Air Defense Anti-Tank System

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ADATS test firing
ADATS
General characteristics
Crew 3 (commander, driver, system operator)
Length 4.86 m
Width 2.69 m
Height
Weight 15.8 tonnes
Armour and armament
Armour 12-38 mm aluminium
Main armament 8 ADATS missiles
Secondary armament -
Mobility
Power plant 6-cyl two-stroke diesel General Motors//Detroit Diesel 6V53
212 hp (158 kW)
Suspension torsion-bar
Road speed 58 km/h
Power/weight 13 hp/tonne
Range 400 km

The Air Defense Anti-Tank System (ADATS) is a dual-purpose short range surface-to-air and anti-tank missile system based on the M113A2 vehicle. It is manufactured by the Swiss Oerlikon-Contraves, a member of the Rheinmetall Defence Group.

After an extensive competition, the ADATS system was selected by the U.S. Army for the FAAD program under the designation MIM-146 for the missile, but ultimately the FAAD contract was cancelled in the early 1990s after the end of the Cold War. It is currently in service with the Canadian Army and in Thailand (Shelter version). The ADATS missile is a laser-guided supersonic missile with a range of 10 kilometres, with an electro-optical sensor with TV and FLIR. The carrying vehicle has also a conventional 2D radar with an effective range of over 25 kilometres.

In September 2005, the Canadian Government and the Canadian Forces announced a modernization program, transforming the ADATS and associated command, control and communications systems into a Multi-Mission Effects Vehicle (MMEV). Not only will the MMEV retain and enhance ADATS capability (85% or better engagement success rate) to meet new threats, but it will be mounted on a LAV III wheeled armoured vehicle. This will be fitted with a 3D radar, non-line-of-sight (NLOS) missile (Using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) to gather required intelligence and target location at a range of 8 km or more) and low-cost precision kill (LCPK) missile (Fireable on direct shot at an 8 km+ range), based on a 2.75-inch rocket and advanced Battle Management Command and Control Communication Computer and Information (BMC41), including Link 11/16, to provide the third dimension to the ISTAR infrastructure of the Army. The flexible ground-based multi-mission system will be providing military commanders with a homeland defence and expeditionary air, land, and maritime forces capability for ground-based air defence/air-space coordination and long-range direct fire/NLOS support for ground engagement to defend against asymmetric and conventional threats.

[edit] MMEV weapon systems

The MMEV will feature a wide array of weapons for different engagements. Its direct fire with low cost rockets will be able to take down direct targets at an 8+ km range with an astonishing damage effect as it will fire multiple rockets on targets. The Promotional videos of the MMEV shows it firing eight rockets at a single target without missing once. Note that the dub target was not moving, but the attack left only small debris of the armor leaving no chance for any enemy vehicle encountered.

Its second ground-fire function features a guided missile, again with an 8+ km range that is guided onto the target. This can be used to engage long-range targets like light artillery but doing heavy damage. The non-line-of-sight capability (NLOS) allows the ADATS crew to use unmanned aerial vehicles to spot targets under cover and fire its laser-guided missile over any obstacle.

The MMEV also features the regular ADATS air-defence system which can fire at a 10 km range to engage helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft.

It is believed that two C6 machine guns will be mounted on the MMEV, for self-defence.

[edit] Missile

  • Length: 2.05 m
  • Diameter: 125 mm
  • Launch weight: approx. 51 kg
  • Speed: Mach 3+
  • Range: 10 km
  • Ceiling: 7,000 m
  • Warhead: 12.5 kg HE fragmentation/shaped charge, impact and proximity fuze.
  • Penetration: 900 mm RHA
  • Guidance: Digitally coded laser beam-riding.

[edit] External links

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