BAE Guided Projectile Test a Success

The prototype hopes to more than double the range of existing cannon-launched munitions.

In partnership with the U.S. Army, BAE Systems successfully fired a sub-caliber artillery long-range projectile with enhanced lethality.
In partnership with the U.S. Army, BAE Systems successfully fired a sub-caliber artillery long-range projectile with enhanced lethality.
BAE Systems

BAE Systems recently successfully fired a sub-caliber artillery long-range projectile with enhanced lethality, the company's concept for the U.S. Army’s XM1155 sub-caliber program. The projectile was fired from a 155 mm XM907E2 58 caliber cannon and impacted a fixed target beyond ranges previously demonstrated by other precision guided projectiles fired from the same type of cannon.

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The test at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, used a U.S. Army-designed sabot package and confirmed the projectile’s compatibility with the 155 mm extended range cannon artillery (ERCA) Howitzer test bed and propelling charges.

BAE's concept for the U.S. Army’s XM1155-SC program is an advanced, cannon-launched projectile under development for the defeat of fixed and moving targets in contested environments at more than double the range of existing cannon launched precision guided munitions (PGM).

The latest PGM in the Hypervelocity Projectile family of munitions, BAE's prototype was developed to penetrate and destroy adversary defenses through increased range, advanced guidance, lethality and survivability. The projectile addresses the Army’s modernization goals for a long-range precision fires munitions solution.

For the past several years, BAE Systems has invested in the innovation, development and testing of advanced long-range precision fires solutions and has completed more than 100 PGM tests.

In early 2022, the predecessor to BAE's XM1155-SC concept, the extended range hypervelocity projectile (HVP-ER), successfully destroyed a target at a range of more than 110 kilometers.

BAE Systems is currently under contract with the U.S. Army to develop and test the projectile as part of the Army’s XM1155 Extended Range Artillery Projectile program.

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