P-70 Ametist

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
P-70 Ametist

P-70 Ametist.svg

General Information
Type Anti-ship guided missile
Local name P-70 Ametist, 4K66
NATO designation SS-N-7 Starbright
Country of origin Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union
Manufacturer OKB-52 Chelomei
development 1959
Commissioning 1968
Working time 1968-1993
Technical specifications
length 6.70 m
diameter 550 mm
Combat weight 3,375 kg
span 1,200 mm
Drive
First stage
Second stage

4 solid fuel booster
solid rocket engine
speed 300 m / s
Range 65 km
Furnishing
steering Inertial navigation platform
Target location Active radar target search
Warhead 840 kg shaped charge or nuclear warhead 200 kt
Weapon platforms Submarines
Lists on the subject

The P-70 Ametist ( GRAY index 4K66 , NATO reporting name SS-N-7 Starbright ) was a submarine -assisted anti-ship missile manufactured in Russia. It was the world's first anti-ship guided missile that could be used by submerged submarines.

development

The P-70 was used to combat naval forces and aircraft carrier groups. The development in the design office NPO Maschinostrojenija Tschelomei began in 1959. The first systems were introduced in 1968 in the Soviet naval forces. The following classes of submarines were equipped with the P-70:

technology

The guided weapons were housed in launch and transport containers outside the pressure hull. Before the start, the coordinates and the course of the target had to be entered in the navigation system of the missile . These were determined from the submarine using sonar or ELINT . The guided missile launch could only take place from the submerged submarine. The launch of the missiles was done with the help of the marching engine and four boosters on the rear of the missile. The guided missiles could be launched individually or in series from a maximum depth of 30 m. After piercing the surface of the water, the guided missile rose to a height of around 100 m. After the four boosters had burned out, they were thrown off and the guided missile sank to a cruising altitude of 30 to 60 m. A radar altimeter provided the necessary safety distance between the missile and the sea surface. The P-70 was a fire-and-forget guided weapon and the flight to the target area was carried out autonomously with the help of the inertial navigation platform . The on-board radar seeker was activated for the target approach . Once the target was captured, it was approached in a low dive. The impact in the target took place at water level.

distribution

The P-70 was only used by the Soviet naval forces. The system was never exported.

swell

  • Russian / Soviet Sea-based Anti-Ship Missiles. DTIG - Defense Threat Information Group, Nov 2005
  • Jane's Naval Weapon Systems Edition 2005. Jane's Publisher

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Norman Polmar, Kenneth J. Moore: Cold War submarines: The design and construction of US and Soviet submarines, 1945-2001. Brassey's, 2004, ISBN 1-57488-594-4 , p. 138.