Fenrir Posté(e) le 8 avril 2006 Share Posté(e) le 8 avril 2006 D'accord pas taper... Mon plan d'interception tombe à l'eau (mauvaise blague je sais) si la portée est bien de 7.5km, la Schval est sur ca cible en 1.25 minute. Ca va donner des sueurs froides aux escorteurs des PAN. Lien vers le commentaire Partager sur d’autres sites More sharing options...
karim1218 Posté(e) le 24 juillet 2006 Share Posté(e) le 24 juillet 2006 au fait vous les francais vous allez etre decus :lol: l'iran a aquis de la chine la licence pour fabriquee le FM-80 qui est lui meme une copie du crotale ;) il s'appele le saheb saghb Lien vers le commentaire Partager sur d’autres sites More sharing options...
jeanmi Posté(e) le 24 juillet 2006 Share Posté(e) le 24 juillet 2006 ouais bof :lol: c'est un vieux système maintenant :) Lien vers le commentaire Partager sur d’autres sites More sharing options...
loki Posté(e) le 24 août 2006 Share Posté(e) le 24 août 2006 j'ai trouvé ça sur les défenses sol air iraniennes : http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/iran/airforce.htm In 1997 the Iranian Air Defense forces declared the Almaz S-200 Angara (SA-5 'Gammon') low-to high-altitude surface-to-air missile (SAM) operational. The missile has a comparatively modest acceleration rate, and relies on its small wings for maneuverability. Furthermore, the mechanically steered radars used by the SA-5 are vulnerable to saturation by decoys. Sources disagree on the number deployed, with some claiming four batteries, while others claim ten. Another source reports that the Air Force had three Soviet-made long-range SA-5 units, with a total of 10-15 launchers -- enough for six sites. There were reports that Iran was considering purchases of the highly capable SA-10 [s-300] missile system. The SA-10 is a highly capable long-range all-altitude SAM. As early as 1994 it was reported that Iran had six SA-10 batteries [96 missiles] on order from Russia [but as of early 2006 no deliveries had taken place]. In February 1997 a $90 million sale of 36 missiles to Iran and three older SA-10 SAM systems, made up of components from Russia, Croatia, and Kazakhstan, fell through. On 30 December 2000 an announcement was made in Russia that Iran had informed Russian Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev about Iran's desire to purchase the S-300 anti-missile system. In March 2001 there were reports tha the Russians are close to cutting a deal with Iran on advanced missiles. Itar-Tass reported that Iran would soon close the deal on the Russian Tor-M1, Tor-M1T, and the S-300 surface-to-air missiles. After this report, there were no subsequent reports of Iranian interest in the SA-10. In December 2005 Iran entered into a contract to purchase 29 TOR M1 [sA-15 GAUNTLET] mobile surface-to-air missile defence systems from Russia worth more than USD 700 million (EUR 600 million). The TOR-M1 is a mobile system designed for operation at medium- and low-altitude levels against aircraft and guided missiles. Each unit consists of a vehicle armed with eight missiles and a radar that can track 48 targets and engage two simultaneously. The TOR-M1 systems have medium-range capabilities for intercepting planes and missiles and are not designed for ground operations. There is no dispositive source of information on Iranian air defense deployment. Key SAM-defended areas include Tehran and centers involved in nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons programs. Iran appears to have deployed the SA-5 batteries to defend Tehran, major ports, and oil facilities, providing long-range medium-to-high altitude coverage of vital coastal installations. The I-Hawk and SA-2 batteries are reportedly located around Tehran, Isfahan, Shiraz, Bandar Abbas, Kharg Island, Bushehr, Bandar Khomeini, Ahwaz, Dezful, Kermanshah, Hamadan, and Tabriz, providing point defense for key bases and facilities. Some of these sites lack sufficient missile launchers to be fully effective. Iran imported surveillance radars from the China National Electronics Import-Export Corporation. The radar can detect targets up to 300 km away and is now part of Iran's air defense system. But even with China's help, Iran's air defenses remained porous, perhaps on par with Iraqi capabilities demonstrated in the 1991 Gulf war. The launchers are scattered too widely prevent relatively rapid suppression. Iran lacks the low altitude radar coverage, overlapping radar network, command and control integration, sensors, and resistance to jamming and electronic countermeasures needed for an effective air defense net. The defenses operate a point defense mode. La présence de S300 n'est donc pas confirmée mais l'arrivée de SA15 va moderniser l'ensemble avec un systéme extrémement léthal ayant de bonnes capacités contre les avions, les missiles et les bombes guidées ( selon le constructeur [08] ) Lien vers le commentaire Partager sur d’autres sites More sharing options...
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