Naval Weapons Evaluation Facility Patch — Where the Navy Tests What Works Before It Goes to the Fleet
Before a weapon system goes aboard a carrier, it has to survive the evaluation process. This is where that happens.
The Naval Weapons Evaluation Facility (NWEF) was a United States Navy test and evaluation organization responsible for assessing the operational effectiveness and suitability of naval weapons systems before they were fielded to the fleet. Located at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico, NWEF conducted operational testing, evaluation, and certification of weapons, delivery systems, and related equipment used by Navy and Marine Corps aviation and surface forces. The facility's mission was critical to ensuring that every bomb, missile, rocket, torpedo, and guided munition that went to the fleet actually worked as designed under operational conditions. NWEF personnel — a mix of military test pilots, weapons systems officers, engineers, scientists, and technicians — conducted live weapons testing, simulated combat evaluations, and systems integration assessments that bridged the gap between laboratory development and fleet employment. The facility played a key role during the Cold War in evaluating nuclear weapons delivery systems and conventional ordnance, and continued to support the Navy's weapons testing enterprise through the precision-guided munitions revolution. Testing organizations like NWEF represent the unglamorous but essential infrastructure that ensures the fleet fights with weapons that work. This patch honors the men and women who tested the weapons before the fleet used them in combat.
Perfect For: NWEF veterans and staff, Navy test and evaluation community members, weapons systems engineers, military test pilots, ordnance specialists, and anyone who served in the naval weapons testing enterprise.