avia.wikisort.org - Weapon The QW-series (pinyin: Qian Wei )[1] are man-portable air-defense systems (MANPADS) developed by the People's Republic of China.[2]
Chinese surface-to-air missile
A QW-3
QW-1
QW-1 Type Man-portable air-defense system Place of origin ChinaMass 36 pounds (16 kg)[3] Operational range
5 kilometres (3.1 mi) (maximum)[4] Flight ceiling 2.5 miles (4.0 km)[3] Guidance system
Infrared homing[4] Launch platform
MANPADS
The QW-1 is the initial version. It is likely a copy or derivative of the Soviet 9K38 Igla-1 MANPAD.[2]
The system was unveiled in 1994.[5]
Variants
QW-1M
Modernized version. Also used by Kata'ib Hezbollah.[6]
Anza-2
Version developed or produced in Pakistan.[4]
Misagh-1
Version developed or produced in Iran.[4] Also used by Iraqi insurgents[5] and Kata'ib Hezbollah.[6]
QW-2
QW-2 QW-12
Type Man-portable air-defense system Place of origin ChinaUsed by Bangladesh[7]
Turkmenistan[1] Produced After 1998[8] Length 1.59 metres (5.2 ft)[1] Operational range
0.5–6 kilometres (0.31–3.73 mi)[1] Flight ceiling 0.01–4 kilometres (0.0062–2.4855 mi)[1] Guidance system
Infrared homing[4] Launch platform
MANPADS
Ground vehicles[9]
The QW-2 has improved performance against targets flying faster and at lower-altitude than the QW-1.[9]
Variants
QW-12
Uses a laser proximity detonator. Unveiled in November 2014.[10]
QW-3
The QW-3 uses semi-active homing.[11]
See also
References
Dominguez, Gabriel (15 January 2018). "Footage suggests QW-2 MANPADS has entered service with Turkmenistan Army" . Janes . Archived from the original on 17 January 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2022 . Chinese Tactics (2021): page C-3 Whitmire, James C. (December 2006). "Shoulder Launched Missiles (a.k.a. MANPADS): The Ominous Threat to Commercial Aviation" (PDF) . The Counterproliferation Papers. 37 . Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: United States Air Force Air University. Retrieved 6 March 2022 . SIPRI Yearbook 2007: Armaments, Disarmament, and International Security . Oxford University Press. 2007. p. 684. ISBN 9780199230211 . Small Arms Survey (2012). "Surveying the Battlefield: Illicit Arms In Afghanistan, Iraq, and Somalia" . Small Arms Survey 2012: Moving Targets . Cambridge University Press. p. 327. ISBN 978-0-521-19714-4 . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-08-31. Retrieved 30 August 2018 . Iraq: Turning a blind eye: The arming of the Popular Mobilization Units (PDF) (Report). Amnesty International. 5 January 2017. p. 26. MDE 14/5386/2017. Dr. Michael Ashkenazi,Princess Mawuena Amuzu, Jan Grebe,Christof Kögler and Marc Kösling (February 2013). "MANPADS - A Terrorist Threat to Civilian Aviation?" (PDF) . BICC brief. 47 . Bonn International Center for Conversion: 159. ISSN 0947-7322 . Retrieved 8 September 2019 . CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link) DeClerq, David (October 1999). Trends in Small Arms and Light Weapons Development: Non-Proliferation and Arms Control Dimensions (PDF) (Report). Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Canada. p. 29. Retrieved 6 March 2022 . Chinese Tactics (2021): page C-2 Shukla, Parth; Udoshi, Rahul (16 February 2022). "China tests QW-12 missile capabilities" . Janes . Retrieved 6 March 2022 . Zeigler, Sean M.; Hou, Alexander C.; Martini, Jeffrey; Norton, Daniel M.; Phillips, Brian; Schwille, Michael; Strong, Aaron; Vest, Nathan (2019). Acquisition and Use of MANPADS Against Commercial Aviation: Risks, Proliferation, Mitigation, and Cost of an Attack (PDF) . Santa Monica, California: RAND Corporation. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-9774-0418-3 . RR-4304-DOS.
Bibliography
Chinese Tactics (PDF) . Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Army. 9 August 2021. ATP 7-100.3.
Missiles of the People's Republic of China
Surface- to-surface (SSM)
Ballistic
Intercontinental
DF-41
DF-31AG
DF-31A
DF-31
DF-5B
DF-5
DF-4
Intermediate-range Medium-range Short-range
B-611
P-12
BRE8
DF-16
DF-15 (M-9)
DF-11 (M-11)
DF-1
M-7
WM-120
WS-2 series
WS-3 series
WS-15
WS-22
WS-32
WS-33
WS-35
WS-43
WS-63
WS-64
WS-600L
A100
A200
A300
SR-5
SY300
SY400
Submarine-launched Anti-ship
DF-26
DF-21D
YJ-21 (CM-401)
Hypersonic glide
Cruise
Long-range land attack
CJ-100/DF-100
CJ-20
CJ-10
DH-2000
HN-2000
CF-2
CF-1
HN-3
HN-2
HN-1
Short-range land attack Anti-ship supersonic Anti-ship subsonic
Anti-tank guided
CM-501G
CM-501GA
HJ-12
HJ-11
HJ-10
HJ-9
HJ-8
HJ-73
3UBK23-3
J-202
J-201
265-I
Anti- submarine
CY-1
CY-2
CY-3
CY-4
CY-5
CJ-1
WS-3 ASW missile
Air- to-surface (ASM)
Surface- to-air (SAM)
Air- to-air (AAM)
Transporters
Notes
See also: People's Liberation Army
На других языках - [en] QW missile [fr] QW-1 Vanguard Le QW-1 Vanguard, ou Qian Wei-1 (en français : « avant-garde »), est un système de missiles sol-air portatifs très courte portée de type « tous-aspects »[Note 1], développé par la république populaire de Chine. Ce missile était le premier de toute une série de variantes améliorées qui firent leur apparition par la suite. [ru] QW-1 «Цяньвэ́й» (экспортное название — QW-1, пиньинь сокр. от Qián wèi [前衛], с кит. — «авангард») — китайский переносной зенитный ракетный комплекс, скопированный 50/50 с советской модели — ПЗРК «Игла-1» (головная часть, рулевая машинка) и инкорпорировавший в себя ряд конструктивных решений американского аналога — «Стингер» (ракета в целом, оперение, выбрасывающий двигатель, наземный источник питания).[2] Поступили на замену в частях Народно-освободительной армии Китая комплексов HN-5.
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