June 19,2008:
Another small air-to-ground
missile has been developed for UAV use. This one, from Raytheon (for a customer
they won't name) is 130mm in diameter, laser guided, weighs 45 pounds, has a
range of six kilometers and a nine pound warhead. The idea is to carry two or
three in place of one Hellfire.
Earlier
this year, a British firm announced the LMM (Lightweight Multirole
Missile). Weighing 29 pounds, with a
range of 8 kilometers and carrying a 6.5 pound fragmentation warhead, the LMM also
uses laser guidance. Hellfire missiles,
the current favorite for Predators, weigh a hundred pounds each, and have 20
pound warheads (about half of which is explosives).
Another
light weight contender is the laser guided 70mm rocket with a six kilometer
range and a six pound warhead. This weapon is based on an unguided rocket of
the same size, that has been in wide use since World War II. The U.S. Army is using the guided version
from helicopters. The new helicopter missile racks each hold four Hellfire
missiles, or sixteen 70mm guided missiles
Alternatively, each rack can hold eight 70mm guided rockets and two
Hellfires. The racks can be used on the AH-64, AH-1Z, Tiger or the SH-60B
helicopters. Each rack weighs 145 pounds. Loaded with missiles, the rack weighs
500-600 pounds. Attack helicopters usually carry two of these racks.