India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-15/B05

Shaitan

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

all the help is welcome, even Chinese helped, as they motivated us to make this missile.
The biggest help came from the Sri Lankans.

Thank you Lankans. :yo:
 

sayareakd

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

Russia Is Helping India Extend Range of Missile, U.S. Aides Say - The New York Times

Lol after 14 tests and start of production they wake up to this fact. Btw if Russians would have helped us then Brahmos sub launch test would have come first. The very fact that it has delayed so long shows this is cent percent local product.


This is wake up call to all those who think that uncle is our friend. He is just using us and we should do the same.
 

sayareakd

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

Russia Is Helping India Extend Range of Missile, U.S. Aides Say - The New York Times

Lol after 14 tests and start of production they wake up to this fact. Btw if Russians would have helped us then Brahmos sub launch test would have come first. The very fact that it has delayed so long shows this is cent percent local product.


This is wake up call to all those who think that uncle is our friend. He is just using us and we should do the same.
 

Bheeshma

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

That news clip is from 14 years ago. Its from Apr 27 1998.
 

sayareakd

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

Lol on mobile i didt saw date...
 

A chauhan

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

I think its range is 1500 km with max payload and as you decrease the payload its range extends up to 2100 km isn't it so?
 

Bheeshma

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

With 1 tonne payload 900 odd km. 300 kg 1800 km per Arun_S
 

Daredevil

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

What is the weight of a 200KT thermo nuclear weapon?. That should be the payload that we have to assume all times when calculating Indian missiles range.
 

Sridhar

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

India's underwater N-missile passes final test
28 January 2013

Moving closer to its ambition of achieving the nuclear weapon triad - the capability to fire nuclear-capable missiles from the land, air and sea - India on Sunday successfully test-fired the underwater ballistic missile, K-15 (code-named B05), off the Visakhapatnam coast, marking an end to a series of developmental trials.

In its twelfth flight trial, the 10-metre tall submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) lifted off from a pontoon, rose to an altitude of 20 km and reached a distance of about 700 km as it splashed down in the waters of the Bay of Bengal near the pre-designated target point.

According to scientific advisor to the defence minister V K Saraswat, the missile was tested for its full range of 700 km and the mission met all its objectives. He said the impact accuracy of the medium range strategic missile was in single digits.

Officials of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) said the SLBM) was now ready for induction into the defence forces.

"The two-stage missile, which rapidly climbed to a 20-km altitude after being launched from the pontoon, was tested for its full range over 700-km. This was its last developmental test, in which all mission objectives were met," said an official.

"Now, the missile, which can carry a one-tonne nuclear warhead, will undergo a user-trial within a month before it's integrated into the submarine.

''Only the US, Russia, France and China have successfully developed SLBMs till now," he added.

The next major test is to test whether the K-15 missile can be launched from the 6,000-tonne INS Arihant, the country's first indigenous nuclear-powered submarine, which is now all set to undergo "sea-acceptance trials" after its miniature 83 MW pressurized light-water reactor goes "critical" at Visakhapatnam soon.

Built with four silos to carry 12 K-15s, or four of the 3,500-km range K-4 missiles under-development at present, INS Arihant will of course have to test-fire the 10-tonne missile during the sea trials before it can be said that India's long-awaited nuclear triad has finally become operational.

The first two legs of the triad, already in place with the armed forces, are the Agni series of missiles and fighters like Sukhoi-30MKIs and Mirage-2000s configured to deliver nuclear warheads.

The absence of an operational SLBM, however, has for long left a "big credibility gap" in the country's nuclear deterrence posture. Only a nuclear-powered submarine, which can stay underwater for extended periods, armed with nuclear-tipped missiles can provide a country with effective and difficult-to-detect "second or retaliatory strike capabilities".

domain-b.com : India's underwater N-missile passes final test
 

Daredevil

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

Why the K-15 missile success is BIG deal for India

The underwater leg of the nuclear triad has always been regarded as the most survivable. Going by the January 27 test, the K-15 missile is well up to the task. Ajai Shukla reports

Even in the visually spectacular field of missile testing, the sight of a submarine-launched missile breaking through the surface is a breathtaking one.

On Sunday, Defence Research and Development Organisation scientists cheered excitedly as their indigenous, submarine-launched ballistic missile leapt out of the water, its rocket motor fired soon after clearing the surface, and it soared off in a white plume to accurately strike a target 700 kilometres away.

To nobody's surprise, the underwater launch went exactly according to plan.

This missile, called in turn the K-15, the Shaurya and now the B-05, had already been launched 10 times from under water and thrice from land. This exacting test schedule is designed for assurance, since this is a missile that cannot afford to fail.

Until a better one is developed, this will be the backbone of India's underwater nuclear deterrence.

That means it will arm the INS Arihant, India's first and only nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarine, or SSBN.

Tipped with nuclear warheads, the K-15 will be launched from the Arihant only after a nuclear attack on India. New Delhi's "no-first-use" nuclear policy prohibits the pre-emptive use of nuclear weapons.

That means India's land-based and air-based nuclear weaponry, such as the Agni series of missiles, might already have been destroyed by a pre-emptive enemy nuclear attack.

