- Reaction score
- 8,295
- Points
- 1,160
Read the data sheet in your link yes? You want an 84 gunner to also hump a full size laser designator ?
I know it’s cool and new; but I’ve tried explaining this exhaustively. Laser designation requires a bunch of things in order to make sure everything is going to work when employing a PGM. Not the least of which is the laser and weapon being on the read pulse repition frequency. It’s not like in Transformers when the guy point a paq 4 at the bad robot and the bomb flies to his IR point. You need to be set up, stable, coded, and high enough to not create under spill. All of which makes it unusable at a section level. If you want information I suggest the JPUB 3-09.3 V-33.
Cool and new....
Or at the exploitable edge of possibility?
Saab and Raytheon are cooperating on an 84mm guided projectile - SAL guided
The M4 loses weight which allows for an MLD of 0.8 kg to be mounted.
For guiding the missile different solutions can be adopted. It is possible to install on the Carl-Gustaf or the AT4 a lightweight designator, i.e. the MLD Mini by L3 Harris with maximum energy output of 80 mJ weighs only 800 grams, or the GMM can be fired from its launcher on a target designated by a third party. “The GMM can be used in two modes, LOBL (Lock-On-Before-Launch) and LOAL (Lock-On-After-Launch),” Ty Blanchard explains. This provides considerable flexibility, allowing the soldier to launch the round from a protected site, without the need to expose himself to the enemy to illuminate the target after having unveiled his position when shooting, as the guidance can be carried out by somebody else who remained undetected.
Saab and Raytheon detail their Guided Multipurpose Munition - EDR Magazine
By Paolo Valpolini When in October 2014 Saab unveiled its Carl-Gustaf M4, the latest and lightest iteration of its well-known
www.edrmagazine.eu
The CG84 may end up being the most versatile, and key, element in the tool kit.