- GBU-12 Paveway II
The GBU-12 PAVEWAY II laser-guided
bomb is an American aerial bomb, based on the Mk 82 500-poundgeneral-purpose bomb , but with the addition of a nose-mounted laser seeker and fins for guidance. A member of the PAVEWAY series of weapons, PAVEWAY II entered into service c. 1976. It is currently in service with U.S. Air Force,US Navy ,US Marine Corps ,Colombian Air Force , and variousNATO air force s.GBU-12 bombs (along with the balance of the PAVEWAY series) are produced by
defense contractor sLockheed Martin andRaytheon . Raytheon began production after purchasing the product line fromTexas Instruments . Lockheed Martin was awarded a contract to compete with Raytheon when there was a break in production caused by transferring manufacturing out ofTexas . It should be noted that "Paveway II" specifically refers to the guidance kit; rather than the weapon itself. See alsoGBU-16 Paveway II , where the same guidance unit is fitted to a Mk 83 1000lb bomb.The
US Government has upgraded GBU-12 production versions to includeGPS guidance modes. Lockheed Martin is the sole source forUS Navy purchases of this version. Raytheon sells upgraded GBU-12s to the US Government and other nations. Raytheon production of the GBU-12 is centered inArizona ,Texas , andNew Mexico . Lockheed Martin production is centered inPennsylvania .Laser-guided bomb s are often labeled "smart bomb s" because they are able to follow a non-ballistic trajectory whenlaser designation of the intended target is undertaken. According to Raytheon's face sheet for the Paveway 2, 99 deliveries ofguided munition s will yield acircular error probable (CEP) of only 3.6 feet, vice a CEP of 310 feet for 99unguided bomb s dropped under similar conditions.Paveway II laser guided bombs use what is known as "bang bang" guidance. This means the bomb's
fin s deflect fully, rather than proportionally when it is attempting to guide to the laser spot. For example, if it sees the laser spot and determines that it should make a change it deflects its fins until it has over-corrected and then it deflects back the opposite direction creating a sinusoidal type of flight path. This type of guidance may be less efficient at times.References
External links
* [http://www.raytheon.com/products/paveway/ Raytheon's official Paveway fact page]
* [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/munitions/gbu-12.htm Globalsecurity.org Paveway fact page]
* [http://www.missilesandfirecontrol.com/our_news/factsheets/Product_Card-LGB-NAVY.pdf Lockheed Martin Paveway fact page]
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