Low-Cost Guided Imaging Rocket
The Low-Cost Guided Imaging Rocket was a weapons system under development for the US Navy as part of ONR's Low-Cost Imaging Terminal Seeker FNC.[1] It transitioned as the weapon used in the Medusa Joint Capability Technology Demonstration with South Korea.[2] The program provided a precision guided 2.75 inch (70 mm) rocket for use with existing Hydra 70 systems in service, as such it has many similarities with the Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System program. The principal difference between the systems is that while APKWS uses terminal laser homing, requiring the target to be 'painted' until impact, LOGIR would guide to a position supplied by the launching aircraft, using imaging infrared in the terminal phase making it a true fire-and-forget weapon.[1][3] Another advantage of LOGIR was that it was "especially effective against swarm attacks by enemies like small boats, as there’s no need for ongoing guidance."[4]
Development
South Korea's contribution in the LOGIR program are the following:[5]
- Electronics for guidance and control system (production only, design by the USA)
- Electronics for control actuation system (DSP and PWM inverter board)
- Assembly parts for control actuation system (CAS frame and integrated BLDC motor)
- Airframe structure and fins (canard fin, CAS skin, seeker skin)
- Cruciform tail fins and nozzle assembly
- Warhead and fuze attachment improvement
Specifications
- Diameter: 70 mm
- Guidance: INS midcourse/Imaging infrared terminal.
- Motor: Existing Hydra 70 motors
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 LOGIR moves a step closer to the fleet
- ↑ APKWS II "Hellfire Jr." Hydra Rockets Enter SDD Phase - DID
- ↑ Guided Hydra Rockets and hellfire missiles: Program Halts & New Entries - Defense Industry Daily
- ↑ APKWS II: Laser-Guided Hydra Rockets in Production At Last
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
See also
- Direct Attack Guided Rocket
- Guided Advanced Tactical Rocket - Laser
- Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System
- Roketsan Cirit
External links
- Air-Launched 2.75-Inch Rockets - Designation Systems
- Low-Cost Imaging Terminal Seeker (LCITS) (video)
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