Published on 02/16/2021 – Last Updated on 02/16/2021 by OTC
Indian Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO) commenced the final production batch of Long Range Surface-to-Air Missile (LRSAM) in collaboration with its partners on 14th February at Abdul Kalam Missile Complex in Hyderabad.
According to The Economic Times, the event hosted high-level guests, including the Chairman of DRDO and Director of Defence Machine Design Establishment.
LRSAM Missile
DRDO and IAI Israel jointly develop LRSAM to equip the latest ships of the Indian Navy. This Missile system can provide point and area defense against various aerial targets, including fighter aircraft, subsonic & supersonic cruise missiles. The two countries began to join work on the Long Range Surface-to-Air Missile 2006, with a first successful test firing of the missile system in May 2010.
he Missile is powered by an indigenously developed dual- pulse rocket motor and dual control system to impart required maneuverability at the terminal phase. The LRSAM system’s end-to-end performance has been successfully demonstrated through several user flight trials from Indian Naval ships. It has been successfully developed and delivered to the Indian Navy.
The vertically-launched two-stage LRSAM, fitted with advanced radio frequency/infrared homing seekers, is designed to deal with a wide range of incoming airborne threats and intercept targets as close as 500 meters away from a ship. The missile has a maximum speed of Mach 2. Its maximum range is estimated at around 70 kilometers (an extended range version of the Barak 8 can reportedly intercept targets at a distance of up to 150 kilometers.)
LR-SAM also features a multifunction active electronically scanned array naval radar system providing 360-degree coverage.
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