Audio
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2012
- Messages
- 5,411
- Reaction score
- -3
- Country
- Location
Another START treaty has taken place in 2011.
That's the treaty i was talking about. It was agreed in 2010, ratified in 2011 by both parties.
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.
Another START treaty has taken place in 2011.
Thanks for this bit.That's the treaty i was talking about. It was agreed in 2010, ratified in 2011 by both parties.
Though we can only speculate in these matters. I have cited information compiled by experts.
But that bomb is large enough to fit in any ICBM, that's a perfect weapon for self annihilation.
Tsar Bomba weighed 24.8 metric tons and was 8 m in length and 2 m in diameter. I doubt that any missile can carry a weapon of this size.I am sure by now they would had figure how to make it fit on a ICBM.
I am sure by now they would had figure how to make it fit on a ICBM.
I am sure by now they would had figure how to make it fit on a ICBM.
But that bomb is large enough to fit in any ICBM, that's a perfect weapon for self annihilation.
Tsar Bomba weighed 24.8 metic tons and was 8 m in length and 2 m in diameter. I doubt that any missile can carry a weapon of this size.
I mean by now they could had made it smaller.
Indeed. It was 3 staged weapon.Tsar Bomba achieved 50 MT yield by staged detonation, very unlikely they achieved much miniaturization.
This MT is in yield.SS-18 modification carried a 25 MT warhead back in mid 70's.
However due to the advances in targeting and minituarization of components it was established that a few smaller yield devices would more effectively destroy a target area then one massive blast. Hence the MIRV's.
lol........india is three times bigger than pak........ofcourse u need more nuclear arsenal......
Indeed. It was 3 staged weapon.
This MT is in yield.
Tsar Bomba was 50 MT weapon in yield.
R-36M (SS-18 Mod 1): The SS-18 Mod 1 carried a single large reentry vehicle, with a warhead yield of 18-25 MT, a distance of about 6000 nm. In January 1971, cold-launch tests began during which the mortar launch was perfected. The actual flight tests for the single-RV Mod 1 began on 21 February 1973, though some sources suggest that testing began in October 1972. The testing phase of the R-36M with various different types of warheads was finished in October 1975 and on 30 December 1975 deployment began (though some Western sources suggest that an initial operational capability was reached in early 1975). A total of 56 were deployed by 1977, though all were replaced by Mod 3 or Mod 4 missiles by 1984. These high-yield weapons were assessed in the West as possibly developed to attack American Minuteman ICBM launch control centers. Tom Clancy described this potential tasking as the ability to 'turn Cheyenne Mountain into Cheyenne Lake.