Anonymous Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Hi LOMAC- Enthusiasts! Why the Vikhr-Missiles has a spirally flight path to the target? Never seen this on other Missiles. In Comanche vs. Hokum they have an direkt flight path... Thanks for answer the question and sorry for my bad Englisch.
SAM-Smasher Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Its the real deal physics and flight intelligance of the vikhr, Commanche vs Hokum did not model this, but the good people at ED have kindly put this into LOMAC, which is REALLY impressive stuff!!! :) "I love smashing the crap out of those buggers on the ground who keep making a beeping sound on my RWR..... the bells the bells!!!!!!.... erm yeah.... I like destroying SAM sites, thats the main point"
Joe Kurr Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 AFAIK it's because the missiles only have control surfaces in one plain, so in order to steer in other directions, they rotate. Dutch Flanker Display Team | LLTM 2010 Tiger Spirit Award
SAM-Smasher Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Yep you hit the nail on the head there I think Joe :wink: "I love smashing the crap out of those buggers on the ground who keep making a beeping sound on my RWR..... the bells the bells!!!!!!.... erm yeah.... I like destroying SAM sites, thats the main point"
BearF_CO_159th Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Not sure on this (will need to do some research) but it may also be because of the guidance system the Vikhr uses. The flight path is similar to the SA-7 in its spiralling. The SA-7 spirals due to the seeker head using a rotating disk with a 'cake slice' segment missing. As this disk rotates the IR sig of the target appears through the missing 'slice'. The seeker head then steers the missile towards it. As the missile is constantly correcting itself it spirals to the target. Is the Vikhr SACLOS (like the TOW) or laser (like the HELLFIRE)?
SAM-Smasher Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 The Vikhr as far as I know is a LASER weapon, would I be right in saying the Vikhr can be tracked to a target mid flight? "I love smashing the crap out of those buggers on the ground who keep making a beeping sound on my RWR..... the bells the bells!!!!!!.... erm yeah.... I like destroying SAM sites, thats the main point"
IKG200 Swierczek Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Wikhr is radio-guided in the first phase of flight, then it is guided IN the guiding laser beam - it is not aiming laser light reflected from the target as majority of laser guided missiles (as Kh29L for example). Laser-guided are versions 9M127, 9M227, 9M127F, 9M127G, 9M227G1. 9M227M1, 9M227F, 9M227G2 are infra-red guided. "it's because the missiles only have control surfaces in one plain, so in order to steer in other directions" => are you sure Joe Kurr? On photos and drawing available the controls seems to be "normal" - as in each other missile Maybe the answer for the question is, that if the missile has to stay in the guiding laser beam, which is constantly changing its position (as it is linking target and aircraft, which is moving), the missile just try to adjust its flight path to stay in the beam .... I don't know ... just guessing :D
GGTharos Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 It only has one-axis control, and that's why it spirals. Beamriders don't spiral because they're riding a beam ... they fly straight in it. The Vikhr is a beam-rider. It spirals due to the control surface setup ;) [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Reminder: SAM = Speed Bump :D I used to play flight sims like you, but then I took a slammer to the knee - Yoda
IKG200 Swierczek Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 I agree BBTharos they fly straight to the target inside the beam... there is only one condition... the carrier emiting laser beam has to be in relative stillnes in relation to the target - that means it could be chopper in the hover or aircraft diving straight onto the target - then the laser beam is not moving in space. But what if the carrier/emiter is constantly moving in relation to the target...? then the position of the beam in space is contantly changing. If the missile "wants" to stay inside, it should follow the beam This is what common sense is telling
GGTharos Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 I agree BBTharos they fly straight to the target inside the beam... there is only one condition... the carrier emiting laser beam has to be in relative stillnes in relation to the target - that means it could be chopper in the hover or aircraft diving straight onto the target - then the laser beam is not moving in space. But what if the carrier/emiter is constantly moving in relation to the target...? then the position of the beam in space is contantly changing. If the missile "wants" to stay inside, it should follow the beam This is what common sense is telling And it does. THe AIM-7 for example is a beam-rider until terminal guidance. [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Reminder: SAM = Speed Bump :D I used to play flight sims like you, but then I took a slammer to the knee - Yoda
ED Team Chizh Posted November 11, 2004 ED Team Posted November 11, 2004 Vikhr missile not have radio guidance only a laser-beam. Vikhr missile not have a head seeker instead it have a tail sensors which locate a laser beam (actually grid) from laser designator “Prichal” integrated into “Shkval” system. Vikhr have a one axis control system with only two constrained control surfaces (other two fixed). Therefore missile must rotate for beam guidance. Единственный урок, который можно извлечь из истории, состоит в том, что люди не извлекают из истории никаких уроков. (С) Джордж Бернард Шоу
