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Pakistan successfully test-fires Land based anti-ship missile

To me it looks like a ramjet powered Anti ship missile. Because we already have got subsonic cruise missile... its something totaly new into our inventory...
 
Chinese missile build or produced in Pakistan with better technology and guidance speed is comparable to Yakont aka Brahmos with bigger and more lethal warhead.

Name: Seig e raaz :lol:


Not semi full khana kharaab of any kind of Armour same like hot knife cuts through butter.

People call it carrier killer :lol: not C-602 but something more sinister.
I love China :china:

Why not you discuss
CM-400 AKG ground launch version.

Surprised? you should be.

131945u280fp6hezz5hhj8-thumb.jpg

Engine integrated ramjet/booster propulsion system
Operational
range

250–400 km (160–250 mi; 130–220 nmi)
Speed Mach 2-4
Guidance
system

Inertial navigation system (INS)Beidou navigation system
Terminal guidance

Subject missile not only modified to target moving sea based targets but also could be used against surface to surface target with hyper-sonic speeds.
No bro its not ramjet equipped missile
but all solid fueled missile and follows semi ballistic trajectory to achieve Full range and top speed, and b/w where are the air breathing openings for the ramjet?o_O
Pakistan Air Force JF-17 fighter with CM-400AKG supersonic ground missiles 4.jpg

CM-400AKG_03.jpg

:hitwall:

From global security
The CM-400AKG supersonic standoff missile was first on display at the 2012 Zhuhai Airshow as part of FC-1/JF-17's "complete" weapon package. Unlike most modern ASMs flying at the low altitude, the missile flies a rare high ballistic trajectory, powered by a solid rocket motor. It appears that CM-400AKG may have evolved from the earlier SY-400 SRBM. Therefore the effectiveness of such attack profile is still unknown.

The missile has a weight of 900kg, maximum range of 240 km, max speed Mach 5.5 (at diving stage?). It has INS during the mid-course and utilizes active radar/passive radar/IIR seeker with target-recognition capabilities at the terminal stage, which may improve its accuracy. The missile is claimed to be capable of terminal maneuver in some degree to avoid interception by SAM. CM-400AKG is speculated to have been designed to attack fixed or "slow moving", high value ground targets.

here is a link
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/sy-400.htm
 
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Sir please if you can get former Navigational warnings after which we tested our long range Missiles please post them and tell where they mention the land area ?

Under the WWNWS the world's oceans are divided into 21 geographical sea areas, called NAVAREAs (NAVigational AREAs), which are identified by Roman numerals.

NAVAREA IX is the responsibility of Pakistan.

So NAVAREA warning are only issued mentioning an area over the sea and not land.
 
I have a question, its off topic but would appreciate if you can help. There was Indian gas pipe supposedly going underneath the same area that was latter added to our EZ which meant that India either seeks our permission and pays or get lost. Do you have update on that?
Fail.
In continental shelf no permissions are needed for pipelines.
 
It was a Cruise missile with MIRV , which can hit multiple Indian ships..then go up and hit Indian jets too.

Sure why not, after hitting sea, air and space targets, missile will make safe pit stop landing and refuel and get back on hunting again haha sounds like we talking about pet not missile
 
Guys why getting worried.
Something was tested with few hundred range hit capability. Whatever the name is of that missile, we know one thing that we have got the capability to hit target from our shores to open seas targets with high speed and accuracy.

Sit back and relaxed, now let the enemy think what was that....?
 
Pakistan conducts anti-ship missile test
By: Usman Ansari, March 16, 2017 (Photo Credit: Pakistani Press Information Department)
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan successfully test launched a land-based anti-ship missile on Thursday, but the did not reveal its identity, possibly indicating it is a new development of its Babur land-attack cruise missile.

The military’s media branch, ISPR, said the “land-based anti-ship missile” featured “advanced technology and avionics, which enable engagement of targets at sea with high accuracy.”

The trial, witnessed by Vice Chief of Naval Staff Adm. Khan Hasham Bin Saddique and other senior officers, was undertaken in the coastal region. A warning to shipping regarding missile tests was issued for March 16-17.

Siddique congratulated the technical team, saying the test would help improve Pakistan’s defenses and operational reach of the Navy by enabling the launch of long-range, anti-ship missiles from land.

No performance details or even the name of the missile were provided, however.

Though an image released by the government’s Press Information Department appeared to show a Babur missile, its resolution was insufficient to accurately determine the missile’s identity.

In April last year, a shore-based anti-ship missile dubbed Zarb was test fired. It was speculated by analysts to be the Chinese C-602/YJ-62.

