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CostasTT said:NATO designation is SA-5 GAMMON, not GUILD.
Why not use a totally obsolete and virtually useless SAM as a nuisance weapon with the intention of forcing the Russians to expend precisious missiles used by the S-300V (possibly in anticipation of the arrival of ATACMS or Sapsan) especially after having experienced a year of continuous bombardment by Russian S-300s? I do not find this development strange in any way.Okay, strange crap now being reported. I appreciate this is speculation at this point, but damn interesting. Silhouette profile certainly matches an S-200 missile.
View: https://twitter.com/Maks_NAFO_FELLA/status/1678096856428032000?s=20
Questions remain as to how well guided it is. One missile actually got through Russian defences on Kerch bridge yesterday, but it missed and landed in the water on the far side of the bridge anyway. But from a trolling point of view it was successful, because Russia used several million $s of S-400 missiles to intercept defunct SAMs.Given its range and big warhead, the S-200 makes for a decent SSM, too. Virtually the same explosive payload as an ATACMS, but substantially longer reach (300km - which is comparable to the longest-ranged ATACMS versions - as a SAM equates to a lot more on a ballistic trajectory). Basically trades accuracy for expediency.
Probably don't have the means to calculate the trajectory, but then, how would you play it, since the missile has the ability to steer. A GPS module for this old sky warmers would be interesting.You'd think they'd just ignore missiles that weren't going to hit anything important.
Hey now. Decade singularSA-5 isn’t a mobile system, so it probably has limited usefulness. Plus the individual rockets must be almost as old as I am. Firing them as inaccurate surface to surface weapons, ideally as a distraction to some more accurate strike, seems perfectly worthwhile if any of thier left over rockets were serviceable (withdrawn from service decades ago).
Questions remain as to how well guided it is.
But from a trolling point of view it was successful, because Russia used several million $s of S-400 missiles to intercept defunct SAMs
I wonder how it's being guided or if it's just fired ballistically. (Nike Hercules had a similar role in SK back in the day.)
Does it have any kind of INS as standard?
My assumption is that ballistic trajectory is controlled by fire control radar that send engine cut-off when needed - at correct speed, height and angle.
SK Nike Hercules SSM - Hyunmoo - 1
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I don't think they're still in service in SK. The next development of Hercules in the US was Nike Zeus A.Are they still in service? I noticed that the South Koreans had replaced the original booster assembly consisting of four Nike rocket-motors strapped together with a single rocket-motor (Something the US should've done with the MIM-14 when it was in service).
The next development of Hercules in the US was Nike Zeus A.
Replace the nuke warhead with a conventional one and it might have made a hell of a SAM. But nothing to shoot it at until the 80s for the most part.Imagine if the US Army had replaced the MIM-14's existing booster-stage with the Nike Zeus A's booster? It had a thrust of 450,000Lbs which was more than twice that of Hercules' booster (220,000Lb thrust).
That's the big problem. The US wasn't under bomber threat from about 1960-1985. And even in the 1980s, mobile, tactical SAMs should have been a higher priority.Replace the nuke warhead with a conventional one and it might have made a hell of a SAM. But nothing to shoot it at until the 80s for the most part.
Replace the nuke warhead with a conventional one and it might have made a hell of a SAM.
And by the 80s the Patriot system was coming online anyways.That's the big problem. The US wasn't under bomber threat from about 1960-1985. And even in the 1980s, mobile, tactical SAMs should have been a higher priority.
No bet.As for the Grammon?
I will bet good money that they figure out how to rig up a GPS receiver to the Autopilot. You can buy a decent one for 50 bucks at hobby shop for RC planes that has Desert Storm Tomahawk accuracy. There enough Youtube videos of people msking GPS guided planes and drones for that.
Be a cheap upgrade to a large missile with a big boom.
I will bet good money that they figure out how to rig up a GPS receiver to the Autopilot. You can buy a decent one for 50 bucks at hobby shop for RC planes that has Desert Storm Tomahawk accuracy. There enough Youtube videos of people msking GPS guided planes and drones for that
Will that GPS works for a legit Mach 4-5 missiles ?
It should do and it doesn't need to work continuously through the missile's flight just long enough to lock onto the GPS signals and get a fix, at high altitudes at peak velocity the GPS's receiver aerial(s) shouldn't have to worry about a plasma-sheath interfering.
Commercial GPS receiver have speed and apparently altitude limit tho
They seem to get through, just off target.