Next Generation Jammer Wins Top Navy Test and Evaluation Award

March 12, 2021

In support of the Next Generation Jammer Mid-Band (NGJ-MB) developmental test, Owen Finch, Airborne Electronic Attack Systems (PMA-234) NGJ test engineer, prepares the High-power Electronic Attack Technique Radiation (HEATR) calibration antenna system in the HEATR chamber located at Naval Air Station Pt. Mugu, Calif. (U.S. Navy photo)

The Next Generation Jammer Test and Evaluation (T&E) team recently won the Department of the Navy’s T&E award for their accomplishments on two Acquisition Category 1 programs in 2020.

Part of the Airborne Electronic Attack (AEA) Systems Program Office (PMA-234), the NGJ T&E team tests and evaluates the NGJ Mid-Band (NGJ-MB) and NGJ Low-Band (NGJ-LB) capabilities that will augment, and ultimately replace the legacy ALQ-99 Tactical Jamming System currently used on the EA-18G Growler aircraft.

“This was an incredible collaboration between the program office, NAVAIR [Naval Air Systems Command], the test community, big Navy, and industry,” said Capt. Michael Orr, PMA-234 program manager. “The team moved mountains in 2020 to support critical test efforts for NGJ-MB and NGJ-LB, which are complex enough as we integrate cutting edge technology into a system of systems. What is truly remarkable is that they accomplished these efforts simultaneously and during a worldwide pandemic.”

The team developed ground-breaking test strategies that made the best use of early testing, Capabilities Based Test & Evaluation (CBT&E), suitability testing, and modeling & simulation that will meet program objectives and provide a capability that meets warfighter requirements, said PMA-234 T&E Lead Dan Ensminger.

“We were challenged to think outside the box and try new approaches during the test strategy development, and the resulting TEMPs [Test and Evaluation Master Plans] met the needs of the warfighter efficiently while addressing relevant stakeholder concerns,” Ensminger said.


The NGJ T&E team showed its resilience, dedication and creativity as one of the first to develop policies to conduct test safely and efficiently while honoring Center for Disease Control (CDC) guidelines to protect the workforce.

Ensminger said the team worked closely with test squadrons, test facility personnel, flight surgeons, and prime contractors to work out efficient testing within weeks of the COVID-19 shutdowns. Despite the restrictions, the team met several milestones, including the NGJ-LB technology demonstration, which involved managing two contractors and two test facilities concurrently while working with limited staffing. The team successfully completed the demonstrations within the scheduled two-week timeframe. They also successfully conducted NGJ-MB first flight that involved Air Test and Evaluation (VX) 23 and PMA-234 military, government civilian and contract support services personnel.

“This award recognizes our highly talented, joint cooperative U.S and Australian team and is a testament to the diversity of agencies supporting the development of these critical capabilities for the warfighter,” said Orr.

PMA-234 and the Royal Australian Air Force share a joint cooperative partnership on NGJ-MB and LB capability development.

By Kristine Wilcox, PMA-234 communications

In support of the Next Generation Jammer Mid-Band (NGJ-MB) developmental test, Owen Finch, Airborne Electronic Attack Systems (PMA-234) NGJ test engineer, prepares the High-power Electronic Attack Technique Radiation (HEATR) calibration antenna system in the HEATR chamber located at Naval Air Station Pt. Mugu, Calif. (U.S. Navy photo)