Rheinmetall spends $41M to expand U.S. Army production

Key Points
  • American Rheinmetall announced a $41 million capital investment across six U.S. manufacturing facilities in Michigan, Ohio, and Maine, with $12 million already executed.
  • The investment supports XM30, Mobile Tactical Cannon, Common Tactical Truck, and Common Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher programs through new machining equipment and facility upgrades.

American Rheinmetall is spending $41 million to expand and modernize six manufacturing facilities across Michigan, Ohio, and Maine, accelerating production capacity for some of the U.S. Army’s most important ground combat modernization programs while deliberately avoiding the time and cost of building entirely new factories.

The German defense giant’s American subsidiary announced the capital investment initiative targeting programs including the XM30 infantry fighting vehicle, the Mobile Tactical Cannon, the Common Tactical Truck, and the Common Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher, with roughly $12 million already spent on completed equipment installations and an additional $26 million currently being deployed across ongoing projects.

The XM30 program at the center of this investment is the Army’s next generation infantry fighting vehicle, intended to replace the aging M2 Bradley that has served since the early 1980s. The Bradley has been continuously upgraded over four decades and proved its value in Desert Storm, Iraq, and as a platform supplied to Ukraine, where Bradley crews have demonstrated its effectiveness against Russian armor. Its replacement must carry more soldiers, carry more protection against modern anti-tank threats including top-attack munitions and loitering drones, and integrate the digital systems that modern combined arms operations require. American Rheinmetall is one of the competitors for the XM30 production contract, and the investment in large-format machining capability positions the company to demonstrate production readiness before that award decision.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

The centerpiece of the manufacturing investment is a 65-foot bridge mill manufactured by FPT, a large-format machining center capable of processing complete vehicle hull structures in a single setup rather than requiring the structure to be repositioned multiple times for different machining operations. That single-setup capability matters for production precision and speed: every time a large metal structure is repositioned, there is an opportunity for alignment errors to accumulate that compound across the finished part. A machine that processes the entire hull without repositioning produces more precise results faster and with less labor than a sequential multi-machine process. American Rheinmetall explicitly frames this investment as positioning for potential XM30 production if it wins the contract, while also noting the machine’s applicability to other next-generation combat vehicle programs.

The investment portfolio also includes two FPT Dinox 350 five-axis machining centers that expand the company’s ability to machine complex curved and angled surfaces that flat or two-axis machines cannot handle, a Kapp ZE 800 Gear Grinder for the precision finishing of combat vehicle final drive gears, and two Stinger 180 five-axis machining centers dedicated to missile-related component manufacturing. Each of those additions addresses a specific production constraint: five-axis capability unlocks geometries that simpler machines cannot achieve, gear grinding to precision tolerances directly affects the reliability and service life of vehicle drivetrains, and missile component manufacturing tolerances are among the tightest in any defense production environment because small dimensional variations translate directly into guidance and propulsion performance.

Matt Warnick, CEO of American Rheinmetall, framed the investment strategy around the speed advantage that building on existing infrastructure provides over starting from scratch: “At a time when speed, scalability, and certainty are paramount, expanding existing capabilities provides a decisive advantage. These investments reflect our long-term commitment to supporting the U.S. Warfighter and strengthening the domestic defense industrial base. By modernizing and expanding proven infrastructure already in place, we are positioned to respond faster, scale production more effectively, and deliver the critical systems and components needed to meet evolving national security demands.”

Warnick returned to the execution dimension in a second statement that reflects the company’s understanding of what defense modernization actually requires: “Modernization is not just about innovation, it’s about execution. Our investments ensure that capability and capacity move forward together, aligned with customer timelines, operational requirements, and long-term readiness objectives.”

The Common Autonomous Multi-Domain Launcher, one of the programs specifically supported by these investments, represents one of the Army’s more forward-looking modernization efforts. CAML is designed to provide ground forces with the ability to deploy munitions across air, land, and sea domains from a single launcher platform, supporting the multi-domain operations concept that Army doctrine has been developing in response to the complex, integrated threat environments that peer adversaries present. A launcher that can fire counter-drone interceptors, precision ground attack munitions, and maritime strike weapons from the same vehicle gives ground commanders options that current single-domain systems cannot provide, and the manufacturing flexibility that American Rheinmetall is building into its facilities supports the production of the diverse components that CAML requires.

The Common Tactical Truck program, another investment beneficiary, addresses the Army’s requirement for a next-generation medium tactical vehicle to replace aging FMTV and LMTV fleets that handle the bulk of Army logistics. Moving ammunition, fuel, supplies, and troops across contested environments requires vehicles that can survive the electromagnetic and kinetic threats that modern conflict imposes on logistics convoys, and the CTT program is designed to incorporate survivability features that current trucks lack while maintaining the payload capacity and mobility that logistics operations demand.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Greece is arming up with U.S.-made kamikaze drones

The U.S. State Department approved a possible sale to Greece of Switchblade 300 Block 20 systems, a portable loitering munition built by AeroVironment (AV)...

U.S. Air Force wants ground launcher for drones and missiles

The U.S. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center's Command, Control, Communications, and Battle Management Directorate at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio published a...

Chinese spy vessels cross U.S. waters on the way to the Arctic

Two Chinese research ships pushed north through American waters off Alaska this week, and for the first time this year, they didn't just skirt...

Unknown U.S. Navy drone boat spotted leaving Virginia base under escort

A U.S. Navy security boat escorted an unfamiliar uncrewed vessel out of Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek, and the open-source account Aviation and Naval...

U.S.-based aerospace firm X-Bow Systems heads to Farnborough

U.S.-based aerospace firm X-Bow Systems announced it will exhibit at the Farnborough International Airshow, running July 20 through 24 in Hampshire, England, setting up...

Russia’s cutting-edge drone upgrade is a $2 camping compass

Somewhere in a Russian drone factory, an engineer looked at a satellite-jamming crisis that has cost the Kremlin countless drones and countless rubles, and...