Nimrod (missile)


The Nimrod is a long-range air-to-surface missile developed by Israel Aerospace Industries. While designed for mainly anti-tank warfare, it provides standoff strike ability against a variety of point targets such as armoured personnel carriers, ships, bunkers, personnel concentrations, and guerrillas.
Nimrod has a semi-active laser guidance system that operates day or night. Its flight trajectory can be set below obscuring cloud layers, while a forward reconnaissance scout team uses a laser designator to direct it from up to.
Nimrod may be installed on a variety of towed launchers, light combat vehicle launchers, helicopters, and fixed-wing aircraft. The primary helicopter launch platform for the Nimrod in the Israel Defense Forces is a modified Sikorsky CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter. The launching vehicle or aircraft may fire up to 4 Nimrods at once from a single pack.

Description

Nimrod is a long-range semi-active laser-guided anti-tank guided missile, developed by the MBT Weapon System Division. It has a solid-propellant rocket and can operate day or night. It can also serve as an anti-ship missile.
Nimrod allows a gunner to pre-select a flight trajectory mode. This can be direct trajectory, high cruise trajectory or low cruise trajectory, the cruise altitude being constant and between.
Mid-course guidance is provided by an inertial navigation system, and terminal guidance by a semi-active laser homing seeker. The target can be illuminated either by a ground-based or airborne laser designator.
The gimballed and stabilised seeker head acquires, tracks and homes in on its target using localised proportional navigation. It is said to have a view angle of more than 30°. The seeker has a search area wide and deep. In the terminal flight phase, the weapon adopts a dive angle of approximately 45° to strike an armoured target on the thinner, more vulnerable upper surfaces.
The missile is stored in a sealed canister which also acts as the launcher. Total weight of the missile and canister is. It has five main sections: seeker, guidance and control, warhead, solid-propellant rocket motor, and servo. It is roll-stabilised in flight. Time to come into action at a launch site is less than 3 minutes; there is no need to survey the site for alignment or levelling, nor does it require a direct line of sight to a target. The weapon can be fired in single-round, ripple, or salvo modes.

Characteristics

Effective range: 300 - 36,000 metersLength: 265 cmDiameter: 17 cmBody: 18 cmSpan 40 cmWeight: 100 kgSpeed: ~1000 km/h or Mach 0.8Propulsion: Single stage solid-propellant rocket motor Guidance: Semi-active laser homingWarhead: High-explosive anti-tank, fragmentation high explosive, thermobaric, or anti-personnel

Variants

, three Nimrod versions exist:
  • Nimrod 2 – A dual guidance, laser and Global Positioning System, homing missile, with a range of, and a mobile launcher. The warhead is, and the missile supports various warheads for a variety of targets. This missile is well suited to rapid response and for coastal defence.
  • Nimrod 3 – An extended variant of Nimrod 2. The missile has a range of with warhead. It supports various warheads for a wide range of targets, and has a mobile launcher.
  • Nimrod SR – A short-range variant that can be fired from ground and airborne platforms.

Comparable systems

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