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Iranian Air Defense Systems

This is your problem!

If you get bothered in McDonalds , bring some strap on bombs next time!

Rest in peace !

:lol:
overdoze of even goodness is not good thats all
Iranian leaders be it the godless shahs or ayatullahs are far more aesthetically easy on the eyes than the crooked eyed fat bellied Arab leaders we see.

propaganda is a good thing but today people have information on their fingertips so they can call the bluff so some homework is needed before making claims, I am disappointed since that q313 stealth plane claim.
despite all the embargoes your education and resolve is admirable
I want to be a believer in real modest achievements for a start will like to see undoctored footage of this system takking out a drone
 
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overdoze of even goodness is not good thats all
Iranian leaders be it the godless shahs or ayatullahs are far more aesthetically easy on the eyes than the crooked eyed fat bellied Arab leaders we see.

propaganda is a good thing but today people have information on their fingertips so they can call the bluff so some homework is needed before making claims, I am disappointed since that q313 stealth plane claim.
despite all the embargoes your education and resolve is admirable
I want to be a believer in real modest achievements for a start will like to see undoctored footage of this system takking out a drone

I know ... Q-313 unveiling was a real failure !

But what if you see the real one in the future !?

This is completely different !

Future is fantastic & unbelievable ... :-)

13930221_12226364.jpg
 
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overdoze of even goodness is not good thats all
Iranian leaders be it the godless shahs or ayatullahs are far more aesthetically easy on the eyes than the crooked eyed fat bellied Arab leaders we see.

propaganda is a good thing but today people have information on their fingertips so they can call the bluff so some homework is needed before making claims, I am disappointed since that q313 stealth plane claim.
despite all the embargoes your education and resolve is admirable
I want to be a believer in real modest achievements for a start will like to see undoctored footage of this system takking out a drone
The red missile in Soheil's post is Sayyad-3 which will be used by Talash-3 AD system and it has not yet been unveiled.

The picture below of SAM launcher belong to Talash-2 mediam range AD system which has not been unveiled.

But Talash-2 missile(Sayyad-2) has been unveiled a year ago, although then Talash was still not yet completed, they have shown the footage of it firing a missile at a drone, they will show more footage during the system actual unveiling.
Sayyad-2 missile

But here you can see the missile test of equally important and new Raad TEL and 3rd Khordad TELAR.(footage from 2 years ago), although Raad and it variants have not yet been mass produced and we will surely witness more footage during its actual unveiling.
 
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I know ... Q-313 unveiling was a real failure !

But what if you see the real one in the future !?

This is completely different !

Future is fantastic & unbelievable ... :-)

13930221_12226364.jpg
totally
the poster and the Ayatullah in the background there for good measure.
wish I had continued learning Persian. but I like to think that it says America wont make this mistake again

Ghalti= mistake
numi= not

The red missile in Soheil's post is Sayyad-3 which will be used by Talash-3 AD system and it has not yet been unveiled.

thanks second video contains 1 minutes of driving of the platforms which was not necessary.but tests looks conclusive going by the footage
 
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TEHRAN (FNA)- Iran on Tuesday unveiled and successfully tested the first phase of a new home-made long-range radar system named Sepehr (Sky) with the capability of detecting satellite and space objects' trajectories.

"The Sepehr radar system covers a range of over 2,500 kilometers and can detect stealth targets and micro UAVs at low, medium and high altitudes while it can also very easily identify and detect ballistic, semi-ballistic and cruise missiles," Lieutenant Commander of Khatam ol-Anbia Air Defense Base Brigadier General Shahrokh Shahram said addressing the unveiling ceremony today.

The commander underlined that Sepehr could successfully pass all tests.

Earlier today, the radar went under a last test of operation and assessment, and General Shahram said the results were successful and "the information gathered by the radar during its last assessment test today was for the first time fed into the country's integrated radar and air defense network".

The General said Sepehr provides the air defense units to identify hostile targets far from the country's borders, leaving them with more time for decision-making and reaction.

In August 2013, Iran announced that it has finalized construction of space radars to detect satellite and space objects' trajectories, adding that the country is now using new passive phased array radars to detect stealth targets and cruise missiles.

"The executive stages of Sepehr (Sky) space radar with the range of over 2,500km have been accomplished and the point for its deployment has also been specified," Commander of Khatam ol-Anbia Air Defense Base Brigadier General Farzad Esmayeeli told reporters in Tehran at the time .

He also pointed to the designing and building of new passive phased array radars under the name of 'Soundless Project', and said, "The radar is capable of detecting stealth (radar-evading) targets and cruise missiles and enjoys a high movement and mobility capabilities and acts in different ranges."

In recent years, Iran has made major breakthroughs in its defense sector and attained self-sufficiency in producing important military equipment and systems.

Iran has locally made radar systems with different ranges up to some 1,850 miles (3,000 kilometers).

In May 2012, Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Commander Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh said Iran is mass-producing Ghadir Radar systems in great numbers, adding that the radar system covers areas over 1,000km in distance.

"This radar system can cover areas around 1,100 in range and its designing and production project ended early last (Iranian) year and is now being mass-produced," Hajizadeh told FNA at the time.

In June 2011, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps put into operation the new home-made long-range Ghadir radar system that enables its forces to monitor low-altitude satellites.

The Ghadir radar system which covers areas (maximum) 1,100km in distance and 300km in altitude has been designed and built to identify aerial targets, radar-evading aircrafts, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles as well as low-altitude satellites.

