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do you need VLS to launch cruise missile from subs ?Does Iran have submarines with VLS?
No,one can also launch from existing torpedo tubes,like everything both methods have their respective advantages and disadvantages.do you need VLS to launch cruise missile from subs ?
First of all, I'm an amateur in the field of defense tech so be nice.
Time after time Iran reveals apparently very modern weapon systems. But when it comes to implementing those weapons into the military defense structures of the country, Iran at least partly fails to do so. But why?
I'm asking myself this question since years. There must be a structural failure somewhere in the Iranian military-industrial complex. Why can't Iran transform such weapons into military deterrence?
That test appeared to be a failure as the footage showed the missile producing a double exhaust plume, suggesting its launch capsule was not discarded correctly or its motor was venting from the side of its airframe.
Some people in this forum are more qualified to write for Janes than this idiot who doesn't know what that smoke is!
Using anonymous officials is an old and outdated tactic.Are you an eye-witness to the test in question? If yes, then provide evidence of its success. If no, then accusing others of lying is a sign of insecurity.
Failures can be expected in trials. Don't be sensitive about it. On the bright side, you learned something from it.
Americans have fielded an incredibly vast and comprehensive surveillance system around the world through which they can observe important developments in regions of interest. Expect them to disclose developments that normal people are not privy of.
Are you an eye-witness to the test in question? If yes, then provide evidence of its success. If no, then accusing others of lying is a sign of insecurity.
Failures can be expected in trials. Don't be sensitive about it. On the bright side, you learned something from it.
Americans have fielded an incredibly vast and comprehensive surveillance system around the world through which they can observe important developments in regions of interest. Expect them to disclose developments that normal people are not privy of.
They are calling the missile Jask-2. I don't think it was a covert test so to speak. The submarine was probably not totally submerged or just dived before the test so US army units present there could see what submarine is doing the test.According to US officials, the submarine launched cruise missile is named "Jask-2"
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2017/05/04/pentagon-eyes-iran-north-korea-military-connection.html
This is worrying, as it(like Khorramshahr MRBM) shows that there is leak of information somewhere in the Armed Forces or MOD.
Not really. If it were a failure, the MOD would never publicize the video. The double exhaust can have other reasons as well just like the one I explained earlier in this thread.This is partly true, but Iran's very modern weapons are the ones that are being mass produced. Air defence systems (some of which are equipped with AESA radars), precision guided ballistic missiles, long range anti ship missiles, ATGMs, etc. Iran has had projects in the past, like the Zulfiqar tank project, or the Saeqeh project. Both of these were based on old designs (the Zulfiqar less so, but it was still not up to par with modern standards).
The only very modern weapon I can think of right now that wasn't mass produced was the Shafaq advanced trainer/light fighter, but that was because the Russians pulled out of the joint project, taking their engines with them.
Its a reasonable assumption. By the way, this idiot is the same one who you praised for reviewing the Bavar-373 honestly.
Heres a model of a canister/capsule
The same old Israeli recruits working in social media..paid to provoke some Iranian members so maybe in reaction they reveal something useful!!! This is why they often give very outlandish and crazy claims... Very old and childish technique...obsolet old soviet russian design rebuilt with help of northkorea
Fateh is northkorean for sure.
Qaher will never fly. Maybe as rc toy again.
Iranian midget submarine missile test reportedly fails
Jeremy Binnie, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
04 May 2017
Iran's attempt to test launch a missile from one of its midget submarines has failed, Fox News reported two US officials as saying on 3 May.
The Nasir, which was unveiled on 15 April, could potentially be launched from a 533 mm torpedo tube. (MODAFL)
The officials said the test was carried out in the Strait of Hormuz using a Yono-class submarine: a North Korean design that is produced in Iran as the Ghadir. It was not stated when the failed test took place.
There were reports in February that Iran had test-fired a submarine-launched cruise missile called the Nasir.
When images of the Nasir were released for the first time in April, it appeared to be based on the Nasr anti-ship missile, the Iranian version of the Chinese C-704, that has an air-breathing engine rather than a solid-fuel motor as well as a booster that together would give it a significantly longer range than the 38 km listed for the Chinese missile.
A consignment of Nasirs was then handed over to the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps Navy (IRGCN) in a ceremony on 22 April.
While the Iranian media made no mention of the Nasir being a submarine-launched missile during its coverage of the handover ceremony, with the addition of folding control fins it could potentially be encapsulated so that it could be launched from the 533 mm torpedo tubes on both Iran's Ghadir and 'Kilo'-class attack submarines.
There has been speculation - but no evidence - that Iran received 3M-54 Club submarine-launched anti-ship missiles from Russia for the three 'Kilos' that were delivered in the 1990s.
Meanwhile, there have also been indications that Iran is working on its own submarine-launched missile. Most notably, in February 2015, Iranian television showed footage of a sub-surface launch of what IRGCN commander Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi described as a "very special weapon".
That test appeared to be a failure as the footage showed the missile producing a double exhaust plume, suggesting its launch capsule was not discarded correctly or its motor was venting from the side of its airframe.
http://www.janes.com/article/70066/iranian-midget-submarine-missile-test-reportedly-fails
That test appeared to be a failure as the footage showed the missile producing a double exhaust plume, suggesting its launch capsule was not discarded correctly or its motor was venting from the side of its airframe.
Some people in this forum are more qualified to write for Janes than this idiot who doesn't know what that smoke is!