DayGlow Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 (edited) I agree BBTharos they fly straight to the target inside the beam... there is only one condition... the carrier emiting laser beam has to be in relative stillnes in relation to the target - that means it could be chopper in the hover or aircraft diving straight onto the target - then the laser beam is not moving in space. But what if the carrier/emiter is constantly moving in relation to the target...? then the position of the beam in space is contantly changing. If the missile "wants" to stay inside, it should follow the beam This is what common sense is telling And it does. THe AIM-7 for example is a beam-rider until terminal guidance. An early version of the AIM-7 was a beam rider, but they are all SARH. ________ Yamaha YSR50 Edited January 22, 2011 by DayGlow "It takes a big man to admit he is wrong...I'm not a big man" Chevy Chase, Fletch Lives 5800X3D - 64gb ram - RTX3080 - Windows 11
GGTharos Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 I agree BBTharos they fly straight to the target inside the beam... there is only one condition... the carrier emiting laser beam has to be in relative stillnes in relation to the target - that means it could be chopper in the hover or aircraft diving straight onto the target - then the laser beam is not moving in space. But what if the carrier/emiter is constantly moving in relation to the target...? then the position of the beam in space is contantly changing. If the missile "wants" to stay inside, it should follow the beam This is what common sense is telling And it does. THe AIM-7 for example is a beam-rider until terminal guidance. An early version of the AIM-7 was a beam rider, but they are all SARH. That's what I said (I think) ... it rides the beam 'till terminal guidance takes over :) [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Reminder: SAM = Speed Bump :D I used to play flight sims like you, but then I took a slammer to the knee - Yoda
IKG200 Swierczek Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Thanks Chizh! That solves the problem :D BTW its very interesting that only one axis is controlled without affecting accuracy Just checked it in LOMAC 1.02. Wikhr flies straight ahead to the target. I suppose this is due to simplificated modelling of this missile. Am I right? Concerning Wikhr guidance - the information about it was in a book about russian rocket/missile weaponry issued in Poland in 2000. That is the source of the mistake among polish users I think :D
ThirdELTPoznan Posted November 11, 2004 Posted November 11, 2004 Thanks Chizh! That solves the problem :D BTW its very interesting that only one axis is controlled without affecting accuracy Just checked it in LOMAC 1.02. Wikhr flies straight ahead to the target. I suppose this is due to simplificated modelling of this missile. Am I right? Concerning Wikhr guidance - the information about it was in a book about russian rocket/missile weaponry issued in Poland in 2000. That is the source of the mistake among polish users I think :D Vikhir missiles (those mounted on Su-25T) come from older types of AT missiles. AT-16 comes from AT-9 which was modernisation of AT-6 missile which in fact had both radio and laser guidance. Check this topic: http://forum.lockon.ru/viewtopic.php?t=2179 GROM- Grupa Reagowania Operacyjno Manewrowego
ED Team Chizh Posted November 11, 2004 ED Team Posted November 11, 2004 Just checked it in LOMAC 1.02. Wikhr flies straight ahead to the target. I suppose this is due to simplificated modelling of this missile. Am I right? Yes. Some things, for example a flight trajectory of anti-tank missiles have been simplified. Now we have decided to simulate a real trajectory of this missile. By the way many other things the Soviet anti-tank one-axis missiles “Phagot”, “Konkurs”, “Kornet”, “Metis”, etc, have also flight trajectory. This is a anti-tank “Metis” missile with two control surfaces (one-axis) only. Единственный урок, который можно извлечь из истории, состоит в том, что люди не извлекают из истории никаких уроков. (С) Джордж Бернард Шоу
Avimimus Posted November 17, 2004 Posted November 17, 2004 "Laser-guided are versions 9M127, 9M227, 9M127F, 9M127G, 9M227G1. 9M227M1, 9M227F, 9M227G2 are infra-red guided. " Where did you get these versions? I am not sure it is accurate. There are only two versions of the Vikhr I know about the 9A1472 (9m127?) and its improved M version. There may also be a thermobaric warhead but don't count on it. Western authorities have believed that every missile since the 9M114 (At-6 Spiral) has semi-active laser homing. They are wrong, no known Russian ant-tank missile employs this guidance. The 9A1472 is a laser beam rider and completely different from the 9M114/120 Shturm/Ataka complex (AT-6/AT-9). May books in the west either say that the 9A1472 is unguided or more often they lump it in with the 9M114 and 9M120 and call the whole system Vikhr and say it has semi-active laser beam riding. This is a product of Cold War. The spiral motion may allow the missile to do a "blind-mans dance" toward the center of the laser beam -allowing it to keep up with the changed position of a moving platform.
