RBS 70
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RBS 70 | |
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RBS70 SAM |
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Type | short-range man-portable air-defence system |
Service history | |
In service | 1977 |
Production history | |
Manufacturer | Saab Bofors Dynamics |
Specifications | |
Weight | 15 kg |
Length | 1.32 m |
Diameter | 106 mm |
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Warhead | 1.1 kg Combined with prefragmentation and shaped charge (armour piercing) |
Detonation mechanism |
Adaptive proximity fuze function with 3 selectable modes (Off, Normal, Small target) |
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Engine | Booster and sustainer with smokeless solid propellant |
Wingspan | 32 cm |
Operational range |
250 m–8 km |
Flight altitude | 4,000 m |
Speed | Mach 2 (Mark 2) Mach 1.6 (Mark 1 |
Guidance system |
Laser beam riding missile |
Launch platform |
tripod, weapon platform (ASRAD-R) and warship |
RBS 70 (Robotsystem 70) is a Swedish MANPADS designed for combat in all climate zones and with little to no support from other forces. It uses the RB 70 missile which is also in use in a number of other Swedish missile systems.
Contents |
[edit] History
RBS 70 was developed to supply the Swedish air defense with a low-cost, easy-to-use and effective shortrange SAM system. Before RBS 70 the mainstay of Swedish air defense was American HAWK systems (RBS 77 and RBS 97 "Swedish HAWK"), American Redeyes (RBS 69) and the Swedish Bofors m/48 AAA. The main reason for choosing to base air defense around a short-range, low-cost system is that at the time the doctrine of the Swedish Army was to fight a war where mobility and low maintenance are of great importance.
[edit] Current status
RBS 70 is a short-range man-portable (MANPADS), laser-guided missile system. The operator (skytt in Swedish, literally meaning "shooter") receives instructions on the position of the target from a local SLT (combat-control terminal) which is about the size of a laptop. The SLT in turn receives information through an encoded radio broadcast made by either a radar station (PS 90, PS 70) or some other information gathering source. When the target has been acquired by the operator he turns off the safety, which switches on the main laser and sends out an IFF signal and if positive makes firing impossible. If the operator is confident that he has a good track he fires. The missile then flies in the beam of the laser from the sight, adjusting its position constantly to stay within the beam. This puts a lot of pressure on the operator who needs to have a very steady aim. If the missile is guided to within 30 meters of the target a kill is 95% assured.
The exhaust is vented in the missile's midsection and the laser beam riding system is fitted in the tail, where it is extremely difficult to jam.
RB 70 has been constantly updated and improved, the first versions (Mk 0) had a short range and limited kill capabilities but this was much improved in later versions. Mk 1 and Mk 2 followed shortly and are the standard RB 70 with a range of 5,000–6,000 m and a ceiling of 3,000 m. RBS 70 is a product of Saab Bofors Dynamics and is operational in 15 customer countries, on all continents and in arctic, desert, and tropical environments.
The latest development is the BOLIDE system. It has a range of 8 km and can reach an altitude of 5 km. The BOLIDE has also a new warhead, which is both fragmentating and has a shaped charge, the adaptable proximity fuse gives it full effectiveness against a wider variety of targets, and new reprogrammable electronics gives it the possibility to engage attack cruise missiles and UAVs. The BOLIDE missile is an RBS 70 Mk 2 upgrade that is faster (Mach 2 vs Mach 1.6), with a range up to 8 km (4.8 miles). The BOLIDE deliveries were initiated in 2005
[edit] Operators
- Argentina
- Australia
- Bahrain
- Bangladesh
- Brazil
- Czech Republic[1]
- Finland[2]
- Indonesia
- Iran
- Ireland
- Latvia
- Lithuania [3]
- Mexico
- Norway
- Pakistan
- Singapore
- Sweden
- Thailand
- Tunisia
- United Arab Emirates
- Venezuela
[edit] References
- ^ "Register of the transfers of major conventional weapons from Sweden 1995-2005", Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
- ^ http://www.saabgroup.com/en/MediaRelations/Pressreleases/Pressrelease.htm?PressreleaseId=142446 Saab sells air defence to Finland worth 600 million SEK, 2007-01-18 11:07
- ^ "Giddy over air-defense system", Baltic News Service, November 17, 2004.
[edit] See also
- Bofors RBS15 Surface-to-Surface Missile
- SA-18 Grouse (Igla) Surface-to-Air Missile
- FIM-92 Stinger Surface-to-Air Missile