MBDA said a series of successful firings of the Brimstone 2 development program in early October demonstrated “significant progress” in proving the performance of the latest guidance system upgrades being added to Brimstone via the U.K. Ministry of Defense program.

The trials involved firing five missiles at a series of targets moving at up to and including 70 mph, from a variety of launch conditions including long range and high off-boresight. The tests were against targets transiting representative cluttered road  environments.

Every shot achieved a direct hit on the target, a company statement said.

The Brimstone 2 program builds on the combat proven Dual Mode Brimstone capability, providing significant performance enhancements including: A substantial engagement envelope increase–more than 200 percent increase in off boresight and maximum range capabilities; enhanced laser and dual mode performance against a range of static, fast moving and maneuvering targets at very long ranges against significantly lower reflectivity targets in highly cluttered environments; and increased maneuverability for release from fast moving and maneuvering platforms and to further increase the performance against highly dynamic targets in the end game.

All five missiles were fitted with a telemetry system instead of a warhead to provide the necessary performance evidence for the guidance chain. 

The telemetry system confirmed that each missile performed perfectly throughout, the statement said.  Each missile flew the optimum trajectory, immediately acquiring the laser returns confirming the enhanced long range laser performance, fused and correlated the laser and MMW RF radar target tracks and then used the MMW radar to ensure no escape and a direct hit.

Brimstone demonstrated its precision and low collateral capability against a range of armored, non-armored, static and fast moving and maneuvering targets in support of RAF operations in Libya and continues to do so in Afghanistan. 

These capabilities to now engage targets at longer ranges, higher altitudes, and at high off-boresight angles, even with high platform bank angles, ensures optimum flexibility and survivability for the platform, while minimising the process and time to engage time sensitive targets, the statement said. The aircrew can stand off at vastly longer ranges, engage targets from a Close Air Support (CAS) wheel without the need to revert to straight and level flight, and all the time have the confidence that the missile has the precision to hit the target irrespective of target speed and maneuver especially in real world cluttered environments.

MBDA is jointly held by BAE Systems with 37.5 percent, EADS with 37.5 percent and Finmeccanica, 25 percent.