The Cutting Edge: A2A Missile Technology - Page 1/1
Created on 2005-01-30
Title: The Cutting Edge: A2A Missile Technology By: Len 'Viking1' Hjalmarson Date: Unknown 1463 Flashback:Orig. Multipage Version Hard Copy:Printer Friendly
Western analysts studying Russian air-to-air missiles used
to think inferior electronics made them heavier without
being more effective. This has been discovered to have been
false.
The Vympel R-27 medium-range missile (code name AA-10
Alamo), in service since 1983, is more than equivalent to
the U.S. AIM-7 Sparrow. Its replacement, the Vympel R-77,
is acknowledged to have longer range and greater agility
than the Air Force's most modern weapon, the radar-guided
advanced medium-range air-to-air missile (AMRAMM).
The most alarming Russian missile is the Vympel R-73E,
known by its NATO code name AA-11 Archer. It is the "King
Kong of the visual-range fight." Its front and rear control
fins are augmented with a thrust-vectoring system that
deflects hot gases from the rocket motor, greatly enhancing
turning performance.
A Vympel R-73E can be launched from a fighter that's
turning hard, at a target far off to one side. The instant
it comes off the launch rail, the missile veers sharply
toward its prey. Flight time is short, leaving the target
little time for evasion.
Able to scan 90 degrees off center in any direction, the
R-73E's infrared seeker lets a fighter pilot lock onto any
target in the hemisphere of space in front of his aircraft.
The seeker can even be slaved to the pilots helmet-mounted
sight, so that all the shooter has to do is look at the
enemy and press a button.
Vympel is working on a new missile, based on the R-73E,
which can be fired backward. Designers have been thinking
about rear-defense missiles for years.
Mounting a missile backward is allows its seeker to lock-on
even before the pilot pushes the launch button. But because
the aircraft is moving forward, the missile is actually
flying tail-first and backward as it comes off the rail. It
must then accelerate through zero airspeed before its
aerodynamics flight-control fins can start to work.
Vectored thrust--in which Vympel has a 15-year lead--is the
only way to control such a missile.
Russian IR missiles compared:
Warhead Range
R-23T (Apex) 217kg IR 35km
R-27T (Alamo-B) 254kg IR 70km
R-27TE(AlamoC) 350kg IR 120km (!)
R-60 (Aphid) 45kg IR 10km
R-73 (Archer) 110kg IR 40km
R-27
“...It can destroy targets at any aspect angle, both
in daylight and at night, in good or bad weather. Its
guidance system is resistant to natural interference and
ECM, and capable of tracking targets against ground and
water clutter. The R-27 can engage targets ranging in
altitude from 25m to 20km with elevation up to 10km. The
targets can fly at speeds up to 2500km/h and with g-load up
to 8 Gs." The TE model apparently has an added booster to
extend its range.
Python 4: Fourth Generation A/A missile made by Rafael
Main Features:
In operational use in the Israeli Air Force
Revolutionary no escape volume
Unique aerodynamic configuration for superior agility
State-of-the-art, high performance seeker
Advanced IRCM & background rejection capabilities
Highly effective fragmentation warhead
News Article from the Paris Air Show, June, 1997
In 1996,
Israel finally unveiled the latest addition its air-to-air
combat armory, the Rafael Python-4 Although speculation
about the existence of the weapon had been widespread,
official confirmation of its existence and capabilities
caused a stir all over the world.
Rafael stresses that the new short-range missile is not
simply an extension to its range of Shafrir and Python
products, but a step advance to a true fourth-generation
infra-red-guided look-and-shoot missile.
Its primary advance it to expand the "no-escape" zone
within which an enemy aircraft has no hope of evading the
missile. with an increased velocity and high offboresight
capability, the Python-4 enlarges the no-escape volume
dramatically to almost any frontal target. In short, any
aircraft in the pilot’s forward field of vision
within range will be destroyed regardless of its flightpath
or of any evasive maneuver it makes up to 9G.
