Raytheon, Boeing fire first Joint Air-to-Ground Missile
The test, funded by the two companies, was conducted at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.
The missile was fired from a ground-based rotary-wing launcher. It performed a series of preprogrammed maneuvers and flew to a pre-designated location, validating the flight control software and Brimstone airframe.
“The mission met all primary test objectives,†Raytheon said in a statement.
The missile is slated to undergo a series of guided tests so as to complete its technology demonstration phase, a Boeing official said.
Raytheon and Boeing teamed up in 2008 to design and develop the JAGM system that will replace the AGM-114 Hellfire II, the Maverick and the BGM-71 TOW missiles presently used by the US Army, Navy and Marine Corps.
While Boeing has designed the missile's body and multi-purpose warhead, Raytheon has built its tri-mode seeker which enables the weapon to hit a fixed or a moving target in all weather conditions.
The air-to-surface missile will be deployed in both the rotary-wing, fixed-wing and unmanned platforms of the army, navy and marine corps. It will ultimately be launched from a number of aircraft, including the Super Hornet F/A-18 E/F, Apache Longbow AH-64D, Seahawk MH-60R, Super Cobra AH-1Z, Extended-Range Multi-Purpose UAV, Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter and Warrior Unmanned Aircraft System.
