GQM-163 Coyote: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 75: Line 75:
}}
}}
[[File:Coyote_flt.jpg|230px|right|thumb|A GQM-163A Coyote flies over the bow of a U.S. Navy observation ship during a routine test.]]
[[File:Coyote_flt.jpg|230px|right|thumb|A GQM-163A Coyote flies over the bow of a U.S. Navy observation ship during a routine test.]]
The '''GQM-163 Coyote''' is a [[supersonic]] [[sea skimming]] target built by [[Orbital ATK|Orbital Sciences]] and used by the [[United States Navy]] as a successor to the [[MQM-8 Vandal]]. Orbital's proposal was chosen over the MA-31, a joint venture between [[Boeing]] and Zvezda-Strela. Orbital was awarded their contract for the development of the Coyote SSST in June 2000.
The '''GQM-163 Coyote''' is a [[supersonic]] [[sea skimming]] target built by [[Orbital ATK|Orbital Sciences]] and used by the [[United States Navy]] as a successor to the [[MQM-8 Vandal]]. Orbital's proposal was chosen over the [[MA-31]], a joint venture between [[Boeing]] and Zvezda-Strela. Orbital was awarded their contract for the development of the Coyote SSST in June 2000.


The Coyote is initially boosted by a [[Hercules MK-70]] [[Booster (rocketry)|booster]], of similar design to those used by the now obsolete [[RIM-67 Standard]] ER missiles. After the booster stage is expended the missile switches to an [[Aerojet MARC-R-282]] [[solid-fuel rocket]] /[[ramjet]] engine for sustaining its flight.
The Coyote is initially boosted by a [[Hercules MK-70]] [[Booster (rocketry)|booster]], of similar design to those used by the now obsolete [[RIM-67 Standard]] ER missiles. After the booster stage is expended the missile switches to an [[Aerojet MARC-R-282]] [[solid-fuel rocket]] /[[ramjet]] engine for sustaining its flight.

Revision as of 22:44, 3 January 2017

GQM-163 Coyote
A GQM-163A Coyote test launch in May 2004.
Production history
ManufacturerOrbital Sciences
Specifications
Length5.62m (18 ft 5.2 in) (without booster), 9.56m (31 ft 4.2 in) (incl. booster)
Diameter35 cm (13.8 in), booster: 46 cm (17.99 in)

PropellantAerojet MARC-R-282 solid-fueled ducted rocket/ramjet engine
Operational
range
45 nmi (84 km) [1]
Flight ceiling55,000 feet
Flight altitudeSea-skimming: 30 feet (cruise phase), 15ft (terminal phase)
Boost timeHercules MK 70 solid-fueled rocket
Maximum speed Mach 3.0-4.0 at 5,000-55,000ft, Mach 2.6 at 30-15ft [2]
A GQM-163A Coyote flies over the bow of a U.S. Navy observation ship during a routine test.

The GQM-163 Coyote is a supersonic sea skimming target built by Orbital Sciences and used by the United States Navy as a successor to the MQM-8 Vandal. Orbital's proposal was chosen over the MA-31, a joint venture between Boeing and Zvezda-Strela. Orbital was awarded their contract for the development of the Coyote SSST in June 2000.

The Coyote is initially boosted by a Hercules MK-70 booster, of similar design to those used by the now obsolete RIM-67 Standard ER missiles. After the booster stage is expended the missile switches to an Aerojet MARC-R-282 solid-fuel rocket /ramjet engine for sustaining its flight. [3][4][5]

Operators

Map with CQM-163 operators in blue

Current operators

United States United States of America
France France
Australia Australia[6]
Japan Japan[7]

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ [2]
  3. ^ Aster Slays The Russian Dragon
  4. ^ Directory of US Military Rockets and Missiles
  5. ^ "GQM-163 SSST: A Tricky Coyote to Match Wits With Defenses". Retrieved 2010-08-17.
  6. ^ ANZAC upgrade completes final acceptance trial
  7. ^ Latest GQM-163 SSST contract includes first sale to Japan