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The Navy's Ship Defense Missile Just Got Deadlier
Popular Mechanics ^ | Apr 11, 2016 | Eric Tegler

Posted on 04/12/2016 6:29:54 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki

US Navy / YouTube

In response to a range of new threats to its ships, whether it be air- and surface-launched missiles or drone aircraft, the U.S. Navy is improving and expanding its ship-defense capabilities. In early March, a test on the USS Porter—a guided-missile destroyer stationed in Rota, Spain—paired Raytheon's new Block 2 Rolling Airframe Missile with a launch and tracking system called SeaRAM to demonstrate a new way to protect ships.

Raytheon's Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) is a lightweight supersonic weapon designed to destroy anti-ship missiles and other airborne threats to a ship at close range, typically less than 10 miles. Much like a bullet fired from a rifled-barrel, RAM Block 2 rolls around its longitudinal axis as it flies. The missile uses the rolling motion generated by its tail fins to change direction on a dime. It's guided by a radio frequency (RF)/infrared seeker to intercept threats.

"ALL YOU WANT IS MORE TIME. THAT'S WHAT THE MISSILE GIVES YOU OVER THE GUN."

Lasers have gotten all the hype recently thanks to their potential to create effective, cheap defensive systems for ships. But RAMs have been doing the job since the early 1990s and are currently deployed on 165 different vessels across eight different navies.

They form part of a three-layered ring of close-in defense for certain U.S. Navy ships. The outer defensive ring is handled by the Sea Sparrow, a ship-defense missile with a range of approximately 27 nautical miles. Inside 10 miles, RAMs take over. The last line of defense is the venerable Phalanx 20 mm radar-guided Gatling gun (or CIWS, Close-In Weapons System), which takes on threats inside two miles.

"As advanced targets are coming in closer and maneuvering much faster, we need the performance in the RAM Block 2 to be able to be able to engage them," says Alan Davis, Raytheon's director of short-range defense systems.

The new RAM Block 2 has a more powerful rocket motor and improved control surfaces, which make it faster and more maneuverable than its predecessor. Davis says the added power not only makes the RAM Block 2 faster, but also allows the missile to maintain its speed during energy-sapping high-G turns needed to intercept targets. The Block 2 has two and a half times the range of the Block 1 RAM, which has a reported effective intercept range of about 5.6 miles. The latest RAM also has an improved seeker package with greater sensitivity, allowing it to detect anti-ship missiles that employ low probability-of-intercept receivers.

The second piece of the improved defense package is pairing the RAM Block 2 with SeaRAM. SeaRAM is a hybrid system consisting of an 11-round Rolling Airframe Missile launcher mounted on a Phalanx chassis and radar unit. The combined Gatling gun-RAM launcher unit uses the Phalanx high resolution radar for initial tracking and fire control. The March test on the Porter marked the first time that the Block 2 RAM and SeaRAM have been integrated on a U.S. Navy destroyer.

The ranges of the RAM Block 2 missile and 20 mm rounds of the Phalanx Gatling gun overlap. While the Phalanx is a crucial last line of defense, the RAM Block 2/SeaRAM combo gives ships (particularly U.S. Navy destroyers which haven't previously had RAM capability) a better chance of defeating threats before they get so close that a gun becomes the only choice.

"It gives you breathing room," says Ed Lester, SeaRAM program manager and former commander of the guided missile cruiser USS Leyte Gulf. "When you're on the bridge of a ship or in the Combat Information Center, and bad things are happening, all you want is more time. That's what the missile gives you over the gun."

Lester adds that the live-fire testing on the USS Porter was successful, and the effort went from concept to reality in just 12 months. The Porter is the first of four destroyers the Navy plans to equip with SeaRAM/RAM Block 2 missile system. The ship is set to take the capability on an upcoming deployment and a second destroyer (USS Carney) is now in the process of having the RAM/Gatling gun combo installed.

Lasers may represent the future of close-in ship defense but the interest in the SeaRAM.Block 2 expressed by a number of Middle Eastern countries confirms that the latest Rolling Airframe Missile will be part of the ship defense equation for decades to come.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ciws; raytheon; searam; usn

RAM

1 posted on 04/12/2016 6:29:54 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
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To: sukhoi-30mki

Interesting design. Thanks for posting!


2 posted on 04/12/2016 7:12:39 AM PDT by FreedomOfExpression
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To: sukhoi-30mki

Looks like it shares some design with the AIM9X.


3 posted on 04/12/2016 8:44:27 AM PDT by pfflier
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