Bombkapsel m/90, Mj|lner 1993 Feb 12 Urban Fredriksson urf@icl.se The Swedish Air Force has now started to purchase a gliding bomblet dispenser weapon system (DWS 39) for Gripen and Viggen. Its official designation is Bombkapsel m/90, but is also known as Mjo"lner. As it is designed by MBB, some details are similar to their MW1. The Swedish Air Force wanted a weapon that could be released at high speed and very low altitude _very_ close to the target, as well as having a stand off range in cases where target position is known. Dispensers such as MW1 and JP 233 _always_ require you to overfly the target. Foreign stand off dispensers under development are all to be powered, and none is made to be released at very close ranges. General configuration: The nose is much more pointed, 22% of total __ _ length. Submunitions section 68%, electonics ________/__|__/_| \|_/ section 6%, tailcone 22%. The wing is precisely / | | | in line with top of box. \________________| |_| \__| \_| /| \ 24 sideways firing launch .o.o.o.o.o.o ________....___-- Length 340 cm tubes, in this pattern: o.o.o.o.o.o. <_______________ | Span 90 cm Diameter 12 cm, each(?) with 3 -- Width 60 cm submunitions. Weight 600 kg Height 30 cm (Almost all data my estimation only!) Two types of submunitions are carried, one the MJ1, a 4.0 kg air bursting warhead against soft targets; the other, MJ2 of 18 kg a proximity fuzed anti-armour warhead, also useful against semihard targets. Among the important ones mentioned are troops, bridge building equipment, (armoured) helicopters, aircraft and vehicles including APC's. Primarily it will be used against air delivered and other key units during an invasion. Air defence will have difficulties, as a large number of small targets will arrive from different directions in a very short time space. Immediately after ejection, submunitions are retarded by small chutes making impact point practically independent of speed and release altitude thus making computation easier for the dispenser. The dispenser can be launched from very low altitude (<50 m ?) when the target "is almost under the aircraft's nose".* When launched at 50 m altitude and Mach 0.9, it it can travel more than 10 km in the direction the aircraft is flying, or 5 km to the side of the aircraft's path. * I don't see any reason why you couldn't launch when you've already overflown the target, as the dispenser could make a turn and come back. (Source: Several issues of the Sw. AF magazine FlygvapenNytt and the Feb 1993 Air International)