Developed
by Raytheon company as a stand-off glide weapon, the basic
AGM-154A-1 configuration was designed as a multi-purpose weapon
'platform', utilizing GPS-guidance. A more advanced variant
designated AGM-154C, (JSOW-C) was developed for te US Navy,
incorporating both an imaging infrared seeker for high precision
and a multistage warhead, which has both a blast- fragmentation
and hard-target penetration effect. It is currently being
produced for U.S. Navy and Marine Corps' F/A-18 Hornets and
has been ordered by Poland and Turkey for use on F-16 Fighting
Falcons.
During the recent captive flight tests the weapon demonstrated
the seeker's capability to track moving maritime targets.
were conducted by attaching the seeker to the outside of a
Raytheon- owned Convair aircraft, which then flew through
the same
mission
profiles the JSOW-C1 might experience during an operation.
The tests subjected the seeker to the same stressors -- wind,
vibration, and altitude -- the JSOW-C1 would face during an
operational mission.
"These tests are the first step in the JSOW-C1 hardware
integration process," said Commander Andrew "Chunder"
Kessler, JSOW deputy program manager for NAVAIR's (Naval Air
Systems Command) Precision Strike Weapons program. "The
fact that C1 hardware and software technology is mature enough
to even conduct these flights at this point in the JSOW program
is an indication of how high the performance bar has been
set. The NAVAIR-Raytheon team plans to maintain these high
standards into the development test program that commences
later this year."
