RPK-6 Vodopad/RPK-7 Veter

RPK-6 Vodopad (Russian: РПК-6 Водопад, "waterfall") is a Soviet 533 mm anti-submarine missile deployed operationally since 1981.[1]

RPK-7 Veter (Russian: РПК-7 Ветер, "wind") is a 650 mm version, deployed operationally since 1984.[1]

Both missiles are given the same United States Navy designation SS-N-16 and NATO designation Stallion.[1]

Both missiles are torpedo-tube launched, with a solid-fuel rocket engine to power them above the surface.[1] Both missiles are dual-role; they can be armed with either a 400 mm anti-submarine torpedo or a nuclear depth charge.[1]

The Veter's increased range of approximately 100 kilometers was an impressive boost over its predecessor the SS-N-15 Starfish, which could only reach half the distance.

Specifications (RPK-7 Veter)

Performance:

  • Range: 100 km (55 nmi)

Payload:

  • nuclear depth charge or 400 mm torpedo

Guidance:

  • inertial guidance

Operators

 Soviet Union
 Russia
gollark: <@!309787486278909952> You too.
gollark: <@331320482047721472> You ARE to participate in the next code guessing round.
gollark: <@805534998660775986> top
gollark: I said I would have it done within two days. I picked one yesterday but have been writing the test suite. It will be released at 18:00.
gollark: I should write my test suite for the codegueß challenge so ubq can releaseize it.

References

  1. Autofilled, Norman Polmar (2003). Cold War Submarines. p. 670. ISBN 9781597973199.
External video
SS-N-16 Stallion test launch on YouTube
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.