khanboy007
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- May 22, 2012
- Messages
- 1,180
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
Congratulations PAKISTAN and Thank you CHINA
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
this "lollipop" has hurt many egos since the day it is revealed. Now you want to know about fire and forget process. Hmmm. I suggest you watch the designers interview posted few pages ago but then, ....
radar does not have to guide the missile in either case, particularly when the missile has on-board seeker that activates during flight trajectory. Active guidance is the name of the game here.
Unfortunately, no videos yet as far as i know
Something straight out of 70s and retired from most AFs around the world... oh yes it must have.
I would suggest you to read few good books on radars, antennas and wave propagation before making audacious claims to which rest of the world's audience laugh.
My question still stands "How does the seeker of your missile which has smaller aperture size than the aircraft's radar picks up and tracks the target when the aircraft's radar fails to do so.. for the mentioned range of missile which is upto 240km.".. the different frequency bands between the missile seeker and aircraft's radar considered.
If you have slightest of weight behind what you keep spraying all around in this forum you'd be able to answer this... more so that you are a think tank here and people seek you thinking advice... its time you gave one.. about this one.
The seeker comes in during the terminal phase of the target which can be pre-set(a building) or based on known co-ordinates(handed off target co-ordinates based on external platform such as the ZDK).
So the missile flies to a pre-set point via GPS and then turns its seeker on to look for the target and acquire it.
Its a fairly common method of missile guidance and has been around since the late 80's..
Dont you know anything about weapons to be asking such questions?
his intention is pretty clear, panic and...
Something straight out of 70s and retired from most AFs around the world... oh yes it must have.
I would suggest you to read few good books on radars, antennas and wave propagation before making audacious claims to which rest of the world's audience laugh.
My question still stands "How does the seeker of your missile which has smaller aperture size than the aircraft's radar picks up and tracks the target when the aircraft's radar fails to do so.. for the mentioned range of missile which is upto 240km.".. the different frequency bands between the missile seeker and aircraft's radar considered.
If you have slightest of weight behind what you keep spraying all around in this forum you'd be able to answer this... more so that you are a think tank here and people seek you thinking advice... its time you gave one.. about this one.
what is the payload of this missile?
CM-400AKG is said to be a YJ12 derative and YJ12 is quoted as having a unit cost of US$ 1.8 million (as compared to US$ 2.73 million for Brahmos). I would expect CM-400 AKG to be in a similar price bracket. The unit cost for Harpoon block II is US$1.2 million. AIM9 Sidewinder has a unit cost of US$85,000.I wasn't asking for a Divan-i-Hypie but thats just too minimal !
How much do you think would one of these cost ? And do tell that relative to other missiles that we have; Exocet, Sidewinders, Ra'ads etc. to give me a decent comparative of whether we'd have the cash to procure them.
For example : It'll cost as much as : 2 Exocets, 10 Sidewinders or 1 Ra'ad ! Something...gimme something to work here, Rora !
With that size and weight class.. not more than a 100kg..
These missiles rely on kinetic impact for damage... and at most leave something like this
I'm a man of very few words. If it works as advertised and provided we get large enough numbers of it, plus 'if' we are allowed to tinker around in secret with it's guidance software and terminal-phase attack mechanics ---- then KABOOM!!!
@Oscar,
Is that enough to sink a carrier?
Not even close.. not even a barrage.
But "sinking" a carrier is a misnomer..
Disabling it, or at least disrupting flight operations is the more realistic goal.
Say hit the bridge.. hit the hanger deck..
That blast is still enough to damage recovery gear and spew debris all over the deck..
hence.. flight ops.. disrupted.. effectiveness of carrier = 0