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RIM-174 ERAM

Raytheon · Surface-to-Air · USA · Digital Age (2010–present)

RIM-174 ERAM — Surface-to-Air
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The RIM-174 Standard Extended Range Active Missile (ERAM), or Standard Missile 6 (SM-6), is a missile in current production for the United States Navy (USN) by RTX. It was designed for extended-range anti-air warfare (ER-AAW) purposes, providing capability against fixed and rotary-wing aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, anti-ship cruise missiles in flight, both over sea and land, and terminal ballistic missile defense. It can also be used as a high-speed anti-ship missile. The missile uses the airframe of the earlier SM-2ER Block IV (RIM-156A) missile, adding the active radar homing seeker from the AIM-120C AMRAAM in place of the semi‑active seeker of the previous design. This improves the capability of the Standard missile against highly agile targets and targets beyond the effective range of the launching vessels' target illumination radars. Initial operating capability was planned for 2013 and was achieved on 27 November 2013.

Specifications

Category
Missiles
Sub-Category
SAM
Domain
Defence
Era
Digital Age (2010–present)
Country
USA
Manufacturer
Raytheon
Operator
USA/Australia/Japan/export
Primary Role
Surface-to-Air
Status
In Service
Service Entry
2013
Produced
500
Unit Cost (2026$)
$8.0M
Propulsion
Rocket
Engine
Mk 72 booster + Mk 111 dual-thrust solid rocket
Thrust / Power
None (rocket)
Launch
Sea-launched
Length (ft)
21.5
Wingspan (ft)
3.5
Empty Weight (lb)
1500
MTOW (lb)
3300
Payload (lb)
140
Endurance (hr)
0.09
Service Ceiling (ft)
110000
Range (mi)
250
Max Speed (mph)
2684
Max Speed (Mach)
3.5
Armament
Blast-fragmentation