Neue russische Rüstungsprojekte "Kinzhal", "Avangard", u.a.

Wehrtechnik & Rüstung, Sicherheit und Verteidigung außerhalb Europas
hakö
Beiträge: 201
Registriert: So 13. Mai 2018, 17:37

Re: Neue russische Rüstungsprojekte "Kinzhal", "Avangard", u.a.

Beitrag von hakö »

Die Frage ist nur wieviele der sicher nicht billigen Waffen haben sie und finden sie auch dafür lohnende Hochwertziele?
Diese Rakete ist ja noch sehr neu, da werden sie noch nicht soviele im Arsenal haben.
Wenn es stimmt, daß Lügen kurze Beine haben, dann haben Politiker Eier aus Bodenhaltung.
theoderich
Beiträge: 20366
Registriert: So 29. Apr 2018, 18:13

Re: Neue russische Rüstungsprojekte "Kinzhal", "Avangard", u.a.

Beitrag von theoderich »

Russia's Sarmat heavy ICBM to enter service at end of year

https://www.janes.com/defence-news/weap ... nd-of-year
theoderich
Beiträge: 20366
Registriert: So 29. Apr 2018, 18:13

Re: Neue russische Rüstungsprojekte "Kinzhal", "Avangard", u.a.

Beitrag von theoderich »

Moskau: Neue Interkontinentalrakete bald einsatzbereit

Der russische Verteidigungsminister Sergej Schoigu hat beim Besuch einer Rüstungsfabrik die baldige Einsatzbereitschaft der neuen Interkontinentalrakete des Typs Sarmat versichert. Sein Ministerium in Moskau veröffentlichte heute auf Telegram Bilder von Schoigu und anderen Militärvertretern in der Kramasch-Fabrik in der sibirischen Stadt Krasnojarsk. Die Sarmat-Raketen würden „in naher Zukunft in den Dienst gestellt“, hieß es in einer Ministeriumsmitteilung.
https://orf.at/#/stories/3333941/

theoderich hat geschrieben: Sa 10. Aug 2019, 20:43 Заявление Департамента коммуникаций Госкорпорации «Росатом»

https://www.rosatom.ru/journalist/news/ ... i-rosatom/

Rosatom Department of Communications Statement
Five Rosatom staff members died and a further three people were injured in a tragic accident that took place during tests on a liquid propulsion system involving isotopes at a military facility in Arkhangelsk region.
https://www.rosatom.ru/en/press-centre/ ... statement/
Russia May Be Planning to Test a Nuclear-Powered Missile

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Satellite imagery and aviation data suggest that Russia may be preparing to test an experimental nuclear-powered cruise missile — or may have recently tested one — with a theoretical range of thousands of miles.

Movements of aircraft and vehicles at and near a base in Russia’s remote Arctic region are consistent with preparations that were made for tests of the missile, known as the Burevestnik or SSC-X-9 Skyfall, in 2017 and 2018, according to a New York Times analysis.

U.S. surveillance planes have also been tracked in the area over the last two weeks, and aviation alerts have warned pilots to avoid nearby airspace.

Russia previously conducted 13 known tests between 2017 and 2019, all of which were unsuccessful, according to a report from the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a nonprofit group focused on arms control. And mishaps can be deadly. A missile launched in 2019 crashed and eventually exploded during a recovery attempt, killing seven people, according to U.S. officials.
In previous tests, the missile failed to fly a distance anywhere close to the designed range, estimated to be around 14,000 miles. U.S. officials assessed that during its most successful test flight, lasting just more than two minutes, the missile flew 22 miles before crashing into the sea. In another test, the missile’s nuclear reactor failed to activate, causing it to go down only a few miles from the launch site. For a test to succeed, the missile’s nuclear reactor would need to initiate in flight, so that the missile can cover much more ground.
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An image taken on the morning of Sept. 20 shows several vehicles, including one with a trailer that appears to correspond to the dimensions of the Burevestnik missile, also called the SSC-X-9 Skyfall. Credit...The New York Times; satellite image by Planet Labs
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A satellite image captured in the afternoon shows a nearly empty launchpad at the base.Credit...The New York Times; satellite image by Planet Labs
Visual evidence of testing preparations includes before-and-after satellite images.

Imagery taken on the morning of Sept. 20 shows numerous vehicles present on a launchpad at the base, including a truck with a trailer that appears to correspond to the dimensions of the missile. A weather shelter that typically covers the specific launch site had been moved about 50 feet. By the afternoon, the trailer was gone and the shelter was moved back to its original position.

Additional imagery captured on Sept. 28 shows the launchpad active again, with a similar trailer present and the shelter again drawn back.

On Aug. 31, the Russian authorities issued an aviation notice for a “temporary danger area,” advising pilots to avoid part of the Barents Sea off the coast and 12 miles from the launch site, known as Pankovo. The notice has since been extended several times and, as of Sunday, was scheduled to be in force through Oct. 6. Russia issued a similar notice before a Burevestnik test in 2019.
Bild
Additionally, two Russian aircraft specifically used for collecting data from missile launches were parked about 100 miles south of the launch site in early August, at the Rogachevo air base, according to analysis of satellite images by Bellona, a Norwegian environmental organization. The aircraft are owned by Rosatom, the Russian atomic energy company. They remained at that base at least through Sept. 26, according to additional satellite imagery. During Burevestnik tests in 2018, aircraft of the same type were also in the vicinity.

A U.S. Air Force reconnaissance aircraft, an RC-135W Rivet Joint, also flew at least two missions off the coast of the Arctic island where the launch site is, on Sept. 19 and Sept. 26, according to the tracking platform Flightradar24. The two missions represented a slight uptick from usual known activity.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/02/vide ... ssile.html



theoderich
Beiträge: 20366
Registriert: So 29. Apr 2018, 18:13

Re: Neue russische Rüstungsprojekte "Kinzhal", "Avangard", u.a.

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theoderich hat geschrieben: Sa 7. Okt 2023, 18:37Moskau: Neue Interkontinentalrakete bald einsatzbereit
Russian leaders have high hopes for new nukes this year — again
Roscosmos subsidiaries involved in the production of Sarmat have financial and production problems. In particular, the Proton-PM plant, which produces the missile’s propulsion system, “faced limited access to Western equipment, tools, raw materials of imported origin and an increase in the interest burden on loans,” director Ivan Krasnov said in 2022.

As stated in the company’s corporate magazine, officials instead bought Russian, Belarusian or Chinese machining and foundry equipment.


In addition, several top Proton-PM managers were arrested last year on charges of embezzlement to the tune of 195 million rubles in connection with planned equipment upgrades, regional media reported.

Chemical Automatics Design Bureau (CADB), which produces the second stage of the Sarmat missile, is in a pre-bankruptcy state. The company has had a chronic shortage of working capital.

After the start of the war, money appeared, but while employees’ wages came through on time again, other CADB contractors are still having difficulty getting paid, a source at the company told Defense News on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive information. Management also failed to modernize the workshops, as was promised in late 2021, the source added.

Plant managers have been selling non-core assets, like a production site and a canteen for 247.8 million rubles, according to the source.
https://www.defensenews.com/global/euro ... ear-again/
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