this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2024
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Toss-bombing always looks cool, but has had very little application before this war. With dumb bombs it's inaccurate, and with precision bombs countries like America gain air supremacy and fly high and drop from level flight. The Hammer is well suited for contested environments in this war as it gives much more range when lobbed from low altitude as it's rocket assisted.
Target selection for them will be interesting. They have a higher payload than something like a GMLRS round, so the Hammers are likely to be primarily used against buildings with troops or supplies, as we see in this video.
We used it for nukes for a while -- I remember reading an article from an early Cold War USAF pilot who did it. When you're throwing the equivalent of tens of thousands of tons of explosives, pinpoint accuracy doesn't matter too much in a lot of applications.
kagis
I don't think that this was the article I remember -- this guy is Navy -- but same idea:
https://www.usni.org/magazines/naval-history-magazine/2000/october/bomb-and-i
Note regarding the above with the guy training for nuclear toss-bombing at Moffett Field, which, reading through, makes me chuckle -- normally, US airfields have ICAO codes that sound something like the airfield's name. Moffett does not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moffett_Federal_Airfield
I'd guess that that explains where it got its ICAO code.
Getting back to the Ukrainian plane here, that's gotta be kind of anus-clenching for them, since I assume that by flying up like that, they're also potentially flying, at least momentarily, into the engagement envelope of a SAM.
Yeah, but currently they stay away from the front far enough. In the near future this will probably be done closer to the front with an amraam and harm packing F16 to back them up.
Edit: Cool read that link btw