Low Cost Autonomous Attack System
The Low Cost Autonomous Attack System (LOCAAS) was a loitering attack munition developed for the United States Air Force (USAF). In 1998 the USAF and U.S. Army Lockheed Martin began to examine the feasibility of a small, affordable cruise missile weapon for use against armoured and unarmoured vehicles, materiel and personnel, and if so develop a demonstration program. The program cost approximately $150,000,000; the cost per unit was calculated to be $30,000 based on a production of 12,000 units before cancellation. After being launched from a weapon platform, it is guided by GPS/INS to the target general area, where it can loiter. A laser radar (LIDAR or LADAR) illuminates the targets, determines their range, and matches their 3-D geometry with pre-loaded signatures. The LOCAAS system then selects the highest priority target and selects the warhead's mode for the best effect. The LOCAAS program was cancelled.
Summary from Wikipedia licensed under CC BY-SA.
- Manufacturer
- Lockheed Martin
- Country of origin
- United States
Specifications
- Cruise speed
- 200 kt
- Max speed
- 200 kt
- Range
- 100 nm
- Service ceiling
- 750 ft
- Max takeoff weight
- 100 lb
- Empty weight
- 100 lb
- Powerplant
- TDI-J45G turbojet
- Engines
- 1
- Length
- 3 ft
- Wingspan
- 3.9 ft
Specifications are approximate and may vary by variant. Compiled from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA).
Reference and training only. Specifications vary by variant — consult the manufacturer and the official documents.