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yes just the speed and nothing else.....So basically the only advantage of such cruise missiles over Babar and Ra'ad is speed?
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yes just the speed and nothing else.....So basically the only advantage of such cruise missiles over Babar and Ra'ad is speed?
Indians are so much thumping their chests over Barak SAM system. Indians you have been ripped off again by Israelis.
Below video showed the reality of much hyped Iron Dome, and Iron Dome rockets instead of intercepting home-made Palestinian rockets are falling themselves on Israeli population.
If thats the performance against home-made rockets what will be the performance of Israeli SAMs against CM-400AKG...??
I think Indian SAMs will be falling back over IN warships
Btw, as no one is congratulating us, I'll congratulate ourselves for this acquisition. Yes yes, we bought it. Does that make it any less lethal? Let's see who else can go and "just buy it" like an off-the-shelf item, don't think so!
Mate, sometimes I just get confused as to why people on this forum loose objectivity when analyzing any weapon / strategy related to India or Pakistan. For me, only the technical parameter(s) of any weapon / equipment should be the sole criteria. Come India / Pakistan into any equation, and all hell breaks loose - everyone gets emotional and abuses start flying left right and center!Congrats dude..And congrats to pakistan for making wise and efficient purchases...
Mate, sometimes I just get confused as to why people on this forum loose objectivity when analyzing any weapon / strategy related to India or Pakistan. For me, only the technical parameter(s) of any weapon / equipment should be the sole criteria. Come India / Pakistan into any equation, and all hell breaks loose - everyone gets emotional and abuses start flying left right and center!
Wouldn't the missile's (friction) heat signature against a cold ocean background stand out like a sore thumb? How many natural phenomena travel supersonic? Once the IR sensors detect something fishy on the water, the radar can be used to pinpoint.
Noob question - Wouldn't a Brahmos traveling at 4m from the sea-level & at that speed with that engine configuration give off an enormously large heat-signature that may off-set any (or most of the) benefit accrued from 'sea skimming' ?
Furthermore, if I were to assume that the Brahmos isn't going to sea-skim till much later into the stage as opposed to doing it since the inception or even before mid-course, wouldn't it be detected by any vessel with an able radar perhaps 100 or 200 Kms away, because of that heat-signature ?
Why is everyone so concerned about the missile and it's lethality? Soon enough, it will be tested and we can all rest!
Btw, as no one is congratulating us, I'll congratulate ourselves for this acquisition. Yes yes, we bought it. Does that make it any less lethal? Let's see who else can go and "just buy it" like an off-the-shelf item, don't think so!
Please, don't let it give you indigestion. Bravado aside, serious engineers and defense analysts (Indian/Pakistani) understand very well the implications of this acquisition by Pakistan.
Holy Crap - You're a Senior Member now !
Congratulations....bazurgooon !
I'm neither serious nor an engineer or a defense analyst - Tell me about the implications of this acquisition ?
I'm a man of very few words. If it works as advertised and provided we get large enough numbers of it, plus 'if' we are allowed to tinker around in secret with it's guidance software and terminal-phase attack mechanics ---- then KABOOM!!!
November 23, 2012: China found its first export customer (Pakistan) for its new CM-400AKG supersonic cruise missile. With a max range of 250 kilometers and a guidance system that includes GPS, onboard radar, and an image recognition system that can identify a specific target, this new missile uses its high speed to evade defenses on ships. In all these respects the CM-400AKG is very similar to the Indo-Russian BrahMos. One major difference between the two missiles is that the CM-400AKG is still in development and there is no evidence of tests. This sale may be a ploy by the Chinese manufacturer to determine if it will be worth the huge expense to actually make this missile work.
To understand that conundrum, consider the background of the missile the CM-400AKG is so similar to. BrahMos is a 3.2 ton missile with a range of 300 kilometers and a 300 kg (660 pound) warhead. Perhaps the most striking characteristic is its high speed, literally faster (at up to 1,000 meters/3,100 feet per second) than a rifle bullet. Guidance is GPS or inertial to reach the general area of the target (usually a ship or other small target), then a radar that will identify the specific target and hit it. The high speed at impact causes additional damage (because of the weight of the entire missile). All this is almost identical with the CM-400AKG.
India and Russia developed the weapon together and now offer it for export. The high price of each missile, about $2-3 million (depending on the version), restricts the number of countries that can afford it. The weapon entered service with the Indian navy in 2005. Different versions of the missile can be fired from aircraft, ships, ground launchers, or submarines. The maximum speed of 3,000 kilometers an hour makes it harder to intercept and means it takes five minutes or less to reach its target. The air launched version weighs 2.5 tons.
The 9.4 meter (29 foot) long, 670mm diameter missile is an upgraded version of the Russian SS-NX-26 (Yakhont) missile, which was still in development when the Cold War ended in 1991. Lacking money to finish development and begin production, the Russian manufacturer eventually made a deal with India to put up most of the $240 million needed to finally complete two decades of development. The BrahMos is being built in Russia and India, with the Russians assisting India in setting up manufacturing facilities for cruise missile components. Efforts are being made to export up to 2,000 but no one has placed an order yet. Russia and India are encouraged enough to invest in BrahMos 2, which will use a scramjet, instead of a ramjet, in the second stage. This would double the speed and make the missile much more difficult to defend against.
Air Weapons: The Chinese BrahMos
(Posted in AF forum, because analyst suspect its only air launch , where the Indo-Russian is all air,ground, navel).
Dude, we will never know the cost of the missile. If you had asked me this question just couple of years back, my chachu was DG Defense Procurement @ GHQ. Besides, you are comparing a peanut, an apple, a watermelon and Ghobi! Whatever the cost, as long as it does for which it is advertised.How much do you think would one of these cost ? And do tell that relative to other missiles that we have; Exocet, Sidewinders, Ra'ads etc. to give me a decent comparative of whether we'd have the cash to procure them.
Yeah, that is kind of funny!1 Para of CM-400AKG & 3 paras of Brahmos. Don't know which missile the author wants to sell
Noob question - Wouldn't a Brahmos traveling at 4m from the sea-level & at that speed with that engine configuration give off an enormously large heat-signature that may off-set any (or most of the) benefit accrued from 'sea skimming' ?
Furthermore, if I were to assume that the Brahmos isn't going to sea-skim till much later into the stage as opposed to doing it since the inception or even before mid-course, wouldn't it be detected by any vessel with an able radar perhaps 100 or 200 Kms away, because of that heat-signature ?
@Penguin : Dude, can you pitch in as well ?