However, a naval industry official told Defense News at Pakistan’s biennial defense exhibition IDEAS 2016 in November that Pakistan was working on indigenous anti-ship missiles. This followed an earlier revelation buried in a Ministry of Defence Production report of development of a shipboard anti-ship missile launcher.

In December, steel was cut for the first indigenous Azmat Block II missile boat, which in can be determined from the images released at the time will carry a larger anti-ship missile than the C-802A/CSS-N-8 Saccade that arms the Block I boats.

No confirmation of this missile’s identity has been forthcoming since then, but it sparked speculation that Pakistan’s indigenous anti-ship missile efforts were perhaps more advanced than realized.

The Babur offers the quickest route to an indigenous anti-ship missile, with a range exceeding the limitations of the Missile Technology Control Regime in the same vein as the United States' UGM/RGM-109B (TAS-M) Tomahawk.

It has already provided the basis of further developments. The updated Babur II was tested in December. The sub-launched Babur III, was successfully tested in January, enabling Pakistan to establish a second-strike capability.

Though the C-602 reportedly cruises at a height of 30 meters, test-area altitude for today’s test was restricted to 1,500 meters — more akin to the higher cruise altitude of the Babur.

A Navy spokesman was asked to comment on the missile’s identity, but there was no reply by press time.

Image in the link.

http://www.defensenews.com/articles/pakistan-conducts-anti-ship-missile-test

@The Deterrent @HRK @Oscar @شاھین میزایل @Arsalan

What do you guys make of this,
 
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So ? has it materialized yet ? as long as its not inside Pakistani EEZ, we don't have any issue with it or Pakistani Govt has passed NOC over it even if it goes through the waters we control.
The status of the deal is unknown. Probably it won't go through Pakistan's EEZ. Rather it bypass the EEZ. If Pakistan give NOC, it's yay!. Still, the additional cost is negligible compared to the profit importing through pipeline.
 
So ? has it materialized yet ? as long as its not inside Pakistani EEZ, we don't have any issue with it or Pakistani Govt has passed NOC over it even if it goes through the waters we control.
stay on topic bro not derail the thread

Pakistan conducts anti-ship missile test
By: Usman Ansari, March 16, 2017 (Photo Credit: Pakistani Press Information Department)
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan successfully test launched a land-based anti-ship missile on Thursday, but the did not reveal its identity, possibly indicating it is a new development of its Babur land-attack cruise missile.

The military’s media branch, ISPR, said the “land-based anti-ship missile” featured “advanced technology and avionics, which enable engagement of targets at sea with high accuracy.”

The trial, witnessed by Vice Chief of Naval Staff Adm. Khan Hasham Bin Saddique and other senior officers, was undertaken in the coastal region. A warning to shipping regarding missile tests was issued for March 16-17.

Siddique congratulated the technical team, saying the test would help improve Pakistan’s defenses and operational reach of the Navy by enabling the launch of long-range, anti-ship missiles from land.

No performance details or even the name of the missile were provided, however.

Though an image released by the government’s Press Information Department appeared to show a Babur missile, its resolution was insufficient to accurately determine the missile’s identity.

In April last year, a shore-based anti-ship missile dubbed Zarb was test fired. It was speculated by analysts to be the Chinese C-602/YJ-62.

However, a naval industry official told Defense News at Pakistan’s biennial defense exhibition IDEAS 2016 in November that Pakistan was working on indigenous anti-ship missiles. This followed an earlier revelation buried in a Ministry of Defence Production report of development of a shipboard anti-ship missile launcher.

In December, steel was cut for the first indigenous Azmat Block II missile boat, which in can be determined from the images released at the time will carry a larger anti-ship missile than the C-802A/CSS-N-8 Saccade that arms the Block I boats.

No confirmation of this missile’s identity has been forthcoming since then, but it sparked speculation that Pakistan’s indigenous anti-ship missile efforts were perhaps more advanced than realized.

The Babur offers the quickest route to an indigenous anti-ship missile, with a range exceeding the limitations of the Missile Technology Control Regime in the same vein as the United States' UGM/RGM-109B (TAS-M) Tomahawk.

It has already provided the basis of further developments. The updated Babur II was tested in December. The sub-launched Babur III, was successfully tested in January, enabling Pakistan to establish a second-strike capability.

Though the C-602 reportedly cruises at a height of 30 meters, test-area altitude for today’s test was restricted to 1,500 meters — more akin to the higher cruise altitude of the Babur.

A Navy spokesman was asked to comment on the missile’s identity, but there was no reply by press time.

Image in the link.

http://www.defensenews.com/articles/pakistan-conducts-anti-ship-missile-test

@The Deterrent @HRK @Oscar @شاھین میزایل @Arsalan

What do you guys make of this,
By the shape its look like a subsonic missile to me sir, may be it is zerb:pakistan:
 

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