01-29-2011, 02:00 AM
Pontoon launch of K-15
DRDO plans K-15 launch
DRDO plans K-15 launch
Quote:DRDO plans another K-15 missile launch
T.S. Subramanian
From a pontoon 10-20 metres below the sea surface
It will climb 20 km in air before cutting a parabolic path and travelling over 700 km
K-15 will be part of the arsenal of first nuclear-powered submarine Arihant
CHENNAI: The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) plans another test-firing of the K-15 missile from a pontoon off the coast of Visakhapatnam.
Developed under the Sagarika project, the K-15 has been test-fired several times from submerged pontoons off Visakhapatnam.
The pontoon, simulating the conditions of a submarine, will be positioned about 10 to 20 metres below the sea surface. A gas-charged booster will erupt into life, driving the two-stage missile to the surface. The missile's first stage will then ignite and it will climb 20 km in the air before cutting a parabolic path and travelling over a range of 700 km.
The missile, which is under production, can carry both conventional and nuclear warheads. It will form part of the lethal arsenal of the country's first nuclear-powered submarine, Arihant, which is undergoing sea trials. India is building two more such submarines.
The DRDO is developing a K-4 underwater-launched missile, which will have a range of 3,000 km. Developmental tests of the missile's gas-booster have taken place from a pontoon.
The sixth launch of the interceptor missile, developed by the DRDO, is scheduled for the first fortnight of February. A modified Prithvi missile, taking off from the Integrated Test Range at Chandipur on the Orissa coast, will act as an ââ¬Åenemyââ¬Â missile.
The interceptor, to be fired from the Wheeler Island, off Damra on the State's coast, will ambush the ââ¬Åenemyââ¬Â missile in endo-atmosphere at an altitude of 15 km.
Sources in the DRDO called it ââ¬Åa tricky missionââ¬Â because the attacker would have a manoeuvrable trajectory and try to dodge the interceptor from homing in on it. Of the five earlier missions, four were successful.