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Russian volley-fire system becomes world's most efficient weapon of the type

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Russian volley-fire system becomes world's most efficient weapon of the type

It takes the Smerch unit only 38 seconds to volley-fire 12 rockets

The Russian volley-fire rocket system known as Smerch (Tornado) has no analogues in the world. The Smerch machine is usually made of six launchers and six transloaders (each transloader contains 12 rockets and has a crane to move them to the launcher). The unit is capable of delivering mines for the anti-tank and antipersonnel mining of a territory, destroying armored vehicles, fortified constructions and command posts.

One volley fire of 12 free 300 mm missiles covers the square of 650x650 meters. The commander of Russian missile troops, Vladimir Zaritsky, said that specialists were going to modernize the rocket system in order to increase its battling capacity by 20 percent.

Increasing the power of the unit is not the most important goal that engineers will be pursuing in their work. Considerable deviations in the trajectory of missiles have always been the weak point of all volley-fire systems, beginning from the era of the legendary Katyusha missile launcher. The drawback became the biggest disadvantage in the work of the US-made MLRS. The system could fire its missiles at the distance of only 30-40 kilometers. A further increase of the launching power would result in a considerable dispersion of missiles, which is detrimental to the battling efficiency.

Specialists of the Tula-based scientific and industrial enterprise Splav were apparently unaware of the circumstance, when they put forward the latest model of the Smerch unit to the arsenal of the Soviet Union Army in 1987. The range of its missiles outdistanced American achievements twice, whereas the target destruction precision (the dispersion of missiles) remained the same – 0.21 percent of the salvo range (about 150 meters).

Kuwait and United Arab Emirates paid attention to the battling capacity of the Smerch missile system in 1991, after the US-led operation against Iraq. The Arab authorities decided to acquire super-powerful weapons to secure themselves against a possible attack from Iraq.

The Russian defense industry presented a new version of the volley-fire system at a recent exhibition of arms and defense technologies, IDEX-2005, in Abu-Dhabi. The show presented the new model of the Smerch unit, outfitted with the target designation system.

“All volley-fire rocket and artillery systems have the reconnaissance problem. We found a very good solution to it. One may say that we inserted a spy plane in system's rockets. Unlike other types of aircraft, it is hard to down such a plane, because it is transferred to a battling area inside a rocket, comes through air defense systems very fast and provides the fire correction within about 20 minutes,” the chief engineer of the Splav industrial association, Nikolai Makarovets said.

It takes the Smerch unit only 38 seconds to volley-fire 12 rockets. Smerch has already proved its impressive destructive capacity during the anti-terrorist operation in the Northern Caucasus.

Russian engineers plan to amend the multiple launch rocket system further as well and outfit the Smerch machine with homing missiles. Such an addition will make the unit become the up-to-date high-precision weapon.
http://english.pravda.ru/science/tech/05-05-2005/8185-smnerch-0
 
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After nearly five years of negotiations, IANS reports that India finally signed a $500 million deal with Russia on December 31, 2005 for SPLAV's Smerch-M BM 9K58 long-range 300mm multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS). Compare them to India's older truck-mounted 122mm Grad rocket launchers, and the capability boost quickly becomes apparent. The Smerch-M contract includes 28 wheeled MAZ-543A vehicles with 12-tube 9A52-2 launchers, plus logistics supply and fire-control vehicles. The systems will arm two artillery regiments of 12 Smerch-Ms each, with 4 platforms being kept in reserve.

So, what kind of capabilities does this weapon bring to the table? It may not be the Soviet NKVD's dreaded World War 2 SMERSH ("death to spies") investigations units, who sometimes acted to stiffen defenders' resolve by waiting in vehicles with machine guns just behind the front lines. The Smerch 9K58s may stiffen resolve on the front lines for different reasons, however, and they may also end up being justly feared.


Smerch on display
(click to view full)The 48.5 ton Smerch version the Indian Army is acquiring is capable of firing six types of rockets to a maximum range of 70 km. This is approximately 40 km further than regional rival Pakistan's M109 self-propelled howitzers can fire. In addition, several of its rocket types have submunitions warheads that can cover wide areas with anti-armor or fragmentation munitions, neutralizing concentrations of armor and troops well beyond the range of any of India's present artillery systems. The 9M55C rocket even packs a 500-pound thermobaric (fuel-air explosive) warhead.

Novosti Press Agency notes that with the signing of the contract, India will become the third foreign country to receive the Smerch MLRS. Russia delivered 18 systems to Algeria in 1999, and 27 systems to Kuwait in 1995-1996.

Defence Ministry sources said that the Smerch contract was divided into three stages over three years, with deliveries scheduled to begin later this year with the arrival of launchers and 'basic' rockets. More advanced version launchers and the guided rockets would arrive in subsequent stages, with deliveries to be completed some time in early 2008.

Tunguska M1 LLAD
(click to view full)In other news, IANS notes that a separate contract for 28 Tungushka M1 self-propelled gun and missile systems for low-level air defence is expected to be signed before the end of 2005-06.

The Tunguska-M1 vehicle carries eight 9M311-M1 (SA-19 Grison) surface-to-air missiles with semi-automatic radar command to line-of-sight guidance. Range is from 15 to 6,000m for ground targets and 15 to 10,000m for air targets. Two twin-barrel 30mm anti-aircraft guns are also mounted on the vehicle. These guns have a maximum firing rate of 5,000 rounds per minute and a range of 3 km against air targets, or 4 km against ground targets. A target acquisition radar and target tracking radar, optical sight, and digital computing system guides these weapons, with a detection range of 18 km and a tracking range of 16 km.

Four of India's artillery regiments have already been operating around 80 Tungushka M1 systems since the late 1990s.
 
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