Mark 8x series conventional bomb: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 17:13, 2 March 2011

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Mark 8x series of gravity bombs are a standard U.S. series, used by all U.S. military services[1], and many other nations. The basic munition is a low-drag gravity bomb (LDGB), with the minimal controls of substituting fins that maximize or minimize speed, and fuzes that mount either in the nose (e.g., for airburst or impact detonation) or tail (i.e., slight delay). One of the tail delay variants can deploy a braking parachute, so the aircraft can drop at very low altitude, but be far enough from fragments when the bomb hits.

These bombs have casings that are aerodynamically designed for minimum drag, so, when they are carried on the external wing mounting points of aircraft, they create the least possible wind resistance.

The "X" indicates the approximate total weight of the bomb. Roughly half of this amount is actual explosive content; the rest goes principally for the casing, fins, and fuzes. While the original filling was TNT, there is a program of replacement with PBXN-109 insensitive high explosives to improve safety in crashes or emergency jettisons. Another program uses the PBX-9502 IHE as a booster in a demonstration Mark 82 with a main charge of the IHE AFX-645. [2]

Specialized fillers may be used, such as dense inert metal explosive that concentrates the blast, minimizing damage to anything near the actual target. There has been some use of concrete fillings in the Mark 8x case with precision guidance, for even more focused damage.

There are ballistically similar bombs, such as the BLU-109, which have much stronger cases, accepting much less explosive in order to be able to penetrate more deeply. Again, explosive fillers such as Tritonal are being replaced with PBXN-109 or other less sensitive explosives.

While the basic Mk. 8x is guided only by the accuracy of the releasing aircraft, all can be equipped with the Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) kit, which replaces the fins with movable fins that can steer the bomb. Steering commands come from a guidance assembly attached to the nose, which can use inertial guidance, inertial+GPS, or, recently, home on a laser designator. Other, more intelligent, guidance and fuze designs are in development.

USAF designation Total weight JDAM designation PAVEWAY laser guidance designation Comments
Mark 81 bomb 250 lb. GBU-29
Mark 82 bomb 500 lb. GBU-38 GBU-12 EBGU-12 with PAVEWAY, inertial and GPS; also called GBU-49
Mark 83 bomb 1000 lb. GBU-32 GBU-16
Mark 84 bomb 2000 lb. GBU-31 GBU-24 PAVEWAY III

References

  1. that have aircraft that drop bombs
  2. John D. Corley, Gary H. Parsons, Alan C. Stewart, Fuzed Insensitive General Purpose Bomb Containing AFX-645