Long Range Land Attack Projectile

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The Long Range Land Attack Projectile (LRLAP) is a developmental program to produce a precision guided 155 mm naval artillery shell for the U.S. Navy. The system is under development by Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, the prime contractor being BAE Systems. In cooperation with BAE a version of LRLAP has been designed to be used with the 127 mm (5-inch)/54 naval cannon.

The LRLAP uses a base bleed rocket assistance, and an extended range fin glide trajectory, the warhead effectiveness is comparable to that of the new M795 artillery shell, and it is capable of 6 round MRSI impact in a span of 2 seconds.[1] It uses a blast fragmentation type warhead.[2]

Specifications

155/62 AGS

  • Caliber: 155 mm.
  • Weight:
    • Total: 225 lb (102 kg).
    • Bursting charge: 24 lb (11 kg).
  • Length (propellant and projectile): 88 in (223 cm).
  • Guidance: GPS/INS.
  • Accuracy: Circular error probable of 50 m or less.
  • Range: 100 nautical miles (190 km) max. (Different sources report 83 nautical miles (150 km), or 74 nautical miles (140 km).
  • Warhead: Unitary high-explosive.[3]
  • Cost: $400,000.[4]

127/54 mk. 45

  • Caliber: 127 mm (5-inch).
  • Weight:
  • Length (propellant and projectile):
  • Guidance: GPS/INS.
  • Accuracy:
  • Range: 53 nautical miles (100 km) max.
  • Warhead: Unitary high-explosive.[5]

Program status

  • June 2005 - Successful guided flight test of the LRLAP sets gun-launched guided projectile range record of 59 nautical miles (109 km).[6]
  • September 2010 - Successful unguided flight test.[7]
  • August 2011 - Two live fire tests of 45 nautical miles range.[8]
  • June 2013 - Four full cycle live fire tests conducted.[9]
  • September 2013 - Lockheed receives $18 million contract to transition the LRLAP to production. Fielding planned for 2016.[10]

See also

References

External links