500nm, LRASM is based off the JASSM-ER with a turbofan instead of turbojet engine as on JASSM and has various other mods for vastly extended range. JASSM actually uses the same turbojet as Harpoon, just has better wings and more fuel which already got you from 80nm to 200nm. The US did not field a long range SSM earlier because it considered the problem of acceptable targeting almost intractable with TASM, and all OTH targeting programs for TASM were terminated at the end of the cold war. Supersonic missiles have slightly less of a targeting problem, but remain vulnerable as ever to eating cruise ships and fishing boats instead of the target, and still can miss completely.Borgholio wrote:Good point about the Harpoon's ability to maneuver, I forgot about that. There's a new advanced long-range anti-ship missile due to roll out later this year with a 200nm range, but I wonder why we didn't do it sooner? Or was the Harpoon's range fine for what we needed up until now?
In reality the USN didn't even give a damn about SSM version of Harpoon post cold war, and ceased fitting it on some warships. Out to the horizon the high supersonic SM-2 missile is vastly superior, and when you consider the realtive height of the trackers on the ship vs the tallest mast on the enemy ship, that can be ~30nm on its own. For OTH attacks functionally a plane was needed as a scout, and thus the plane could carry the missiles in the first place. SLAM-ER gave the USN a missile capable of hitting a ship at 150nm stand off from the carrier plane, which could make a 350-400nm radius unrefueled strike prior to launching. HARM also provided a 80nm range option for crippling enemy warship radars, and arrived with supersonic speed. This was a serious reason why the US didnt really care about supersonic anti ship missiles. HARM was high supersonic and could cripple the enemy radar. If the enemy had no radar then he'd be in no real position to stop other weapons from sinking him, even if the HARM damage was limited to the upper works.
LRASM solves the OHT targeting problem by using the IIR imaging seeker from JASSM in addition to a radar to precisely identify specific types of enemy ship. So it can use some of its long range to search the target zone (TASM did this too) but unlike TASM it will not simply attack the first ship it finds once it reaches the magic 'seeker on' point of flight. This is technology which was simply not plausible before the 21st century. The Soviets designed some missiles such that they could pick out an aircraft carrier from a smaller warship, but NATO had deception jammers which could negate this limited feature. Also it had no real ability in the end to tell a merchant from a carrier, it was just a size bias thing.
LRASM also has an ESM sensor so it can actively avoid enemy warships and fighters prior to reaching the target area. This does reduce the effective range to something less then 500nm, but said range should still be considerable, and it makes it plausible to engage targets identified only by ESM bearing or other uncertain methods which simply would not work with any other existing missile. Also has an inflight datalink.
When Harpoon was new though back in the 1970s its 80nm range was very high, only a few monster Soviet missiles weighing as much as seven tons each outranged it. Styx, Starbright and the ilk had much less range. So in that respect the US was ahead of the curve for a time, Exocet for example had under half the range with rocket power. This was simply because the US could build affordable small turbojets, and nobody else really could at that point.
Soviet OTH targeting was basically intended to be solved by lavish use of money, such as those ocean radar satellites which had very limited service lives, a few months maximum, and large numbers of very high endurance Tu-95-142 patrol planes. Also some missiles types could share radar data in small groups, four in the case of P-700, but this also meant the concentration of the attack was dilluted out of hand as the missiles searched divergent flight paths. All of this was highly vulnerable to interception by carrier launched fighters and shipboard missiles. Which is why aircraft carriers made more damn sense in the first place, something the Soviets only politically accepted in the 1980s. in the end all Soviet thinking and designs were an attempt to get around the fact that political and industrial considerations ruled out building a fleet of aircraft carriers in the early cold war, and they then became obsessive about a flawed development path. This was hardly the only place were the Soviets spent themselves into a black hole of fail until they went bankrupt and imploded of course.
About 250nm yes, though I have seen indications that this was only the 'effective' range and the actual flight distance could be greater when accounting for the terminal search zone which could be rather large.Captain Seafort wrote: Presumably. TASM, IIRC, was up to 250nm.
The reason the range is going to be lower then that of the conventional land attack Tomahawk missile was several fold, (while the nuke one goes way further simply because the nuke is 1/5th the weight of the HE warhead. Basically normally a Tomahawk flies at about 10,000ft for a large portion of its flight, then drops down to treetop height. That was fine if it was flying over open ocean to reach the shoreline, and only then would encounter defenses. For naval missions it was to fly the entire mission low, and in fact gains altitude to conduct its radar search more effectively, before diving again. So that cruise at low level with a full load of fuel greatly increased fuel burn (missile speed also varies in all this). As well the guidance system with radar weighed more and ate more power then the land attack stuff.
This variable cruise height issue also affects other missiles, including just about every supersonic Soviet missile. The P-800 Oynx missile (export Yanhont) for example can only fly IIRC 120km on the deck. At altitude it actually flies faster, but can go 300km with only the final 50km or so conducted at wavetop height. Pretty big difference! The P-500/700 super missiles cruised as high as 10,000m for maximum range, and some missiles were simply incapable of low level flight. Others like Kingfisher had the capability added later.