The Arihant, and the B-05 missiles that it carries, are far more difficult to tackle, since they lurk underwater in complete secrecy.

The underwater leg of the nuclear triad (land-launched, air-launched and submarine-launched weapons) has always been regarded as the most survivable. It is the ultimate currency of a nuclear exchange.

Going by what the DRDO said about its own test, the B-05 is well up to the task.

"The missile, developed by DRDO, was launched from a pontoon and was tested for the full range. It met all the mission objectives. The parameters of the vehicle were monitored by radar all through the trajectory and terminal events took place exactly as envisaged," said a ministry of defence release.

The B-05 is no ordinary ballistic missile. Top DRDO scientists briefed Business Standard that it is not a ballistic missile at all.
It could better be characterised as a hypersonic cruise missile, since it remains within the earth's atmosphere.

A ballistic missile suffers from inherent disadvantages, since it is a relatively crude device, akin to a stone lobbed upwards, propelled by a rocket.

After the rocket burns out, gravity comes into play, pulling the missile warhead down towards the target. Buffeted by wind and re-entry forces, accuracy is a problem; and, since the ballistic missile's path is entirely predictable, shooting it down is relatively easy.

The Shaurya has overcome most of these issues.

Its solid-fuel, two-stage rocket accelerates the missile to six times the speed of sound before it reaches an altitude of 40 kilometres (125,000 feet), after which it levels out and cruises towards the target, powered by its onboard fuel.

In contrast to conventional ballistic missiles that cannot correct their course midway, the Shaurya is intelligent. Onboard navigation computers kick in near the target, guiding the missile to the target and eliminating errors that inevitably creep in during its turbulent journey.

"I would say the Shaurya is a hybrid propulsion missile", says Dr V K Saraswat, the DRDO chief, talking to Business Standard in 2010. "Like a ballistic missile, it is powered by solid fuel. And, like a cruise missile, it can guide itself right up to the target."

Making the B-05 even more survivable is its ability to manoeuvre, following a twisting path to the target that makes it very difficult to shoot it down. In contrast, a ballistic missile is predictable in its trajectory and gives away its target and its path to it.

The problem with the B-05 remains its relatively short range of just 750 kilometres.

While it could reach major cities in most countries if it were launched from just off the coast, it would necessitate a perilous submarine journey to the vicinity of the coastline.

Therefore, the DRDO is also developing a longer-range missile, dubbed the K-4, which will have a range of almost 4,000 kilometres.

An Indian SSBN armed with the K-4 missile would be able to strike most likely targets from a safe patrol location in the Bay of Bengal.


Why the K-15 missile success is BIG deal for India - Rediff.com News
 

arnabmit

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

So it is not a SLBM, but more of a Solid Fueled SLCM capable of doing "S" maneuvers in Azimuth Plane & Porpoise Maneuvers and hitting any target south of Multan if launched from territorial waters off Gujarat...

:notsure:

Rawalpindi & Islamabad needs to be within range for effective deterrence...

:hmm:
 

Armand2REP

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

So it is not a SLBM, but more of a Solid Fueled SLCM capable of doing "S" maneuvers in Azimuth Plane & Porpoise Maneuvers and hitting any target south of Multan if launched from territorial waters off Gujarat...

:notsure:

Rawalpindi & Islamabad needs to be within range for effective deterrence...

:hmm:
Yeah, it is not a ballistic missile. It is more like a long range Iskander.
 

sathya

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

After this, any one would think twice before laughing that after 50 odd tests, prithvi failed in testing.
It will keep everyone guessing.
International communities (neighborhood) might object even to genuine prithvi test.
Talk about threat without threatening.. :)
 

average american

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

After this, any one would think twice before laughing that after 50 odd tests, prithvi failed in testing.
It will keep everyone guessing.
International communities (neighborhood) might object even to genuine prithvi test.
Talk about threat without threatening.. :)
Just being on a Russian Sub is threatening...... Deadly Accident Aboard Russian Sub - YouTube

http://spb.org.ru/bellona/ehome/russia/nfl/nfl8.htm
 
Last edited:

sayareakd

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

Yeah, it is not a ballistic missile. It is more like a long range Iskander.
lets keep the confusion, my report says it is very very advance prithvi missile.
 

ashicjose

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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile BO-5

doc,

The canisterised missile is launched vertically, the nose cap prevents water from entering the 'air-intake' during the underwater flight. Once the missile emerges from the water, the sensors provide the "out of water command" and the nose cap is fired for turning the missile in the desired direction to hit the target

.
Sir,
How K-15 got air intakes ,as per my little knowledge ballistic missiles and rockets don't need air intakes and in terminal phase these air intakes may cause the war head to explode ( because of high temperature ).
 
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Re: India successfully tests submarine launched ballistic missile K-5/

Russia Is Helping India Extend Range of Missile, U.S. Aides Say - The New York Times

Lol after 14 tests and start of production they wake up to this fact. Btw if Russians would have helped us then Brahmos sub launch test would have come first. The very fact that it has delayed so long shows this is cent percent local product.

Russians said a while back Indian missile program has advanced to the point where
Russia can provide very little assistance, if anything I think Israelis are a bigger help.
 

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