• The AGM 114R missile features a multi-purpose warhead that enables a single Hellfire missile to cover the entire target set of the currently fielded laser-guided variants.
    The AGM 114R missile features a multi-purpose warhead that enables a single Hellfire missile to cover the entire target set of the currently fielded laser-guided variants.
Close×

Lockheed Martin’s multi-purpose AGM 114R Hellfire II missile struck and destroyed a stationary tank target in its third proof-of-principle flight test, a ground-launch test configured to simulate launch from an unmanned aerial system (UAS).

The R model, or “Romeo” missile, features a multi-purpose warhead that enables a single Hellfire missile to cover the entire target set of the currently fielded laser-guided variants.

A team consisting of personnel from Lockheed Martin and the US Army Joint Attack Munitions Systems program office located in Huntsville, AL, conducted the test at Eglin Air Force Base, FL.

The missile, armed with a live warhead, was fired at a stationary M60 tank located 6.4 kilometres downrange.

Immediately before launch, test equipment emulating an airborne UAS launch platform sent targeting data and warhead delay selection commands for an armoured target to the missile.

The missile was launched in lock-on-after-launch mode with a high trajectory to simulate launch from a UAS.

It used its inertial measurement unit and targeting data to fly to the approximate location of the target before beginning its search for the laser signal generated by the ground-based targeting laser.

The missile acquired the laser spot and struck the target within inches of the laser aimpoint.

“One of the most noticeable operational enhancements in the AGM-114R missile is that the pilot can now select the type of lethality effects while on the move and without having to have a pre-set mission load prior to departure,” US Army Lt. Col. Mike Brown, Hellfire Systems product manager, said.

“The AGM-114R is currently that ‘one missile’ that can service all targets.”

comments powered by Disqus