  

Upgraded K9 model on an 8×8 wheeled chassis
Fires all 155㎜ rounds compliant with the JBMoU
Firing cycle about 7.5 seconds — 9 rounds in 59 seconds
Plans to build a local ammunition plant with roughly $1.3 billion investment (roughly 1.9 trillion KRW)

한화에어로스페이스 Hanwha Aerospace’s U.S. unit, Hanwha Defense USA, has entered the U.S. Army’s self‑propelled howitzer modernization competition. The company is offering an integrated package covering production, sustainment and operations aimed at establishing a domestic manufacturing hub and a defense industrial presence in the United States.

According to statements from the South Korean government and Hanwha Aerospace on April 20, Hanwha Defense USA submitted the wheeled K9MH to the Army’s Mobile Tactical Cannon (MTC) modernization demonstrator. The K9MH is a wheeled, upgraded variant of the K9 family.

Rather than proposing a simple platform sale, Hanwha is pitching a full U.S.‑style artillery package that ties local production, logistics support and ammunition supply together. If selected, the bid would mark a deeper integration of Korean defense industry capability into the North American defense base.

To strengthen its bid, Hanwha is pursuing localization. The company plans a K9MH production and support facility in Alabama and is evaluating an ammunition plant in Arkansas with an investment of about $1.3 billion (roughly 1.9 trillion KRW).

The MTC program seeks to replace the 155㎜ M777 towed howitzers used by Infantry Brigade Combat Teams (IBCTs) and Stryker Brigade Combat Teams (SBCTs) with wheeled self‑propelled guns. Requirements could total on the order of 500 systems.

The Army plans to select vendors to advance to the next phase in July and name a final winner in the fourth quarter of 2027. Competitors include Rheinmetall’s RCH 155, Elbit Systems of America’s SIGMA, and BAE Systems’ Archer, which will compete against Hanwha’s K9MH.

Hanwha cites battlefield data from the Russia–Ukraine war to justify the wheeled variant. The company points to an 8.7% loss rate for the wheeled French Caesar, compared with 17% for the tracked U.S. M109 and 27.7% for the German PzH2000, concluding that wheeled designs can offer advantages in modern warfare where rapid displacement is critical.

한화에어로스페이스 The K9MH builds on the K9 family and is intended to meet long‑range, precision‑fire requirements. Hanwha mounted the automated turret from the latest K9A2 on a Czech Tatra 8×8 chassis to improve mobility, and reduced the crew from five — commander, gunner, assistant gunner, loader and driver — to three.

The turret is fitted with the 155㎜, 52‑caliber CN98 main gun. The CN98 complies with NATO artillery ballistic standards and the Joint Ballistic Memorandum of Understanding (JBMoU), meaning the K9MH can fire any 155㎜ ammunition that meets JBMoU specifications.

With standard charges the range is about 40 km (≈25 miles); with rocket‑assisted projectiles it exceeds 60 km (≈37 miles). The system supports resupply via the K10 ammunition resupply vehicle, similar to the tracked version, and features an armored cabin to protect the crew.

The K9MH drew attention on social media after Ukrainian outlet Defense Express posted footage on April 13 filmed at Hanwha Aerospace’s test range in Changwon, Gyeongnam.

The video highlights the K9MH’s off‑road mobility, showing it negotiating rough, unpaved roads and climbing slopes. Hanwha says the fully automated turret allows crews to occupy a firing position and complete firing operations within 30 seconds.

Live‑fire clips also attracted interest. They show a dual‑feed loading system that moves projectiles and charges on separate conveyors. The system demonstrated a firing cycle of about 7.5 seconds and fired nine rounds in 59 seconds.

Defense Express described the K9MH as “a strong contender in the next‑generation wheeled artillery competition that balances firepower, automation and mobility,” but noted that its time to clear the firing position is somewhat longer than some rivals — a trade‑off among rate of fire, survivability and tactical flexibility.

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Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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