Replacement of Vikhr: Hermes

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This also being I guess you can say a Western equivelant of JCM and Brimstone.


KBP is introducing the Hermes, a new family of missile able to meet the needs of all three services and aimed at eventually replacing the Vikhr while providing longer stand-off ranges. The cornerstone of the variants is their common launcher and missile onto which various guidance elements and booster are grafted depending on the mission, which can be anti-armour, anti-ship and even air-defence against slow flying targets. For example the nominal 18 km range can be extended to 100 km with the use of a 210 mm diameter booster.
While the exact level of development reached by the different variants is still unclear, it appears that the missile itself was qualified in January 2004. It carries a 28 kg high explosive warhead and, for short-range missions (i.e. up to 18 km) relies on its own inertial guidance system. For longer ranges, a datalink is used with final attack performed by the semi-active laser seeker.
The vehicle-launched Hermes will typically be able to engage targets at a range of 40 km and will use a radar and a radio datalink. In the airborne version, known as Hermes A, the inertial system is used to guide the missile to the area where the target will be locked-on by the seeker. Key here is for the launch helicopter to remain outside of the range of typical shorads units. This version carries no datalink.
The shipborne version, designated Hermes-K, can be fired from fast patrol boat-sized platforms and uses both the inertial guidance system (for 15 to 18 km missions and, like the land version, a radio command system comprising a radar and a transmitter to deliver commands to the missile for 40 km missions. It will be able to reach out to 100 km with the of 210 booster. According to KBP the Hermes K can engage surface targets of maximum 100 tons displacement with one missile and incapacitate it by destroying vital units (conning tower, reconnaissance devices, and storehouse for ammunition). It can also engage low-velocity air targets such as helicopters.


JANE'S MISSILES AND ROCKETS - MARCH 01, 2004

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Hermes - the 40km-range tank killer
Piotr Butowski

Konstruktorskoye Byuro Priborostroyeniya (KBP) instrument design bureau of Tula, Russia, has completed tests of its new Hermes long-range anti-tank guided missile, which is now ready for series production, writes Piotr Butowski. It is being offered in variants with maximum ranges of 15km, 40km or 100km.

KBP, which is headed by Arkadiy Shipunow, first announced the Hermes system in early 1999. In summer 2003, the bureau reported that Hermes missiles would be used on the Ka-52 attack helicopter instead of the Vikhr missile system. It has now released the first data of the system, plus illustrations of the hardware.

The requirements for the Hermes system were:

a range exceeding that of the weapons defending a typical target;
the ability to penetrate 1,000mm of armour; and
round-the-clock and all-weather operation ability.
The missile guidance system is dual-mode. In the initial phase of flight, the missile is controlled by inertial navigation system (for version with range 15km) or by radio commands (for versions with range 40km and 100km).
A semi-active laser seeker is used for terminal homing in all versions. Laser designation of the target may be carried out by the launch vehicle, or by an external illuminator located near the target by ground forces, or aboard a reconnaissance helicopter or unmanned air vehicle. The fire unit has two channels, which allow the simultaneous launch and guidance of two missiles.

Two alternative patterns of terminal-homing head are already under test - a passive infrared seeker and active radar seeker. These will allow the creation of fire-and-forget variants, up to 12 of which could be launched in a single salvo.

The missile's high-explosive/fragmentation warhead has an explosive power equivalent to 15kg of TNT.

There are several versions of Hermes system; these have different ranges and are based on various platforms. Tests have already begun of a missile with a more powerful booster. This would have a range of 100km.

The ground-based system consists of a multi-round missile launcher installed on a cross-country vehicle. The vehicle also has a radar to track the missile in flight, and radio command transmitter to adjust the flight path. A separate command-surveillance vehicle has a retractable mast that carries electro-optical sensors used to search for, identify, track and designate the target. When shooting from positions which do not offer a direct line of sight, additional reconnaissance and target designation sensors are needed.

This version of Hermes has a maximum range of 40km or more, rather than the 3-8km of a typical anti-tank missile, so can be regarded as a tactical missile rather than a pure anti-tank weapon. It can also be used against stationary targets such a bunkers, small ships of 100-ton displacement, and slow- and low-flying air targets such as helicopters and unmanned air vehicles.

For coastal defence, the system can be vehicle-mounted, or deployed as a static installation.

Hermes-A (Aviatsionnyi = airborne) is intended to replace the Vikhr missile system for combat helicopters, which was only made in small numbers. It is currently being tested on the Kamov Ka-52, the only pattern of helicopter to have been armed with the system. The range of Hermes-A is 15-18km, which is well beyond that of typical anti-aircraft threats to which a helicopters is likely to face over the battlefield. The helicopter-mounted aiming system includes a millimetre radar, plus an electro-optical turret with thermal-imaging and television cameras, and a two-channel laser target designator combined with automatic target-tracking device.

Hermes-K (Korabelnyi = shipborne) is for use aboard small naval vessels. The version for use on patrol craft is designed for use against sea targets at ranges of up to 15km and relies on homing guidance. A longer-range version is available for use on landing craft and larger warships.

KBP Hermes missile specification Maximum range 15km, 40km or 100km
Mid-course guidance Inertial (short-range version) or radio command (long-range versions)
Terminal homing Semi-active laser
Maximum speed 1,000m/s
Mid-course speed for 40km range missile500m/s
Missile weight (with launch container)110kg
Warhead weight 28kg
Armour penetration capability Up to 1,000 mm behind explosive reactive armour
Missile calibre 130mm
Booster calibre, standard 170mm
Booster calibre, extended range 210mm
Missile length (with launch container) 3,500mm

http://www.armadainternational.com/04-1/bilder/dRAKMY.jpg

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There was a long discussion on this several months ago with PiBu; do a search and you can find it.