155 mm BONUS
BONUS 155 mm construction
TypeSensor‐fuzed submunition artillery projectile
Service history
In serviceSince 1990s
Used bySee operators
Production history
DesignerBofors AB
DesignedEarly 1980s–1994
ManufacturerBAE Systems Platforms & Services
Produced2000
Specifications
Mass44.6 kg (98 lb) unfused
Length898 mm (35.4 in) unfused
Diameter155 mm (6.1 in)

Muzzle velocity830 m/s (2,723 ft/s) from 39‐caliber barrels
Maximum firing range
  • 27 km (17 mi) from 39‐caliber barrels
  • 35 km (22 mi) from 52‐caliber barrels
Filling2 x autonomous anti‐armour and anti‐artillery submunitions
ReferencesJanes[1]

155 BONUS ("Bofors Nutating Shell")[2] is a 155 mm artillery cluster round, developed in cooperation between Bofors of Sweden and Nexter of France, designed for a long range, indirect fire top attack role against armoured vehicles. Development on BONUS began in early 1985 as a study project for the Swedish Defence Material Administration, with an initial expectation of development completion by 1989 and production start by 1990.[3] By 1990, the development completion date had slipped to 1992.[4] The BONUS base bleed carrier shell contains two submunitions, which descend over the battlefield on winglets and attack hardened targets with explosively formed penetrator warheads.

Design

Schematic of the 155 BONUS round
Schematic of the 155 BONUS round

155 BONUS is a 155 mm NATO artillery round that consists of a 47-kilogram (104 lb) heavy artillery projectile containing two autonomous, sensor-fused, fire-and-forget submunitions.

After the submunition is released it opens two winglets. While descending, the submunition rotates, scanning the area below with multi-frequency infrared sensors and LiDAR[5] that compares the detected vehicles with a programmable target database. The submunitions each contain a high-penetration EFP warhead for use against even heavy armoured fighting vehicles like main battle tanks.

When fired from a 52-caliber barrel, a BONUS shell can travel up to 35 km (22 mi).[6][7]

Operation

Phase Picture Description
1 An artillery piece fires a BONUS round After setting range and target profile(s), the BONUS round is fired from a standard rifled 155mm artillery tube.
2 The round flies through the air The round flies on a parabolic arc, with a range of up to 35 kilometres (21.7 mi)
3 The ejector pulls the submunitions clear of the shell A timer fuse ignites a small ejector rocket in the nose, which drags the two submunitions out of the shell casing over the target area.
4 The submunitions fall free Once clear of the shell, the submunitions fall toward the target. The shell and the nose assembly fall away.
5 The submunitions on winglets The submunitions deploy winglets, and independently corkscrew down over the subject area with 900 rpm, scanning for targets.
6 A submunition explodes above a tank Once a submunition detects a target vehicle beneath it, it detonates its explosive payload, creating an explosively formed projectile which strikes the target vehicle's weak top armour. The high-velocity impactor penetrates the hull and kills or wounds the crew.

Competing systems

BONUS is very similar to the German SMArt 155 system; SMArt 155 descends on a parachute rather than a system of winglets, and uses a millimeter radar as altimeter instead of LIDAR.

The United States developed the similar M898 SADARM system (which also descended on a ballute to attack the top surfaces of armoured vehicles), but this was discontinued in favour of the GPS guided M982 Excalibur round. US artillery largely deploys the M712 Copperhead laser-guided round for the anti-tank role.

Operators

Operational history

It has been sent to Ukraine in aid packages by France and potentially Sweden and Norway.

Although rumours mentioned a kill on a Russian Pantsir-S1 system on July 5, 2022, it turned out that it was the SMArt 155 that hit it.[12]

In January 2023 photos of a 155 mm BONUS submunition was found in Ukraine. This is the first confirmed proof of their use in Ukraine.[13]

See also

References

  1. Janes (2 February 2022), "155 mm BONUS sensor‐fuzed munition", Janes Land Warfare Weapons: Ammunition, Coulsdon, Surrey: Jane's Group UK Limited., retrieved 6 August 2023
  2. Frost, Roger; Hewish, Mark (1986). "Defence 86 Show Report". International Defense Review. 19 (4): 495 via Internet Archive.
  3. Frost, Roger; Hewish, Mark (1986). "Defence 86 Show Report". International Defence Review. 19 (4): 495 via Internet Archive.
  4. "Sensor-fuzed anti-tank shell". International Defense Review. 25 (5): 580. 1990 via Internet Archive.
  5. "155mm BONUS Anti-Armor, Top Attack Artillery" (PDF). Baesystems.com. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  6. Roque, Ashley (19 October 2020). "BAE Systems proposes Archer for US Army's towed howitzer replacement competition". Jane's Information Group. Archived from the original on 27 March 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
  7. US Army mobile howitzer shoot-off participants emerge. Defense News. 17 December 2020.
  8. 1 2 "Fritt Militärt Forum Nr 3 2000". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  9. "Finnish defence forces" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 April 2015. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  10. Army Concerned Over Ban on Cluster Munitions, Land Mines - Military.com, 2 May 2017
  11. "Bofors 155mm BONUS Munition". Baesystems.com.
  12. "SMArt 155 in Action: Use of High-Precision Munitions to Eliminate russians is Geting Large-Scale (Video) | Defense Express". en.defence-ua.com. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  13. Boyko Nikolov (4 January 2023). "Proven: Ukraine uses 155mm BONUS anti-tank shells with spaceship tech". bulgarianmilitary.com. Retrieved 5 October 2022.

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