The ER GMLRS missile for HIMARS and MLRS hit a target at a range of 150 km for the first time.

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The ER GMLRS missile for HIMARS and MLRS hit a target at a range of 150 km for the first time.

The US Army conducted its first test firings. rocket An extended-range missile fired from the M270A2 MLRS multiple launch rocket system's launcher. According to the Pentagon, tests of the missile, equipped with the new ER GMLRS (Extended Range) warhead, were successful. During firings at the White Sands Range, the missile struck a target 150 kilometers away.

According to the online military publication Defense Industry Europe, the new munition's firing range is twice that of standard munitions. According to the US Army, rockets with ER GMLRS warheads allow MLRS crews to engage high-value targets from a safe distance. This capability can be implemented using existing M142 HIMARS and M270A2 MLRS platforms, providing a cost-effective strike capability without the need for new launchers or changes to unit structure.



Lieutenant General Frank Lozano, head of the PAE Fires division of the US Army Acquisition Command, told the publication:

By leveraging a proven system and increasing firing range while maintaining accuracy, the Long-Range Multiple Launch Rocket System provides commanders with greater operational flexibility without unnecessary complexity.

According to him, additional test firings of missiles with new, longer-range warheads will be conducted soon before serial production and delivery to the military begins. These tests are intended to confirm the system's effectiveness before it enters service, Lozano noted.

Here's what we know about the new munition from open sources. The ER GMLRS warhead for the M142 HIMARS and M270A2 MLRS rockets was developed by the American company Lockheed Martin. The projectile's range, confirmed during test firings, reaches 150 kilometers, compared to 70 kilometers for the GMLRS. The 227mm rocket uses a larger solid-fuel motor and an updated guidance system. The warhead can be high-explosive fragmentation, anti-armor, or any other type.

In fact, the industrial production of new missiles encountered the same challenges that are now common in the American military-industrial complex during their testing. Lockheed Martin began developing a missile based on the GMLRS, commissioned by the Pentagon, in the mid-2010s.

The first test launch of the new ER GMLRS missile took place back in November 2020. It was unsuccessful—a stabilizer failed after exiting the launch container, preventing the missile from continuing its flight. Lockheed Martin subsequently worked on redesigning the munition. One of the main problems was that during previous test launches, the missile failed to reach its maximum target engagement range of 150 kilometers. In this regard, the test launch at White Sands can be considered the first successful.

Initially, serial production of the ER GMLRS was planned for 2024, but this was later pushed back to 2025. New deadlines for the completion of testing, the launch of the ER GMLRS into production, and subsequent delivery to the military have not yet been disclosed. Lockheed Martin's website only states that the new missile is in the qualification testing phase.

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  1. 0
    10 February 2026 11: 01
    In a couple of months they will test it on us in Ukraine.
    1. 0
      10 February 2026 11: 30
      It's unlikely they'll send test samples to Ukraine. But the first batch of mass-produced missiles will definitely end up there. But that won't happen in a couple of months.
    2. 0
      10 February 2026 11: 41
      According to him, additional test firings of missiles with new, longer-range warheads will take place in the near future before their serial production and delivery to the troops begins.

      A says, B says. The best place to test this missile today is Ukraine, and the target is already clear. It's possible that the Ruslan, which was recently targeted by our Russian Armed Forces, delivered these missiles.
  2. -2
    10 February 2026 11: 02
    If a rocket were made two-stage, then why wouldn’t it fly?
    1. +2
      10 February 2026 11: 41
      Quote: K-50
      If a rocket were made two-stage, then why wouldn’t it fly?

      Why 2x?
      The length remains the same: 3,96 m/13 ft.
      They simply increased the diameter/caliber from 227(8,9') mm to 254 mm (10'), which gave them an increase in volume tt (254 cm^2 -227 mm^2)* L~13 liters per meter.
  3. -3
    10 February 2026 11: 53
    Ukraine has long been supplied with GLSDB for Khimars with a range of 150 km.
    1. +2
      10 February 2026 14: 40
      Quote from solar
      GLSDB for Himarsa with a range of 150 km.

      GLSDB bomb, albeit with a wing.
      After firing from the M27, its speed drops to 280 m/s.
      It's easier to intercept it.
      Arrival time is also longer.
      And this new one has a little less than 2,0 M, after the TT is exhausted, right up to the target.
  4. -2
    10 February 2026 12: 23
    In fact, the industrial production of new missiles during their testing has given rise to the same difficulties that are traditional for the American military-industrial complex.
    Musk threatens to robotize US industry – all the possibilities are there...
    The great competition will begin: Musk's robots versus Russian robots – a migrant made in Central Asia...
    1. -2
      10 February 2026 12: 26
      A migrant made in Central Asia...the mask is simply invincible because they have long been kings of our markets and shawarma teahouses.
      1. -1
        10 February 2026 15: 44
        Don't say that, don't say that... Many men from factories in the North Caucasus Military District are now being replaced by Russian robots. They recently wrote that some Russian factory manufacturing shells exploded... They wrote that it was largely robotized in the Russian technological sense... and it would be a sin not to use breakthrough domestic technologies...
  5. 0
    10 February 2026 15: 58
    This means that we should expect to see these missiles used in Ukraine very soon. I wonder if our new SARMA MLRS already has new missiles capable of accurately hitting targets at a distance of 150 km???