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New JSOW closer to operational capability

TUCSON, Aug. 11 (UPI) -- The U.S. Navy completed the first free-flight test of Raytheon's Joint Standoff Weapon C-1, moving it closer to initial operational capability.

The JSOW C-1 is the only net-enabled standoff weapon with moving maritime target capability.

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JSOW employs an integrated Global Positioning System-inertial navigation system and terminal imaging infrared seeker, guiding the weapon to the target. The JSOW C-1 adds moving maritime target capability and the two-way strike common weapon datalink to the combat-proven weapon.

"When JSOW C-1 reaches initial operational capability, scheduled for 2013, U.S. and international warfighters will have a powerful new weapon," said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Samuel Hanaki, JSOW deputy program manager.

"This weapon will give warfighters the needed capability to precisely engage moving ships at sea from standoff ranges."

The first free flight of the JSOW C-1 demonstrated the weapon's ability to operate on the Link-16 network and autonomously prosecute a mobile maritime target using new seeker algorithms.

During the test the JSOW C-1 was released from an F/A-18F Super Hornet and guided to a ship target 20 nautical miles from the launch point. The JSOW C-1 provided weapon in-flight track and bomb hit indication status messages and used in-flight target updates based on designation of the target ship by the Raytheon Advanced Targeting Forward Looking Infrared pod.

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The test concluded successfully when the weapon hit the target at the pre-determined aim point.

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