The Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser system is a tail kit for use with the TMD (Tactical Munitions Dispenser) family of cluster bombs to convert them to precision-guided weapons.
The CBU-87 Combined Effects Munition is a cluster bomb used by the United States Air Force. CBU stands for Cluster Bomb Unit.
It was developed by Aerojet General/Honeywell. In 1986, the bomb was introduced to replace the earlier cluster bombs used in the Vietnam War. The list price is set at $14,000 per bomb.
When dropped from an aircraft, a cluster bomb unit separates into several smaller bombs and makes many little explosions covering a larger area than a typical bomb would cover. The bomb is not necessarily used for precision, but for destroying multiple targets at once or making sure something gets hit along with the outer perimeter of the target getting hit as well.
The bomb is designed to be dropped by plane at any altitude and any air speed. It is a free-falling bomb and relies on the aircraft to aim it before it drops. Once it is dropped, it needs no further instruction, as opposed to guided munitions or smart bombs. The bomb can be dropped by a variety of modern-day aircraft. It is 92 inches long, 15.6 inches in diameter, and weighs 950 pounds. Inside the cluster bomb unit, there are mini-bombs (or bomblets) that deploy before it hits the ground. Each cluster bomb unit contains 202 armor-piercing shaped charge bomblets.
Manufacturers have claimed that the failure rate for each bomb is about 5%. This would mean that of the 202 bomblets dropped, about 10 will not explode on impact. In reality however, the failure rates of the CBU-87 have been much higher.
The bomblets are stored in an SUU-65B canister. While descending in the air, the bomb starts spinning. After it drops to a certain altitude, the bomb breaks open and drops the mini-bombs. When the mini-bombs hit the ground, they will cover a large area and have separate explosions within that area. The CBU-87 can be adjusted so it can cover a smaller or wider area of land. Depending on the rate of spin and the altitude at which the main bomb opens, it can cover an area between 70 x 70feet and 400 x 800 feet. Decreasing these adjustments causes a lower surface area to be hit. Increasing them allows a wider surface area to be hit. There are 6 speeds that can adjust the bomb's rate of spin.
The CBU-87 is fused with an FZU-39/B proximity sensor. The sensor has 12 time selections which tell when the bomb is to be dispensed and discharge the bomblets. When the bomb opens up while falling, it separates into three pieces, not including the bomblets, and the BLU-97/B bomblets fall out.
When the CBU-87 is used in conjunction with the Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser guidance tail kit, it is designated as CBU-103
iran & alot of MOLLAH needs alot of these.
abcdefghijklmn7039 3 months ago
go north korea~!
baekgno 9 months ago
1 terrorist disliked this video some how he survived
loflaherty21 10 months ago
How come you can see explosions in mid air?And to answer your question phixx4 no it is not a cbu-105 it is definetley a cbu-103.
fin8103 11 months ago
Weird, why says the title CBU-103 when there clearly were BLU-108 loaded? seems more like a CBU-105
PhiXX4 11 months ago
I li
super10crazy10bros1 1 year ago
@MondoMedia7 You Sir are funny...
urosh911 1 year ago
@urosh911 which people like you would no doubt bring upon me if you could. how many neighborhood animals have you practiced on in hope to catch me and live out your SAW movie fantasies??
MondoMedia7 1 year ago
@MondoMedia7 Classic answer.....i pitty you. I whish you and your loved ones a painful death...
urosh911 1 year ago
@urosh911 yeah because NO other MILITARY prepares for war huh? Do you hear yourself? Please do not breed for the sake of what is left of a dying human gene pool.
MondoMedia7 1 year ago