The Iranian officials have always stressed that the country's military and arms programs serve defensive purposes and should not be perceived as a threat to any other country.

Iran Unveils, Tests New Home-Made Long-Range Radar System
 
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going to install this in Qaher's nose ?
 
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How does iran know for sure that its radar will detect stealth systems?:what:
we write stealth on a reflective plate , then we throw it in the air .

if the radar detects it , we've got ourselves a new Stealth-detecting radar :)

lol , how do you think we do it genius ? do you know what RCS means ?
 
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we write stealth on a reflective plate , then we throw it in the air .

if the radar detects it , we've got ourselves a new Stealth-detecting radar :)

lol , how do you think we do it genius ? do you know what RCS means ?
:rofl:
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Thats impressive!!we can almost monitor the whole ME plus central and southern Asia by 4 or 5 units of it.these early-warning radars are needed for neutralization of possible air strikes.
 
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an article from Jane's defence:
More long-range Iranian early-warning radars revealed
Joseph S Bermudez Jr, Colorado - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
04 September 2014

sepehr radar system.jpg

Airbus Defence and Space satellite image from 7 October 2013 showing the probable Sepehr radar complex in northwest Iran. Each of the four radar arrays is supported by a possible height-finding array and a sensor mast. (CNES 2013, Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image / IHS)
Key Points
  • Iran is making significant progress in building a network of long-range early-warning radars.
  • IHS Jane's has identified what appears to be the 3,000 km range Sepehr radar in the northwest of the country, as well as a prototype facility for the Ghadir radar that was unveiled in June.
Satellite imagery obtained by IHS Jane's shows that Iran has two more long-range, early-warning radar sites in addition to the one that was unveiled earlier this year.
Iran's unveiled its long-range Ghadir radar near Garmsar in early June. (Fars News Agency)
The previously known site near Garmsar in Semnan province was publicly unveiled during a ceremony held on 2 June, when the Iranian media released photographs and video footage showing a facility with four horizontal arrays arranged in a square around a vertical array and support buildings.

Brigadier General Farzad Esmaili, the commander of Iran's air defence forces, stated that the Ghadir radar could perform well against electronic warfare systems and would be difficult to destroy using anti-radar missiles. "The radar system uses a system that resonates the frequency and can trace targets more than 1,000 km in distance," he said.

The available satellite imagery of the site, which is 15 km southeast of Garmsar (35.133722° 52.469314°), shows that the Ghadir resembles Russia's Rezonans-NE system and indicates it was operational by the end of 2012 after a construction process that took 8-10 months.

The four primary arrays are approximately 39 m in width and together form a square with sides measuring approximately 55 m. Assuming a detection range of 1,000 km, this configuration provides 360° coverage of nearly all Iran and Iraq, the far southeast of Turkey and parts of northeast Saudi Arabia.

There also appears to be a prototype Ghadir radar site located at an air defence base between the towns of Andisheh and Qods in Tehran province (35.707617° 51.074084°). Satellite imagery shows a single primary array; a vertical, tower-mounted, Yagi-style antenna; and three support buildings were constructed between late-2009 and early-2010.

Like the Garmsar site, the horizontal array is approximately 39 m long. It faces southeast at approximately 151° so should be able to cover most of central Iran and the Gulf. Recent satellite imagery indicates that the facility remains active.

Several Iranian statements during early 2011 almost certainly referred to this facility. Brigadier General Mohammad Ali Jafari, the commander of Iran's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), stated in February 2011 that: "The final phase of research to produce long-range radars is complete and the production phase will start soon."

Four months later, Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the IRGC Aerospace Force, said: "The Ghadir radar system, which covers areas 1,100 km in distance and 300 km in altitude, was put into operation for the first time [during the recent Great Prophet 6 exercise]. The Ghadir radar system has been designed and built to identify aerial targets, radar-evading aircraft, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles as well as low-altitude satellites."

The third and most recently constructed radar was built 350 km to the west of the prototype in a mountainous part of Kordestan province. Airbus Defence and Space satellite imagery shows construction at the site 27 km north of the city of Bijar began in mid-2012 and was mostly complete by October 2013.

Like the Garmsar radar, it has four primary arrays, each 39 m in length. However, the large openings left at the corners mean the resulting square has far longer sides. A central vertical array had not been constructed by October 2013, but all the corners have dual towers housing supporting components such as height-finding arrays.

The primary arrays are oriented in such a way that they provide excellent overlapping coverage with the Ghadir system near Garmsar.

The differences between the two sites suggest the possibility that the one in Kordestan is the 3,000 km-range Sepehr system that Iranian officials have referred to in recent years.

Brig Gen Esmaili said in March 2013 that the Sepehr would become operational in the Iranian year that ended on 20 March 2014. He expanded upon this the following August, saying: "The executive stages of the Sepehr space radar with a range of over 2,500 km have been accomplished and the point for its deployment has also been specified."

The timeline subsequently slipped. Brig Gen Esmaili stated on 16 February that the Sepehr would be operational before the end of the following Iranian year.

If the Kordestan radar is the Sepehr and has a detection range of 3,000 km, it would provide 360o coverage of all Iran as well as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Israel, Turkey and Pakistan. It also provides partial coverage of Eastern Europe, southwest Russia (including Moscow), western India and most of the Arabian Sea.
 
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