Lockheed Martin
successfully completes Spike NLOS test from Apache
JOINT-CAPABILITIES
08 DECEMBER 2023
|
By: Reporter
Lockheed
Martin has announced the first successful live fire of eight Spike
non-line-of-sight (NLOS) all up rounds (AURs) from a US Army AH-64E Apache.
The
successful live fire event over a five-day period at Yuma Proving Ground in
Arizona, clears the Spike NLOS long-range precision munitions
directed requirement (LRPM DR) system for airworthiness release (AWR) for the
US Apache platform.
This paves
the way for starting to equip the Rafael-designed and manufactured Spike system
onto the US Army’s current AH-64E Apache V6 platforms.
Tom
Bargnesi, program management senior manager of the Precision Strike team at
Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, explained, “This successful
demonstration of Spike NLOS showcases that the system is ready to be integrated
onto the Army’s current Apache fleet and provides a premier defence capability
of choice when precision and accuracy matter.”
The
demonstration featured eight Spike NLOS AURs firing from an Apache platform at
a variety of targets, showcasing the system’s different mission set
capabilities across multiple scenarios.
“The AWR
allows delivery of 21st century security solutions to our Army customer for
complex threat environments,” Bargnesi added.
This
demonstration was one of the final steps for the system to receive AWR and
allow the Army to begin fielding Spike NLOS onto its Apache V6 platforms.
In mid-2024,
Lockheed Martin will work with the Army to train pilots to use the system on
the Apache V6 platforms. The US Army expects the Spike NLOS LRPM DR system to
be fully integrated onto all 18 Apache Echo Model V6 platforms by September
2024.
The Spike
NLOS is a multi-purpose, electro-optical/infrared missile system. The missile’s
advanced rocket motor provides capability to reach ranges up to 32 kilometres,
operators can integrate Spike NLOS with ground, aviation or maritime platforms
– while leveraging its stand-off capability to strike distant or geographically
concealed targets without line of sight.
The weapon’s
seeker and wireless datalink provides operators with real-time video imagery
and man-in-the-loop control throughout the missile’s flight. This provides
operators with the opportunity to alter or abort the mission while en route to
the target.
Lockheed
Martin has teamed with Rafael Advanced Defense Systems to offer the weapon
system to US customers.
The AH-64E
Apache is one of the world’s most advanced multi-role combat helicopters and
represents the backbone of the US Army attack helicopter fleet, as well as a
growing number of international defence forces.
The
twin-engine Apache AH-64E attack helicopter, crewed by a pilot and co-pilot, is
designed for destruction of armoured vehicles, personnel, and material targets
in battlefield conditions with a max speed of 164 knots and range of 260
nautical miles. It traditionally carries an M230 30mm cannon (1,200 rounds),
Hydra-70 2.75-inch rockets, and Hellfire missiles.
According to
Boeing, there are nearly 1,300 Apaches in operation globally that have
accumulated more than 5 million flight hours, 1.3 million of which have been in
combat.
The AH-64E
variant will be in production until at least 2028 and is set to be the US’s
primary attack helicopter into the 2060s. Boeing delivered the first-generation
Apache to the US in January 1984 but it made its first flight in 1975.
Australia will acquire 29
AH-64E Apaches to be built by Boeing as part of the multi-billion-dollar LAND
4503 Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter program to replace the Army’s troubled ARH
Tiger helicopters.
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