Sky Spear
The Sky Spear (天戟 Tien Chi) short-range ballistic missile (SRBM) is a Taiwanese short-range ballistic missile capable of striking targets on mainland China.[1] Derived from the Sky Bow II (Tien Kung-2) surface-to-air missile, the Tien Chi has a two-stage booster that extends over the single-stage Tien Kung-2. The Sky Spear was developed by the Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology (CSIST) in Taiwan. As of early 2001, up to 50 Tien Chi missiles were deployed at two sites: Tungyin Island, and an unidentified second location. The Tungyin Island missiles are said to be housed in silos and protected by batteries of Tien Kung-2 SAMs.
Sky Spear | |
---|---|
Type | Short range ballistic missile |
Place of origin | Taiwan |
Service history | |
In service | 2001-current |
Production history | |
Designer | National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology |
No. built | Unknown |
Specifications | |
Mass | 1,150 kg |
Length | 8.0 m |
Width | 0.41 m |
Payload capacity | 100-200 kg |
Propellant | Two-stage solid propellant |
Operational range | 120 kilometres (75 mi) |
Launch platform | Transporter erector launcher or silo |
Transport | Truck |
Information provided by CSIST to Jane's Missiles and Rockets, revealed that Tien Chi uses a submunition warhead and there is no unitary warhead for this missile. According to this report, Tien Chi was developed by CSIST following test firings of a Tien Kung 2 variant with a 120 km range and a 90 kg HE warhead. The report also credited Tien Chi missile with a range of 300 km and a 500 kg payload. This range is well beyond the reported 200 km maximum range of the Tien Kung II SAM system, but since Tien Chi is used in a tactical surface-to-surface missile role, it would fly a more efficient trajectory with no need for energy-consuming manoeuvres. Guidance is believed to be an integrated INS/GPS system.[2]
It has been reported that Taiwan has deployed 15-50 missiles on Tungyin and Penghu.[3]
General characteristics
- Primary Function: Surface-to-surface missile
- Warhead Weight 100 kg[4]
See also
References
- Minnick, Wendell: A better indigenous missile defense, Taipei Times, July 13, 2001.
- Richardson, Doug "Taiwan switches from Tien Kung I to Tien Kung II," Jane's Missiles and Rockets, August, 2006.
- "Tien Chi". missilethreat.csis.org. Center for Strategic and International Studies. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
- Global Security: Sky Spear