Re:
To address some of the HIMARS/GMLRS vs M777/Excalibur issues highlighted.
- When one considers actual cost, Australia got 250 rounds for US$58m (US$232,000 each incl support, training etc) which I suspect the unit cost then was ~US$150k.
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36-b/2008/Australia_08-51.pdf
I think overall full production cost comparison using public sourced info may be 2-3 times higher for the GMLRS. However, considering overall weapons coverage and round effectiveness, I think a good case can be made to state that the GMLRS is a cheaper weapon compared to the excalibur.
- I think what is equally important is the cost-effectiveness of force structure which is what is argued in the rusi.org article. The cost savings comes from lower manpower cost of a himars bn. Don't forget I don't think one can contend that the CEP vs blast effect ratio of a 20 lb warhead vs 200 lb warhead would be better. And as argued that if precision fires is going to be used at range, then the Himars has an accuracy advantage as range increases plus it can hit a target beyond what a 155mm can do. That means one needs less weapons for a bigger coverage area (rather than even SPH 155mm can cover).
Another example (which includes other arguments for the Himars) is as follows:
HIMARS ENGLISHLANGUAGE Ppt Presentation
- As to firing GMLRS at 10km, that's not what its designed for. There are other shorter ranged MLRS munitions. But the contention that it can't do high angle shots is what I am (as well as the article is) highlighting. At 50km, the Himars can hit at 67 deg. The Himars is not exactly a fixed elevation weapon.
Am not stating that it can hit all targets behind mountains but that's not to say it can't hit crest mountains. I think when one looks at the flight profile of a MLRS rocket, I don't think 6,000 ft is too high for a MLRS rocket to crest.
Mathematically, at 70km range and 45 deg elevation, assuming a standard flight profile where the max altitude is achieved at 50% of target range, that's mathematically several kms altitude. As to whether the flight profile for himars is a standard one, I don't think so but the altitude figure remains.
- With respect to Australia, having an SPH capability is already a capability jump compared to towed artillery. That's already way behind in introduction compared to other developed country's armies. When one looks at the intent of Land 17, I can understand why Himars is not considered. Like the USMC, the Himars is not intended as a complete towed arty replacement. The M777 is equally used by the USMC and the Himars does not change that. Its merely doctrine.
The issue has been discussed here so no point repeating.
http://www.defencetalk.com/forums/army-security-forces/mlrs-australia-736/