What's new

Pak gets powerful tracking system, deploys it at firing range to test & develop new missiles

NOWorNEVER

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Nov 26, 2016
Messages
407
Reaction score
0
Country
Pakistan
Location
United Kingdom
Pakistan gets powerful tracking system from China, deploys it at 'firing range' to test and develop new missiles: Report

Beijing: In an unprecedented deal, China has sold Pakistan a powerful tracking system which could speed up the development of multi-warhead missiles by its all-weather ally, the state-run Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) said.

Zheng Mengwei, a researcher with the CAS Institute of Optics and Electronics in Chengdu, Sichuan province, confirmed to the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post that Pakistan had bought a highly sophisticated, large-scale optical tracking and measurement system from China.

pak-china-reuters.jpg

Representational image. Reuters

"We simply gave them a pair of eyes. They can use them to look at whatever they want to see, even the moon," he said.

Zheng said he could not elaborate on the technology nor where in Pakistan it was being used as it involved the country's defence interests.

He, however, said that the Pakistani military recently deployed the Chinese-made system "at a firing range" for use in testing and developing new missiles.

China was the first country to export such sensitive equipment to Pakistan, the CAS said.

The Post report attributed the sale of the equipment to Pakistan to India testing the most advanced nuclear-ready intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) Agni-V with a range long enough to hit Beijing or Shanghai.

Chinese authorities declassified information about the sale of the tracking system on Wednesday.

While India's single-warhead missiles are bigger and cover longer distances, Pakistan has focused its efforts on developing multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs), a type of missile-carrying several nuclear warheads that can be directed towards different targets, the report said.

The US Defence Intelligence Agency officially confirmed in March that Pakistan conducted the first test launch of its nuclear-capable Ababeel missile in January 2017, "demonstrating South Asia's first MIRV payload", it said.

But outside Pakistan, military experts believe that it will take much more time before the Ababeel missile is ready for use in battle. It is thought to be still at an early stage of development, with plenty of room for improvement.


China has been the biggest supplier of arms to Pakistan which included ships, submarines and fighter jets.

The Chinese team which took the tracking system to Pakistan enjoyed VIP treatment during the nearly three months stay to assemble and calibrate it and training technical staff, the CAS statement said.


"The system's performance surpassed the user's expectations," it said, adding that it was considerably more complex than Pakistan's home-made systems.

The report did not reveal how much Pakistan paid for the system.

An optical system is a critical component in missile testing. It usually comes with a pair of high-performance telescopes equipped with a laser ranger, high-speed camera, infrared detector and a centralised computer system that automatically captures and follows moving targets.

The device records high-resolution images of a missile's departure from its launcher, stage separation, tail flame and, after the missile re-enters atmosphere, the trajectory of the warheads it releases."The uniqueness of the Chinese-made system lay in its use of four telescope units, more than normally required," Zheng said.

Each telescope, with a detection range of several hundred kilometres is positioned in a different location, with their timing synchronised precisely with atomic clocks. Together, the telescopes provide visual information of unprecedented detail and accuracy, which missile developers can use to improve designs and engine performance, the CAS said.

Using more telescopes allows the system to track war heads simultaneously from different angles, reducing the risk of losing a target.

http://www.firstpost.com/india/paki...ng-system-from-china-says-report-4401427.html

High-quality optics are essential in missile development, especially MIRVs, said Rong Jili, deputy director at the Beijing Institute of Technology's School of Aerospace Engineering.

Other types of tracking devices, such as radar, can collect more precise data at longer distances, but the Chinese-made optical system provided the intuitive, close-up look at real-life action that missile developers craved, he said.

Unlike the US, which accounts for one-third of exports and supplies to at least 100 countries, China delivered major arms to 44 countries, mostly in Asia and Africa.

More than 60 percent of China's military exports went to Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar and another 22 percent went to Africa, according to a recent study report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.


 
is it possible to put on AWACS.
 
They write as an insult, but actually unknowingly they are writing it for good.
Pak = پاک
and we all know what it means.
Pure in thought and act;
Pure in design and expression;
It is not the first time that their hate and stupidness has got best of them. The Lahore resolution presented by AIML on March 23, 1940 was named Pakistan Resolution by the hindu newspapers and today..little they knew it will turn out to be reality and their worst nightmare.
InshaAllah, Pakistan will become Pak after going through the process of purification.
 
Or you could just.. you know.. Invest in some high end military satellites?! But i guess it's too difficult for our lads at SPARCO to comprehend with their pee little brains.
 
These are statistical calculations, may be we are able to calculate trajectories of moving missiles from moving point of origin.
 
Or you could just.. you know.. Invest in some high end military satellites?! But i guess it's too difficult for our lads at SPARCO to comprehend with their pee little brains.
It is a totally different system. It has nothing to do with guidance and hence satellites. It is a tracking system used for testing and hence improving the design i.e. fine-tuning the aerodynamic and control parameters so that the missile becomes more accurate. No satellite can provide such functionality. Pakistan already had a similar but much simpler system used for simple ballistic missiles while this is more advanced and geared for monitoring multiple warheads from an MIRV.
 
These are statistical calculations, may be we are able to calculate trajectories of moving missiles from moving point of origin.
It is not about calculations rather measurement. It measures visually and quantitatively using laser range finders.
 
Last edited:
These are statistical calculations.
 
It's basically the electro-optical tracking equipment they installed at the Sonmiani instrumented weapon test range.
 
It is a totally different system. It has nothing to do with guidance and hence satellites. It is a tracking system used for testing and hence improving the design i.e. fine-tuning the aerodynamic and control parameters so that the missile becomes more accurate. No satellite can provide such functionality. Pakistan already had a similar but much simpler system used for simple ballistic missiles while this is more advanced and geared for monitoring multiple warheads from an MIRV.
Oh sorry, thanks for the info.
 

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom