P-800 Oniks

Yakhont/Onyx missile

Type anti-ship cruise missile
Service history
In service since 1999
Production history
Manufacturer NPO Mashinostroyeniya
Specifications
Weight 3,000 kg
Length 8.9 m
Diameter 0.7 m

Warhead 300 kg

Engine ramjet using kerosene liquid fuel
Wingspan 1.7 m
Operational
range
120 to 300 km depending on altitude
Flight altitude 5 meters or higher
Speed Mach 2.5
Guidance
system
active-passive, radar seeker head
Launch
platform
naval ships, fixed-wing aircraft, coastal installations

The P-800 Oniks (Russian: П-800 Оникс; English: Oniks), also known in export markets as Yakhont (Russian: Яхонт; English: ruby or sapphire), is a Russian/Soviet supersonic anti-ship cruise missile developed by NPO Mashinostroyeniya as a ramjet version of P-80 Zubr. Its GRAU designation is 3M55. Development reportedly started in 1983, and by 2001 allowed the launch of the missile from land, sea, air and submarine. The missile has the NATO reporting codename SS-N-26. It is reportedly a replacement for the P-270 Moskit, but possibly also for the P-700 Granit. The P-800 was reportedly used as the basis for the joint Russian-Indian supersonic missile the PJ-10 BrahMos.

Sergei Prikhodko, senior adviser to the Russia President, has said that Russia intends to deliver P-800 to Syria.[1] Syria received 2 Bastion missile system with 72 missiles [2]

Contents

Operators

 Russia
 Indonesia 
4 VLS (vertical launching system) mounted on Van Speijk Class KRI Oswald Siahaan (354)[3]
 Vietnam 
land-based coastal defense system[4]
 Syria[5]

Future operators

References

External links