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Eggburt, US-Subs, HAZORD - thank you very much for your input and for sharing your expert knowledge with us. This just goes to show why BOCN is the place / forum to be for anybody wanting to learn about ordnance and anything related to ordnance.
The Hellfire Romeo is just another name for the AGM-114R that I'd already mentioned. I guess people just prefer to use names instead of designations for it? See below.
If you need to know about the Hellfire, let me know as I wrote one of the most extensive (about 23,000 words) open-source (non-classified) reference entries on it for the Janes book 'Janes Weapons: Air-Launched' (former known for decades as 'Jane's Air-Launched Weapons') some time ago.
The earliest reference of the K-Charge I have is generally from the 18th International Symposium on Ballistics, that was help in Texas in 1999. The patent was filed the next year by people from General Dynamics, and a originally from Swiss companies. They could have still been employed by these Swiss companies, as it would seem to have been a co-development with General Dynamics.
I'm not surprised about the Swiss missiles using it too, as they seem to have co-developed it and my first exposure to it being at the 2005 RUAG weapons technology demonstration. They do list a lot of other weapons they developed warhead for, these in documents I still have.
I'm guessing it's called the K-Charge due to its sectioned profile. They never mentioned this name at the RUAG weapons technology demonstration.
By the way, what's the unfuzed HEDP projectile with the spin-compensated (fluted) spit-back (point-initiate based detonate) modified liner? It's marked in the annotated version version of your image below.
John is correct, it is the US 30mm. As far as I know the US used the "fluted" shaped charge design in only two munitions, the 30mm and the 152mm. I don't have the 152mm cone yet, and keep having to convince myself not to chop one of my rounds open just for the cone......
I can't send it to you, it's copyright of Janes, so I don't own it. You'd have to buy an older copy of 'Jane's Weapons: Air-Launched'. I rewrote the entry in July-August 2014, and updated it a few times until I left in 2019. The version I wrote should be in the 2015-2016 or 2016-2017 editions, maybe 2017-2018. After this they rehashed all the structure of entries, ditching a lot of the history and other stuff they (i.e. the head honcho and others of his viewpoint) felt was superfluous to requirements.
John is correct, it is the US 30mm. As far as I know the US used the "fluted" shaped charge design in only two munitions, the 30mm and the 152mm. I don't have the 152mm cone yet, and keep having to convince myself not to chop one of my rounds open just for the cone......
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