Raytheon and the US Navy have successfully fired a precision-guided munition that can be fired from a howitzer and zero in on a moving object. The recent test of the Excalibur S round not only demonstrated its ability to switch from GPS to laser guidance to find its target, but also that its electronics and sensors can withstand the shock of being fired out of a gun.
The Excalibur S is the latest variant of Raytheon's Excalibur line of smart projectiles. Developed by Raytheon and BAE Systems Bofors, it uses the GPS technology from the Excalibur Ib, and combines it with a semi-active laser seeker that allows it to home in on moving land and maritime targets with a miss radius of under two meters (6.5 ft).
The Excalibur system is designed to work with a variety of artillery and can extend the range of a .52 caliber gun to over 50 km (31 mi) to hit or damage its target with the first round. When the Excalibur S is first fired, it uses GPS to make its initial target fix, then switches over to its laser sensor to home in on an outside targeting beam.
According to Raytheon, one Excalibur round can do the work of 10 conventional rounds and the Excalibur S package can be used to upgrade previous Excalibur iterations.
"Using artillery to engage moving targets gives soldiers more flexibility," says Sam Deneke, Raytheon Land Warfare Systems vice president. "Artillery is typically used to hit stationary objects, but Excalibur S expands the capability of artillery on the battlefield."
The video below shows the test of the Excalibur S for the US Navy.
Source: Raytheon
That doesn't sound right to me. .52 is smaller than a 20 mm Cannon,
It looks like there is some type of rocket assist on the shell which may account for the increase in range , 30 miles is pretty impressive however I wonder what he cost of each round is? 10 dumb rounds may be less expensive than one smart round.
Also I wonder how much the shell is able to change course. In the video the target was moving away from the round and the shell only need to alter its course in one direction.
I suspect that under real world conditions the results would not be so impressive, I think that well place observers or drones and a quick barrage would be just as or more effective.
Gonna guess all that electronics reduces the payload, so is it really going to be that more effective than the 10 dumb rounds with larger payloads which may also wing a target but deliver a larger payload