SpudmanWP said:Is LRASM not long-ranged enough?
SpudmanWP said:Looks like LRASM for the USN is capped at 25 per year through 2021 (115 total) and the USAF picked up 46 through FY2019. Clearly this is the "stopgap" phase.
It's not a "conversion," as they retain their primary anti-air role, it's an added capability via upgraded software. This is an important distinction because all the SM-6s, like all the SM-2s, already out in the fleet's VLS cells are also available to use against Surface targets as opposed to having to make room in the existing missile loadout for a dedicated ASM. As for the warhead question, sure you're unlikely to achieve the immediate destruction of any decent-sized surface combatant via a single SM-6. Shooting one at such a target, you're hoping the mass of the missile and the warhead will combine to damage critical systems (like radar) and degrade or mission-kill the ship. That's not nothing.litzj said:If SM series is converted to Surface-to-Surface purpose, How to solve smaller warhead problem?
This surface-to-air missile had experience for air and anti-radiation targets, relatively soft-skinned ones.
Destroying 'big ship' is another problem.
TomS said:Given that full-caliber SM-6 would be a rather heavy, fast, high-diver, I foresee a whole lot of kinetic energy damage, in addition to the warhead. With luck, a big chunk of the debris blows out through the bottom of the target's hull.
litzj said:thx for answers. with its kinetic energy, sm6 could be deadly for some parts of ship and for good penetration.
but I still doubt it is less powerful than Russian supersonic monsters, having much heavier weight.
is there any news that USN try to develop counter part of Russian or Indian big supersonic missiles?
bring_it_on said:A 21' Booster-less SM6 would be a capable PAC-2 replacement though the Army seems to not be in any sort of hurry to replace the legacy missiles or fund a new launcher.
sferrin said:IIRC PAC-2 has a higher top speed, longer range, and a larger warhead than SM-2MR (RIM-66). (Which is what SM-6 is albeit with a different seeker.)
TomS said:sferrin said:IIRC PAC-2 has a higher top speed, longer range, and a larger warhead than SM-2MR (RIM-66). (Which is what SM-6 is albeit with a different seeker.)
Most of the parameters seem to be very similar, but yes, PAC-3 is much faster than SM-2MR (Mach 5 vs Mach 3.5). It's also rather heavier overall, as one much suspect since ti' considerably wider and a bit longer.
Now, the question would be how a full-caliber SM-6 performs. It's wider than Patriot and probably even heavier. How they decide to balance the motor (for speed versus range) is kind of an unknown at this point.
TomS said:Yeah, just a typo; I was looking at PAC-2 GEM numbers, which match what you cited. But I've seen 90 nm range cited for SM-2MR (from the US Navy Fact File, so apparently official). That's not a huge difference in real terms. As far as warhead weight, I was surprised to see that the Mk 125 warhead is supposedly around 300 pounds, which is actually heaver than PAC-2 (185 pounds, roughly).
I agree that full caliber SM-2MR would be a very heavy missile, and might well require modifying the Patriot launcher to beef up hydraulics and the suspension. But it wouldn't be totally incompatible -- if you can quadpack 10-inch PAC-3s into the same space as a PAC-2 canister, you should be able to fit a single 21-inch missile in the same cross-section.
sferrin said:TomS said:Yeah, just a typo; I was looking at PAC-2 GEM numbers, which match what you cited. But I've seen 90 nm range cited for SM-2MR (from the US Navy Fact File, so apparently official). That's not a huge difference in real terms. As far as warhead weight, I was surprised to see that the Mk 125 warhead is supposedly around 300 pounds, which is actually heaver than PAC-2 (185 pounds, roughly).
I agree that full caliber SM-2MR would be a very heavy missile, and might well require modifying the Patriot launcher to beef up hydraulics and the suspension. But it wouldn't be totally incompatible -- if you can quadpack 10-inch PAC-3s into the same space as a PAC-2 canister, you should be able to fit a single 21-inch missile in the same cross-section.
Hmm. The information I'm finding has the Mk 125 warhead at 115kg (253lb). (Though I've seen the 300 figure tied to SM-4 LASM.) SM-6's warhead seems to be closer to 140lbs. (64kg) (Which could indicate that it has a higher performance than the latest RIM-66 since the warhead is roughly half the weight.)
TomS said:sferrin said:TomS said:Yeah, just a typo; I was looking at PAC-2 GEM numbers, which match what you cited. But I've seen 90 nm range cited for SM-2MR (from the US Navy Fact File, so apparently official). That's not a huge difference in real terms. As far as warhead weight, I was surprised to see that the Mk 125 warhead is supposedly around 300 pounds, which is actually heaver than PAC-2 (185 pounds, roughly).
I agree that full caliber SM-2MR would be a very heavy missile, and might well require modifying the Patriot launcher to beef up hydraulics and the suspension. But it wouldn't be totally incompatible -- if you can quadpack 10-inch PAC-3s into the same space as a PAC-2 canister, you should be able to fit a single 21-inch missile in the same cross-section.
Hmm. The information I'm finding has the Mk 125 warhead at 115kg (253lb). (Though I've seen the 300 figure tied to SM-4 LASM.) SM-6's warhead seems to be closer to 140lbs. (64kg) (Which could indicate that it has a higher performance than the latest RIM-66 since the warhead is roughly half the weight.)
Warhead weights are notoriously fuzzy things. Could be looking at differences between explosive weight, warhead (explosive fill plus casing), and weight including the TDD.
JakobS said:Wouldn't it be easier to just put a new seeker on PAC-2?
Seems to me it dosen't need more range or to be hit-to-kill. An active seeker would greatly improve it's ability to counter cruise missiles and smaller UAV's.
The prototype LTAMDS radar must be interoperable with Army Integrated Air and Missile Defense (AIAMD) Integrated Battle Command System (IBCS) command / control and PATRIOT Advanced Capability - 3 (PAC-3) class of interceptors, and meet the performance requirements as defined in the LTAMDS performance specification. The Government intends to use the DOTC OTA to potentially fund up to three (3) vendors for TMRR beginning in FY18 and beyond. The expected prototype deliverable quantity is one (1) demonstration report per technology selected. The feasibility of the prototype will be demonstrated and tested by the Contractor and witnessed by the Government. LINK
JakobS said:Wouldn't it be easier to just put a new seeker on PAC-2?
Seems to me it dosen't need more range or to be hit-to-kill. An active seeker would greatly improve it's ability to counter cruise missiles and smaller UAV's.
TomS said:Sort of an old idea (the patent is from 1994) but I've never seen art for it before.
Dual-Pack Canister for the Mk 41 VLS.
The missile is not named in the patent, but at the time, they were talking about something derived from SM2MR minus the fins. This one seems to be related to Block IIIB with the side-mounted IR seeker.
bring_it_on said:
bring_it_on said:That's why I posted it here