Koovie
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barak 1 is like buying Maruti 800 today! Relaible but obsolete!
Obsolete?
Care to explain........
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barak 1 is like buying Maruti 800 today! Relaible but obsolete!
@ Dillinger, @sancho is there any news rgding or process in jv of maitri srram coze last time I read it will stuck due to work shareMaitri won't require the Revathi radar, I had the same thoughts (due to the illustrations of the Maitri naval variant which show a corvette class ship with a revathi radar marked out) but the Revathi itself is a VSR and not a fire directing radar like the Barak-1's STGR, the Maitir does not need CLOS and so will not need the Revathi.
Nah, it is a pair of Universal Launchers for Brahmos forward and the 'trench' behind it is for Barak-8ER.
^^ Above two images, taken in Oct 2013, and May 2014 respectively, show the progress on first P-15B
hull fabrication. The keel-laying ceremony for the first ship, INS Bangalore, happened in between,
in January 2014.
Thanks to shipone at *** for the images.
To the warship experts here - @Dillinger @Penguin - Sirs, any comments? Believeing
the "slots" on the front to be VLS areas...it looks somewhat different from P-15A ? The SAMs
seem to have been moved to front and BrahMos to rear. The slots toward the stern don't appear
very clear
Oh I know we can be weird, P75I, Vikramaditya, no DSRVs, no ASW helos but more ships being inducted....that does not detract from the improbability of what PSK or Shukla are propagating...give it time..you'll see.
Obsolete?
Care to explain........
PK Sengupta said as per his sources the INS Kolkata has 64 Barak 2 missiles. It has 32 ready to fire VLS and 32 rounds that are stored internally with each 2 X 8 vls section having additional 2 X 8 rounds internally that are reloaded internally using a hydraulic mechanism like in the RBU 6000 canisters once you take out the spent canisters from the vls using a crane. This feature was provided for in order to allow more missiles during pro acted campaigns.
If you look at forward area of the P 15 B it has 2 X 8 sections to allow Brahmos missile. Behind it an even bigger cavity is allowed in order to provide space for 2 X 8 VLS cells of Barak 8. However given volume of space occupied by Barak 8 VLS, this large a space is totally unnecessary meaning just one thing - 32 VLS ready to fire, 32 reloads!
Are you it that doesn't mean 'space and weight reserved' for additonal VLU's? That would make much more sense.I asked Ajai Shukla in mail. He said same exact thing. Even at defence expo 2014 officials said another 16 - 32 rounds can be carried on board. Remember this is not MK 41 or other western VLS. Hence this arrangement can happen. Infact look at the picture and compare for yourself.
How can two people give the same explanation to a similar problem? FRV always accompany the ship with a crane! In the USN the ships used a strike down crane module that was hidden below the deck and used to clear spent casings. But because of limited weigh carrying capacity and sea state issues the cranes were done away with.
Maitri supposedly is MICA based as far as missile front end is concerned. Therefor is will be IR Homing or Active Radar Homing. I.e. fire and forget. So, not target illuminators are required compared to semi-active radar homing missiles like ESSM, and no missile director such as you find with command-to-line-of-sight missiles like Barak 1, Crotale/HQ7. All Maitri needs is a que from a 3D radar, any 3D radar.Maitri won't require the Revathi radar, I had the same thoughts (due to the illustrations of the Maitri naval variant which show a corvette class ship with a revathi radar marked out) but the Revathi itself is a VSR and not a fire directing radar like the Barak-1's STGR, the Maitir does not need CLOS and so will not need the Revathi.
That is what is meant by ' space and weight reserved for future installation'I did, its hogwash, the "extra rounds" talk is simply born out of the fact that the Kolkata has place for hosting an extra farm of 2*8 VLU for the Barak-8s IF the IN opts for it, the design allows for that. There is no "hydraulic system", again VLUs CANNOT be reloaded beneath deck, there is no apparatus for lifting the rounds from the below deck magazine to the top deck, there are no cranes for lifting the spent canisters from the VLU's open hatch and lowering the fresh round in. So unless the IN is completely bonkers they will not opt for such an arrangement. The laws of reality do not change with differing time zones. The extra rounds are just that, space left fallow for retro fitting extra VLUs if the IN so wishes. AND before people jump up and down about rotary systems, rotary systems are not reloadable VLUs and this (the Barak-8's launch mechanism) is indeed a VLU.
