C-701
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
YingJi-7 (C-701) | |
---|---|
Type | anti-ship missile |
Service history | |
In service | 1989 |
Production history | |
Manufacturer | China Haiying Electromechanical Technology Academy (???????????) |
Specifications | |
Weight | 100 kg |
Length | 2.507 m |
Diameter | 0.18 m |
|
|
Warhead | 29 kg time-delayed semi-armour-piercing high-explosive |
|
|
Engine | Solid rocket engine |
Wingspan | 0.587 m (unfolded); 0.450 m (folded) |
Operational range |
15-20 km |
Flight altitude | 15-20 m (flight) |
Speed | Mach 0.8 |
Guidance system |
TV-homing, Infra-red, millimetre radar |
Launch platform |
ground-based vehicles, naval ships, fixed-wing aircraft |
The C-701 is a Chinese missile that is roughly comparable to the American AGM-65 A/B/D/H Maverick air-to-surface missile. However, the C-701 is smaller and has less than half the weight of the AGM-65 A/B/D/H Maverick.
Contents |
[edit] Design
Although originally designed as an anti-ship missile, the missile was eventually developed into a air-to-surface missile that can engage various targets. When used as an anti-ship missile, its intended targets are boats with 180 ton displacement or less, such as missile or torpedo armed FAC, patrol boats, and gunboats.
There are two types of guidance: the Fire-and-forget mode and the command mode. The first type of guidance enables the aircraft/boats/vehicles to get out after launching, providing greater safety while the second type enables the operator to change targets after launching, or to terminate the attack if needed. The television seeker of the missile can be replacing by either an imaging infrared seeker or a millimetre-wave radar seeker. A version with a radar seeker (not the millimetre-wave radar seeker) designated as C-701R has also been displayed in public.
[edit] History
The air-launched television guided version was the first to appear, while the surface launched version followed. The third version to appear was version with the imagining infrared seeker and after that, the version after that was the one with millimetre-wave radar seeker. Although the existence of the last two versions has been reported for a long time, it was not until the six Zhuhai Airshow held near the end of 2006 did these report have been officially confirmed by the Chinese government in public. All of the versions are offered for export.
[edit] Deployment
Unlike the American AGM-65 Maverick air-to-surface missile which is only launched from air, C-701 can be launched from various platforms from air (both fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft) and surface (which includes both land/vehicles and ships/boats), but the missile cannot by launched from submarines yet. When the missile is deployed on land and ships, the standard ground launcher is consisted of 4 rectangular box launching/storage containers with two atop the other two, and the entire 4-round launcher is fixed at 15 degrees elevation. Two of such launchers form the backbone of the missile battery with a total of 8 missiles, with a total weight less than 2 tons.
The C-701 (or its Iranian derivative, the Kowsar) may have been employed by Hezbollah fighters to attack and damage the INS Hanit during the 2006 Lebanon War. The much heavier C-802 is more often reported to have been the weapon used, but this is possibly based on the initial exaggerated damage assessment; apart from destroying the steering, the direct damage caused by the missile hit seems to have been fairly light and the ship was witnessed to have completed the return to base on its own power. Based on the operational history of the Harpoon missile which is a rough equivalent to the C-802, the latter missile would have most likely caused considerably heavier damage.