*** Welcome to piglix ***

Umkhonto missile

Umkhonto
Umkhonto 2.JPG
Umkhonto-R, Umkhonto-IR and Umkhonto-CLOS missiles
Type Surface-to-air missile
Place of origin South Africa
Service history
Used by South Africa, Finland
Production history
Manufacturer Denel Dynamics
Specifications
Weight 130 kg (290 lb)
Length 3.32 m (10.9 ft)
Diameter 180 mm (7.1 in)
Warhead 23 kg (51 lb)

Wingspan 500 mm (20 in)
Operational
range
20 km (12 mi)(Umkhonto-IR)
30 km (19 mi) (Umkhonto-ER-IR)
60 km (37 mi)(Umkhonto-R)
Flight altitude 8 km (5.0 mi)(Umkhonto-IR)
12 km (7.5 mi) (Umkhonto-ER-IR)
15 km (9.3 mi)(Umkhonto-R)
Speed Mach 2
Guidance
system
All-aspect infra-red, command update fire and forget
Launch
platform
Naval Vertical launch system, Ground-based Launcher System

The Umkhonto (Zulu: spear) is a South African family of modern short- to medium-range, all-weather-capable vertical launch (VLS) surface-to-air missiles (SAM) manufactured by South Africa's Denel Dynamics (formerly known as Kentron). The missile and associated subsystems are supplied as a missile group for easy integration into naval combat suites or ground-based air defence systems.

Umkhonto has been designed to counter a wide variety of airborne threats, such as: multiple combat aircraft (fixed-wing or helicopter), anti-ship missiles, anti-radiation missiles, UAVs and drones as well as supersonic cruise missiles. When coupled with a modern air-defence system and multi-function surveillance track and guidance radars, the Umkhonto missile system has the capability to simultaneously engage multiple targets during saturation attacks.

Umkhonto is available in three variants, a short-range infrared homing (Umkhonto-IR), a medium-range infrared homing (Umkhonto-ER-IR) and a beyond-visual-range radar homing version (Umkhonto-R).

Development of the system began in 1993, after the failure to introduce into service and market the ZA-HVM short-range SAM (together with ZA-35). The first Ground-based system tests were completed in July 2005 and the system was judged to be shore-qualified. The tests included using Denel Dynamics Skua subsonic target drones equipped with telemetry sensors. Test flights flew different trajectory profiles, including low-flying, walking and exercising collision course evasive action.

The first successful launch from a ship was carried out on board the South Africa Navy Valour-class frigate SAS Amatola on the 23 November 2005. The missile was launched at a Denel Skua subsonic target drone near Cape Agulhas. Test launches were repeated a week later. Instead of a warhead, missiles were equipped with telemetry data transmission units. According to the telemetry, both tests were assessed as hits.


...
Wikipedia

...