Raytheon’s latest missile-killer hits distance record

October 3, 2016

Tucson.com:

A naval missile made by Tucson-based Raytheon Missile Systems destroyed a missile target in the longest surface-to-air intercept of its kind, the company and the U.S. Navy said Friday.

In a test at the Point Mugu Test Range off the California coast on Sept. 22, a Raytheon Standard Missile-6 was launched by the guided missile cruiser USS Princeton and successfully destroyed an “over-the-horizon” threat target using targeting data from a remote, airborne sensor.

The distance of the intercept was not disclosed, but Raytheon said it broke the previous long-range intercept record in January of this year — a milestone the company set itself in 2014.

First deployed by the Navy in 2013, the supersonic SM-6 was developed from the SM-2 series of ship-defense missiles to counter longer-range threats from manned and unmanned fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles in their final phase of flight. In March, the Navy awarded Raytheon a $275 million contract for SM-6 production.

The SM-6’s range is classified but it is believed to be more than 200 miles, based on the range of a predecessor variant and comments from Pentagon officials.

Raytheon said the mission tested the Navy’s ongoing effort to link ships and airborne sensors into a single network. The SM-6 also can use its own active radar to guide itself toward the end of an intercept.

The SM-6 is being developed as a multi-mission weapon, with the additional capability to hit surface targets.

In January, a modified SM-6 fired from a guided missile destroyer sank a decommissioned Navy frigate in a test off Hawaii.

“The multi-mission SM-6 is in a class of its own as it demonstrates its ability to go further, faster and counter more threats to offer maximum mission flexibility,” Mike Campisi, Standard Missile-6 senior program director for Raytheon Missile Systems, said in prepared remarks.

Rear Adm. Jon Hill, who commands the Navy’s Integrated Warfare Systems program, called the latest SM-6 test a significant accomplishment “that will shape the future of surface warfare.”

The SM-6 offers greater range for defense against airborne threats than its predecessor SM-2 or Raytheon’s medium-range Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile.

As an anti-ship missile, the SM-6 would augment Boeing’s shorter range, subsonic Harpoon missile, which has been in service with U.S. and allied navies since the 1970s…

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