The F1 hand grenade was tested and manufactured by Australian Defence Industries (now
Thales Australia) in the mid-1990s and eventually entered into service with the Australian Defence Force (ADF) in the late 1990s. The grenade is the first Australian manufactured grenade utilised by the ADF, as previous grenades include the British-made
Mills bomb, used in
World War II and the
Korean War, and the American-made
M26 grenade, which was utilised by Australian forces in the
Vietnam War and was replaced by the F1 grenade.
Future grenade development In 2013 it was announced that Thales-owned Australian Munitions and German company
Diehl Defence would work together to develop an
insensitive munitions variant of the F1 grenade. In September 2018, it was announced that
Thales Australia and
Chemring Group signed a joint
memorandum of understanding covering cooperation in the "design, development and manufacture of a future range of grenades." This includes fragmentation, offensive, smoke and training grenades, to be designed and manufactured at Thales Australia's
Australian Government-owned facilities in
Benalla, Victoria and
Mulwala, New South Wales, and Chemring Group's production facility in
Lara, Victoria. This agreement on a future range of grenades will focus on the design and manufacture of a "modular hand grenade product range," allowing a user-selectable detonation mechanism depending on the desired battlefield effect. This new range of modular grenades would combine the effects of the F1 fragmentation grenade and the F2 blast grenade into a selectable
modular grenade with capabilities similar to the German
Diehl Defence-manufactured modular hand grenade, which has a removable fragmentation sleeve. While the design and development of this grenade is slated to primarily focus on the current and future military needs of the ADF, the grenade range will also be made available for export customers under the Australian Government's Defence Export Strategy. Overall, this agreement supports Australia's ability for independent "munitions and small arms research, design, development and manufacture." == Design and features ==