The Outpost

ERCA Precision-guided munition reaches new distance

- By Lt. Col. Thomas D. Jagielski

The Joint Program Executive Office Armaments & Ammunition Project Manager Combat Ammunition Systems (PM CAS) conducted the first successful test of a 70 km (43 miles) shot with a precision-guided munition, Dec. 19, at Yuma Proving Ground.

The live fire demonstrat­ion used the Excalibur projectile and was the culminatio­n of a campaign of learning on multiple systems.

“Not only did the test show the design robustness of a current fielded projectile to demonstrat­e lethality at extended ranges, it did so while maintainin­g accuracy, marking a major milestone in support of (Long Range Precision Fires) objectives of achieving overmatch artillery capability in 2023,” said Col.

Anthony Gibbs, Project Manager for Combat Ammunition Systems.

Providing longer range than that of potential adversarie­s, is a significan­t combat multiple for maneuver commanders and the Long Range Precision Fires Cross Functional Team (LRPF-CFT) was establishe­d to tackle that objective. Their mission includes increasing lethality, improving rates of fire, and enabling deep fires to shape the battlefiel­d and set conditions for the brigade combat team close fight. Multiple efforts including new propellant charges, an Extended Range Cannon

Artillery (ERCA) system, multiple projectile­s with varying capabiliti­es, and target identifica­tion and tracking systems, are under developmen­t to increase range and reduce the time from target identifica­tion to effects on target.

The Excalibur 70 km demonstrat­ion is signaled as the first step to regaining U.S. supremacy in cannon artillery by 2023. For more than 15 years, the M982A1 Excalibur projectile has been the premier precision artillery munition

in the U.S. arsenal. The projectile­s reliabilit­y, robust structural design and the ability to course correct while maintainin­g both precision and accuracy were leveraged to achieve 70 km range during the test.

Throughout initial developmen­t and multiple years of operationa­l use, Excalibur subsystems were proven to be effective with the current 39 caliber gun systems in the M109A6/A7 Self-Propelled Howitzer and M777A2 Towed Howitzer fleets. However, the increased pressure to achieve the muzzle velocity required for 70 km range from the longer 58 caliber ERCA cannon created harsher environmen­ts, so the major focus became maintainin­g flight stability and safety.

“Testing in late 2019 revealed that the warhead used in Excalibur had sufficient margin to survive this higher gun launch environmen­t,” said Gibbs. “The team learned that the effects of the new system and its associated harsher environmen­ts on the projectile had reduced or eliminated some of the design margin that existed with the legacy systems.”

The design team of U.S. Government and contractor engineers analyzed the individual subsystems’ operating margins, their structural integrity and their safety margins in order to assure that the ammunition would be safe and effective in the new ERCA System. Together with support from the Munitions and Weapons Division at the Army Test and Evaluation Command Yuma Test Center, PM CAS, and these technical experts from Raytheon, their subcontrac­tors and the Combat Capabiliti­es Developmen­t Command Armaments Center completed the necessary research and testing to reduce the risk and make the Excalibur 70 km demonstrat­ion possible.

“Today’s demonstrat­ion marks a significan­t step forward in filling a capability gap in our Army of accurately reaching out to 70 km with cannon artillery. It’s the product of tremendous teamwork and initiative by multiple organizati­ons and our industry partners to bring new technology to our artillery forces and regain overmatch with our adversarie­s,” said Brig. Gen. John Rafferty, LRPF-CFT director.

By leveraging the robust design of the current Excalibur, a GPS coordinate-seeking projectile with a circular error probable of less than two meters, it also represents a lowinvestm­ent, high-payoff approach to meeting objectives in support of the Army’s top modernizat­ion priority. Developmen­t efforts will add a seeker able to identify and engage moved or moving targets and differenti­ate between military and civilian vehicles. Future upgrades may also enable the projectile to identify friend or foe and to communicat­e between projectile­s in flight to reduce multiple projectile­s engaging the same target during volley fire. The LRPF-CFT modernizat­ion of U.S. Artillery Forces is poised to deliver overmatch and the evolution of Excalibur continues to incorporat­e cutting edge technologi­es that provide increased capabiliti­es in support of the Field Artillery mission.

 ??  ?? yuma proving Ground (ypG) and yuma test Center leadership along with leaders from the Joint program Executive Office armaments & ammunition project Manager Combat ammunition systems, and Long range precision Fires Cross Functional team, gathered to witness the Excalibur precision guided 70 km shot. after visiting the test site the group witnessed the shot from the mission control center at ypG. (photos by Mark schauer)
yuma proving Ground (ypG) and yuma test Center leadership along with leaders from the Joint program Executive Office armaments & ammunition project Manager Combat ammunition systems, and Long range precision Fires Cross Functional team, gathered to witness the Excalibur precision guided 70 km shot. after visiting the test site the group witnessed the shot from the mission control center at ypG. (photos by Mark schauer)
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 ??  ?? together with support from the Munitions and Weapons Division at yuma test Center, pM Cas, and the Combat Capabiliti­es Developmen­t Command armaments Center completed the necessary research and testing to make the Excalibur 70 km demonstrat­ion possible. (photos by Mark schauer)
together with support from the Munitions and Weapons Division at yuma test Center, pM Cas, and the Combat Capabiliti­es Developmen­t Command armaments Center completed the necessary research and testing to make the Excalibur 70 km demonstrat­ion possible. (photos by Mark schauer)
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 ??  ?? the live fire demonstrat­ion which consisted of three shots, used the Excalibur projectile. the projectile­s reliabilit­y, robust structural design, and ability to course correct while maintainin­g both precision and accuracy were leveraged to achieve 70 km range during the test.
the live fire demonstrat­ion which consisted of three shots, used the Excalibur projectile. the projectile­s reliabilit­y, robust structural design, and ability to course correct while maintainin­g both precision and accuracy were leveraged to achieve 70 km range during the test.

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