|
Tunguska-M1 is a gun/missile
system for low-level air defence. The system was designed
by the KBP Instrument Design Bureau in Tula, Russia and is
manufactured by the Ulyanovsk Mechanical Plant, Ulyanovsk,
Russia. It can engage targets while stationary and on the
move, using missiles for long-range targets and guns for close-in
defence. It is designed for defence against both fixed-wing
aircraft and helicopters and can also fire on ground targets.
Tunguska entered service with
the Russian army in 1988 and has been exported to Germany,
India, Peru and Ukraine. Morocco ordered 12 Tunguska M1 systems
in December 2004.
Armament
The Tunguska-M1 vehicle carries
eight 9M311-M1 surface-to-air missiles. The missile (NATO
designation SA-19 Grison) has semi-automatic radar command
to line-of-sight guidance, weighs 40kg with a 9kg warhead.
It is 2.5m long with a diameter of 1.7m and wingspan of 2.2m.
The missile's maximum speed is 900m/s and can engage targets
travelling at speeds up to 500m/s. 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 mounted on the vehicle. These guns have a maximum
firing rate of 5,000 rounds per minute and a range of 3,000m
against air targets. This extends to 4,000m against ground
targets.
Fire Control
The system has target acquisition
radar and target tracking radar, optical sight, digital computing
system, tilt angle measuring system and navigation equipment.
Radar detection range is 18km and tracking range is 16km.
Vehicle
The Tunguska-M1 system is mounted
on a 34t tracked vehicle with multi-fuel engine. It has hydromechanical
transmission, hydropneumatic suspension which allows for changing
road clearance and hydraulic track-tensioning. The armoured
turret has both laying and stabilisation drives and power
supply. Air-conditioning, heating and filtration systems are
fitted.
A Tunguska-M1 battery is composed
of up to six vehicles and will also include a transloader
as well as maintenance and training facilities.
The armoured turret has both
laying and stabilisation drives and power supply. Air-conditioning,
heating and filtration systems are fitted. A Tunguska-M1 battery
is composed of up to six vehicles and will also include a
transloader as well as maintenance and training facilities.
|