To achieve this, the Python-4 not only needs the power and
aerodynamics to make fast turns, but also requires
special-pursuit trajectory algorithms. For example, the
missile may cut across the path of an evading aircraft to
pursue it through a high-g turn. Previous missiles would
simply have lost the target. Such trajectories - and from a
wide range of angles.
Rafael adds that the Python-4 is not a development project
but a mature weapon system. As the Israeli defense ministry
revealed in 1996, and operational with the Israeli air
force.
First revealed early in 1993, this heavy missile marks the
debut in the AM field of the little-known Novator
experimental bureau. The specification for this weapon was
issued in mid 1991, probably as armament for the Su-27 and
-35. If it flies, this impressive missile will be the
world's largest and heaviest air to air missile. Launched
by a solid-propellant tandem booster, the KS-172 will have
a maximum range of 400 km (249 miles), attacking its
targets with an adaptive high explosive fragmenting
warhead. The initial flight phase will be under the command
of an inertial guidence system, receiving updates on target
position via a command link. In the final stages of flight,
it will switch to an active radar homing head.
In addition, the supersonic, passive radar homing, long
range Kh-31P can be used as an air-to-air anti-radar
missile, especially against vulnerable allied aircraft like
the E-3 Sentry AWACS platform or the E-8-J-STARS. Russian
tactical doctrine emphasizes the importance of such
aircraft as targets, and the best and most experienced
pilots are trained in co-ordinated attacks against such
aircraft and their fighter protection...from "Allies and
Adversaries" by World Air Power.
FMRAAM "Meteor" for the EF2000
from Janes Defence Weekly
Europe's largest missile motor manufacturer, Celerg of
France, is increasing efforts to persuade the UK Ministry
of Defence and industry that its propulsion proposal for
the Royal Air Force's Future Medium Range Air-to-Air
Missile (FMRAAM) is the optimum solution in this hotly
contested Pds900 million competition writes Nick Cook.
While the UK general election has almost certainly
contributed to a substantial postponement in the award of
FMRAAM, the delay has, at least, allowed the two teams -
one led by Matra British Aerospace Dynamics, the other by
Hughes UK - to tighten up their submissions.
As Missiles & Rockets was prepared for press, it was
widely anticipated that FMRAAM - the primary interception
weapon for RAF EF 2000s - would move into a risk reduction
(RR) phase, with token RR contract awards from the MoD to
both teams. Until late last year, the competitors had been
hoping that the UK Government would sign a full scale
development and production contract prior to the election,
which is set for 1 May.
The delay has allowed Celerg to step up efforts to convince
Matra BAe that its liquid fuel ramjet motor is the best
technical approach to the propulsion needs of the Meteor
missile.
Meteor, which is also backed by LFK (DASA) of Germany,
Alenia of Italy, Saab of Sweden and GEC-Marconi of the UK,
faces the Hughes-led FMRAAM, essentially a ramjet-powered
variant of the US company's Advanced Medium Range
Air-to-Air Missile. Effective range is estimated at 70 km.
The Hughes FMRAAM's Rascal liquid fuel ramjet is proposed
by Aerospatiale.
The company entered dialogue with Matra BAe Dynamics at the
beginning of last year. Initial discussions centered on
Celerg's wide experience in solid, liquid and ducted rocket
air-breathing missile propulsion technology. The French
company then submitted bids based on both a liquid fuel
design and another on a solid fuel `unchoked' ducted ramjet
(UDR) system in May 1996.
Competition for selection on Meteor came from Bayern
Chemie, which is owned by Thomson-CSF and DASA. The Bayern
Chemie motor is understood to be a variable flow ducted
rocket (VFDR) ramjet based on boron fuel technology.
At the end of last year, Celerg shelved its UDR motor
proposal to Matra BAe and concentrated on the liquid fuel
design instead. A liquid fuel ramjet has a negligible
visible exhaust plume and is stealthier in the infrared
spectrum.
Matra BAe Dynamics has not yet chosen its missile motor for
FMRAAM, but is expected to do so in the coming months.