Indian bureaucracy at it's best, but these guys do have better sources than mainstream media who simply look up wikipedia.
1> Very short range 12 KM
2> Can intercept supersonic targets around 6 km only.
3> Requires Elta m-2221 fire control radar for targetting.
4> Expensive and not available in bulk.
5> Not effective against supersonic missiles like Klub, P 800, etc.
http://www.rafael.co.il/Marketing/354-928-en/Marketing.aspxBarak is a mature, operational anti-missile point defense naval surface-to-air missile system, designed to protect combat vessels against sea skimming missiles and aircraft threats.
Barak is effective against highly maneuvering, supersonic and low altitude threats (sea skimmers), as well as low radar cross section (RCS) targets. It is also effective against a full variety of free space threats.
The missile system is designed to engage multiple targets simultaneously. BARAK is in operational service in the naval forces of several countries.
Main Features:
- Vertical launch
- Unrestricted 360° azimuth coverage
- Maintenance-free eight cell launcher
- All missiles ready for instant firing
- Radar CLOS guidance
- Operation in day, night and adverse weather conditions
- Short reaction time
- Very short minimum range
- Missile high rate-of-turn
- Automatic and semi-automatic engagement
- High kill probability
http://www.iai.co.il/2013/34408-36713-en/IAI.aspxBARAK-8 Air & Missile Defense System
Naval and based, short to long range, point & area
Main Features Naval Implementation:
- From supersonic skimmers to high altitude targets by all weather
- Multiple simulataneous engagements in severe saturation scenarios
- Stand-Alone data link optimizing task forces and missiles coordination
- Vertical launch active missile, easily fitting on existing or new ships
@Dillinger @Penguin - Kind sirs, if there is space & weight saved for another set of 32 Barak-8s, then why didn't the morons
install it all right now? If IN actually wants it sooner or later, it serves to just put in a VLS there - let the IN command
decide whether to put missiles in them right now or not.
If IN doesn't need any more space, then why was it designed like that? They might as well put provision for a
set of wings & jet engine, for when IN decides to make ships fly
--
And also, Dillinger sir, are you sure about Barak-8ER for P-15B with 110-120km range?
@Dillinger @Penguin - Kind sirs, if there is space & weight saved for another set of 32 Barak-8s, then why didn't the morons
install it all right now? If IN actually wants it sooner or later, it serves to just put in a VLS there - let the IN command
decide whether to put missiles in them right now or not.
If IN doesn't need any more space, then why was it designed like that? They might as well put provision for a
set of wings & jet engine, for when IN decides to make ships fly
--
And also, Dillinger sir, are you sure about Barak-8ER for P-15B with 110-120km range?
@Dillinger Sir, when are you planning to tell A-5 your age?<sorry abt the off-topic post>
To answer your question, ships and aircraft always carry empty space in their superstructure/fuselage. The percentage of free-space might be as high as 30% of overall space in some designs. This is a deliberate effort to accommodate for the likelihood of additional upgrades and capabilities. Not saying such space will always be used in future, but that it certainly is ensured that it can be used should the need arise.
I did, its hogwash, the "extra rounds" talk is simply born out of the fact that the Kolkata has place for hosting an extra farm of 2*8 VLU for the Barak-8s IF the IN opts for it, the design allows for that. There is no "hydraulic system", again VLUs CANNOT be reloaded beneath deck, there is no apparatus for lifting the rounds from the below deck magazine to the top deck, there are no cranes for lifting the spent canisters from the VLU's open hatch and lowering the fresh round in. So unless the IN is completely bonkers they will not opt for such an arrangement. The laws of reality do not change with differing time zones. The extra rounds are just that, space left fallow for retro fitting extra VLUs if the IN so wishes. AND before people jump up and down about rotary systems, rotary systems are not reloadable VLUs and this (the Barak-8's launch mechanism) is indeed a VLU.