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I am sorry for my ignorance but what is the benefit of four tubes?
Four tubes mean four missiles. More than the previous TEL.
With its very very short range (60 kms) its more of a threat to pakistan itself.
With its very very short range (60 kms) its more of a threat to pakistan itself.
Pakistan to test fires new ballistic missile Nasr by end of May
INP 12 hrs ago | Comments (0)
KARACHI - Pakistan will test fire its new missile Nasr by the end of this month and most likely on May 28. The missile with 180 Kilometers range has high degree of accuracy.
According to sources, Pakistan army has completed all its preparation to test fire the nuclear-capable, surface-to-surface ballistic missile Nasr on May 28 Monday. The name "Nasr" is an Arabic word meaning "Victory".
Nasr can carry nuclear warheads and can hit the target with high accuracy, it is learnt.
The missile has been developed to add deterrence to Pakistans strategic weapons development programme.
Pakistan to test fires new ballistic missile
I think the idea here is to play the nuclear card on advancing Indian troops without exacting a similar more devastating reply from the Indian side. You see, they intent on lobbing it on enemy troops advancing on Pakistani soil ( at-least this is what i can infer ). Since, nuclear strike is not being carried out on Indian soil, they hope that an Indian retaliation would be avoided and prompt our military planners to order a retreat. If India is the primary focus, Pakistanis are playing an enormous gamble. We have an NFU ( No First Use policy ) not a NUN policy ( Never Use Nukes ). Any use of nuclear weapons on Indian soil or troops would be construed as an attack on India and will prompt a swift retaliation along the similar lines. Also, the Indian hawks are not likely to recommend holding back anything.
More than the Indian threat, I believe the Pakistanis are developing Nasr to counter possible aggressive maneuver from the United States or the ANA.
Feeling any difference? or the image is blur of second pic?
The two missile tubes/canisters at the top do not appear to have any launch rails inside for the NASR - the addition of the two missile tubes might therefore have been primarily for structural testing.
Reduced overall system cost, since you now need one TEL to transport and launch 4 (or more) missiles simultaneously/almost simultaneously, at a target.I am sorry for my ignorance but what is the benefit of four tubes?
My thoughts are along similar lines. But how would you test structural integrity without any load being borne by the top tubes? I think it might just be there to show the future developmental roadmap of the TEL.The two missile tubes/canisters at the top do not appear to have any launch rails inside for the NASR - the addition of the two missile tubes might therefore have been primarily for structural testing....
The length seems to correspond to that of the AR100, since the same launch truck has been used without any cabin relocation. That puts it to 6.25m. Somebody could measure us out the diameter by ratios....I am still curious about the exact dimensions of the missile (length and diameter), and the maximum warhead size for the suggested range.