ED Team Yo-Yo Posted November 18, 2004 ED Team Posted November 18, 2004 " The spiral motion may allow the missile to do a "blind-mans dance" toward the center of the laser beam -allowing it to keep up with the changed position of a moving platform. No, it is only a side effect of the one-channel steering... besides it's not a "laser beam" - it must be a modulated laser raster because there's no way for the missile to learn it's relative position with its back sensors usuing a single beam. Ніщо так сильно не ранить мозок, як уламки скла від розбитих рожевих окулярів There is nothing so hurtful for the brain as splinters of broken rose-coloured spectacles. Ничто так сильно не ранит мозг, как осколки стекла от разбитых розовых очков (С) Me
Avimimus Posted November 18, 2004 Posted November 18, 2004 " The spiral motion may allow the missile to do a "blind-mans dance" toward the center of the laser beam -allowing it to keep up with the changed position of a moving platform. No, it is only a side effect of the one-channel steering... besides it's not a "laser beam" - it must be a modulated laser raster because there's no way for the missile to learn it's relative position with its back sensors usuing a single beam. Wow! It sounds like you know something about this!! Could you answer a couple of questions? What is the service designation of the Vikhr, how does it differ from the -M version?
ED Team Yo-Yo Posted November 18, 2004 ED Team Posted November 18, 2004 " The spiral motion may allow the missile to do a "blind-mans dance" toward the center of the laser beam -allowing it to keep up with the changed position of a moving platform. No, it is only a side effect of the one-channel steering... besides it's not a "laser beam" - it must be a modulated laser raster because there's no way for the missile to learn it's relative position with its back sensors usuing a single beam. Wow! It sounds like you know something about this!! Could you answer a couple of questions? What is the service designation of the Vikhr, how does it differ from the -M version? Sounds a little bit strange...but I never had an interest in those particular things... my work - to solve problems in general :) Ніщо так сильно не ранить мозок, як уламки скла від розбитих рожевих окулярів There is nothing so hurtful for the brain as splinters of broken rose-coloured spectacles. Ничто так сильно не ранит мозг, как осколки стекла от разбитых розовых очков (С) Me
Tranquil Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 The unusual flight regieme may also help defeat tactical anti-missile systems and active protection systems. Supersonic velocitys also decrease the chance of interception. Also i believe the guidance system may reduce the effects of battlefield obscurants, like smoke, dust etc. As the missile is guided from the rear, rather than homing on a laser spot. I would suspect laser warning systems would have trouble detecting the guidance laser. Assuming this is all correct, i think this could be the 'best' anti-tank missile currently in production.
GGTharos Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 Why would they have any trouble detecting the laser? Those things are pretty bright any way you cut it, there's no hiding it from the target. Obscurants will also work; their purpose isn't to deflect or diffuse the laser as much as it is to confuse the device that is pointing the laser at the target and cause it to lose lock, be that a human or computer that's doing the guiding. Anti-missile weapons aren't an issue; tanks don't use'em AFAIK, and if they did, they're actually frighteningly effective as of ten years ago. [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Reminder: SAM = Speed Bump :D I used to play flight sims like you, but then I took a slammer to the knee - Yoda
ED Team Yo-Yo Posted November 19, 2004 ED Team Posted November 19, 2004 Why would they have any trouble detecting the laser? Those things are pretty bright any way you cut it, there's no hiding it from the target. Obscurants will also work; their purpose isn't to deflect or diffuse the laser as much as it is to confuse the device that is pointing the laser at the target and cause it to lose lock, be that a human or computer that's doing the guiding. Anti-missile weapons aren't an issue; tanks don't use'em AFAIK, and if they did, they're actually frighteningly effective as of ten years ago. Russian tanks and armoured vehicles do use (or better to say CAN USE) active anti-missile and anti-shell system "Arena" but they are short-range systems so the spiral flight-path ain't effective. The spiral path as I wrote has no use - the main feature is reducing caliber, weight and required energy for control-surface actuator (one instead two). The back-sensor guiding is more preferrable than reflected spot because of less laser power required. Also I think that onboard pointing device is more capable to extrapolate or predict target position than self-guidance system if obscurants are present (for a certain time of course). Ніщо так сильно не ранить мозок, як уламки скла від розбитих рожевих окулярів There is nothing so hurtful for the brain as splinters of broken rose-coloured spectacles. Ничто так сильно не ранит мозг, как осколки стекла от разбитых розовых очков (С) Me
GGTharos Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 Well, like I said, there are pros/cons to either method ... with painting you have problems like 'flashilighting' etc ... But anyway ... describe Arena, I neevr heard of it :D [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Reminder: SAM = Speed Bump :D I used to play flight sims like you, but then I took a slammer to the knee - Yoda
Iron Legionnaire Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 http://armor.kiev.ua/fofanov/Tanks/EQP/arena.html Basically, it's a multi-function millimeter-band radar linked to a countermeasure system that fires small grenades at any ATGMs on an intercept course w/ the tank. Perhaps it would be more accurate to call the countermeasures "claymores," considering they unleash shrapnel in a directed blast, rather than simply all over the place. Edit: Another link w/ various active and passive countermeasure systems, including the predecessors of Arena. http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/docs/3aps98.pdf
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