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Thread: Raytheon, US Navy begin JSOW C-1 integrated testing against large, maneuvering ship

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    Senior Member xav's Avatar
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    Default Raytheon, US Navy begin JSOW C-1 integrated testing against large, maneuvering ship

    The U.S. Navy has begun integrated testing (IT) of Raytheon Company's (NYSE: RTN) Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) C-1. During its first flight in IT, the JSOW C-1 was retargeted to strike a large moving ship target.

    "This flight test further demonstrates that JSOW C-1 can receive third party target updates in-flight, retarget after release, and strike a precise point on a moving ship using the weapon's autonomous terminal seeker," said Cmdr. Samuel Hanaki of the U.S. Navy's Precision Strike Weapons Program Office. "The program remains on track for reaching initial operational capability in 2013."

    The test presented two maneuvering ships (large and small) as potential targets. Before weapon release, a Navy F/A-18F Super Hornet targeted the smaller ship, and then handed off weapon control to a second Super Hornet also targeting the smaller ship. After release from the first Super Hornet, the JSOW C-1 was guided by the second Super Hornet toward the smaller maneuvering ship target located 90 kilometers from launch point.

    While in flight, the JSOW was retargeted by the second Super Hornet to the larger maneuvering ship target. The JSOW provided weapon in-flight track and bomb hit indication status messages back to the controlling Super Hornet while successfully engaging the larger target ship. The test validated JSOW C-1's unique ability to be controlled, updated and retargeted as needed to eliminate its intended target.
    http://navyrecognition.com/index.php...sk=view&id=577

    Why develop LRASM if JSOW can hit ships far away ?

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    Hogwarts Alumnus Corrupt's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by xav View Post
    Why develop LRASM if JSOW can hit ships far away ?
    JSOW is a glide bomb with an anti maritime capability, with a (public) maximum range of 70nmi assuming a high altitude launch, LRASM is a missile which can be launched from from a VLS on modern warships aswell as from aircraft and presumably has a much larger range?

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    Quote Originally Posted by xav View Post
    http://navyrecognition.com/index.php...sk=view&id=577

    Why develop LRASM if JSOW can hit ships far away ?
    Apples and oranges mate. One is modified bomb that can correct it's trajectory (and therefore strictly airborne) while the other is pretty much a "small" cruise missile.

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    How's that Hopey Changey thing workin'? C.Puffs's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bidoul33t View Post
    Apples and oranges mate. One is modified bomb that can correct it's trajectory (and therefore strictly airborne) while the other is pretty much a "small" cruise missile.
    JASSMs warhead weighs as much as an entire JSOW so I'm not sure I'd consider it "small". In either case the likelihood of actually hitting a modern warship is effectively nil as they'd be toast against just about any CIWS on the market. Big slow non-manuevering target? One can't help but wonder why they're even bothering.

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    Quote Originally Posted by C.Puffs View Post
    JASSMs warhead weighs as much as an entire JSOW so I'm not sure I'd consider it "small".
    Hence the comas, small in the sense more compact and shorter ranged than a Tomahawk. Not really smaller.

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