JDAMs hit the spot

Two Boeing Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) weapons, each equipped with an Australian-designed and -built wing kit, were successfully released from Royal Australian Air Force Hornets during recent flight tests.

Two

Boeing

Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) weapons, each equipped with Australian-designed and -built modular wing kits, were successfully released from a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) F/A-18 Hornet during recent flight tests.

Flying at 20,000 feet over the Woomera Prohibited Area in South Australia, a RAAF F/A-18 released the 500-pound Mk-82 JDAM Extended Range (ER) weapons and scored a direct hit on their respective targets. Each weapon demonstrated extended range fly out performance, well exceeding that of a baseline JDAM.

‘We have demonstrated the impressive capability enhancement that an affordable modular wing kit can bring to JDAM weapons, while simultaneously setting the engineering foundation that will facilitate the fielding of an Australian-designed wing kit to JDAM users around the globe,’ said Bart Volpe, Boeing JDAM International program manager.

The AIR 5425 JDAM ER test program is a joint effort with the Australian Defence Materiel Organisation, Hawker de Havilland Aerospace and Boeing Integrated Defense Systems. The test team conducted the technology demonstration under the Australian Capability Technology Demonstrator Program, managed by the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO).

The JDAM ER vehicle utilises a modular wing kit developed by Hawker de Havilland, based on technology licensed by DSTO. The ER wing kit is said to provide more than three times the range of a baseline JDAM and is designed to be installed in the field to existing JDAM weapons.