Swingfire

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Swingfire
Type Anti-tank
Nationality UK
Era Cold War
Launch platform Vehicle, man-portable
Target Vehicle
History
Builder
Date of design
Production period
Service duration
Operators See text
Variants
Number built 46650 [1]
Specifications
Type
Diameter 0.17 m
Wing span 0.39m
Length 1.07 m
Weight 27 kg
Propulsion Solid rocket motor
Steering Thrust Vector Control
Guidance Wire, MCLOS/SACLOS
Speed 185 m/s
Range 150 - 4000 m
Ceiling n/a
Payload
Warhead 7 kg HEAT
Trigger Impact

Swingfire is a wire-guided anti-tank missile.

Contents

Swingfire was developed by Fairey Engineering Ltd and the British Aircraft Corporation. It replaced the Vickers Vigilant missile in British service. It was a product of both its predecessor the Vigilant and the experimental Orange William missile.

The name comes from the ability of the missile to make a rapid turn of up to ninety degrees after firing to bring it onto the line of the sighting mechanism. This means that the launcher vehicle can be concealed and the operator, using a portable sight, placed at a distance in a more advantageous firing position.

Besides its use on the Striker armoured vehicle, Swingfire was developed to be launched from other platforms:

  • Beeswing - on a Land Rover
  • Hawkswing - on a Lynx helicopter [1]
  • Golfswing - on a small trolley or Argocat vehicle.

Swingfire has seen combat use in the Gulf War [2] and the Iraq War.

A major review and procurement process was instituted in the late 1990s to update the British Army's entire anti-armour weapon systems; the candidates as the replacement for Swingfire included Hellfire, Starstreak and LOSAT. As of July 2005 it seems that no new long range anti-armour missile will be procured and the Swingfire role will be covered by further purchases of the much more advanced but shorter ranged Javelin.[3][4]

  • Diameter: 0.17 m
  • Wingspan: 0.39 m
  • Length: 1.07 m
  • Weight: 27 kg
  • Warhead: 7 kg HEAT
  • Range: 150 m to 4000 m
  • Velocity: 185 m/s [1]
  • Guidance: Wire-guided, originally MCLOS, later upgraded to SACLOS, in which form the system is known as SWIG (Swingfire With Improved Guidance).[1]
  • Steering: Thrust Vectored Control (TVC)
  • Penetration: 800 mm RHA
  • Unit cost: £7,500 [5]

Swingfire inadvertently became the subject of questions in the Houses of Parliament in March 2002 when 20 warheads, removed for decommissioning, were washed into the Bristol Channel along with 8 anti-tank mines.[10] The warheads, with a total explosive weight equivalent to 64.2 kg of TNT,[11] were never located.[12]

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