Arius said:
What about first shot hit at night? There is video of a Mk47 with thermal engaging 5 targets (wrecks) between 300-700m twice (10 lase/fire engagements) and hitting 100% under a minute – And the CASW is huge leap ahead of the Mk47. Can a 60mm do this? Lets not lie to each other here: All engagements with the 60mm are line of sight and 90% are within 800m. So why advertise ourselves with bedding shot or illumination? Close Area Suppression be damned, its just an lousy acronym. Lets take them out with the very first burst.
We may not be lying to one another, but it would appear that a situated estimate is fine for presenting to those without experience on either type of weapon.
I know you've already said that the idea of comparison to modern 60 mm mortar systems was brushed aside early in the process, but why continue to return to comparing a new AGL to the 50-year old M19 60 mm mortar in the handheld only? (Oh right, because that was our only published doctrinal role.)
If we're going to create an argument to buy a modern AGL technology, let's at least compare it to capabilities of a modern 60 mm system. Where is the realistic examination of modern 60 mm systems with improved laying and sight capabilities? We could even design a sighting system (mounted or separate from the mortar to minimize shock) that uses a laser to determine range and change of elevation to automatically calculate charge and elevation. That should be no more complicated than the CLASS sight trialed for the Carl G.
If we assume the AGL won't be man-packed, we can compare it to a similarly weighted 60 mm system with bipod and baseplate.
With a larger baseplate on a 60, bedding in is less of an issue, too many people are stuck on the image of the 60 on its little spade baseplate, or the 81 bedding-in on high elevation and charge.
I've been doing my best to stay out of this thread, but more and more it sounds like the case for the Thomson-Brandt RT-61 in the mid-80s. If you don't bring in realistic competition, then they desired system wins every time. And, once you dispense with the need to match a doctrine, since you've told us we don't have an effective
doctrine-weapon system approach, it just seems to lack a certain element of balance in the argument. Now, I'm quite sure there's more information that you can't post here, but the appearance of an incomplete estimate is bothersome.