9K111 Fagot | |
---|---|
AT-4 Spigot anti-armor team | |
Type | Anti-tank weapon |
Place of origin | Soviet Union |
Service history | |
In service | 1970 – present |
Used by | See Users |
Production history | |
Designed | 1962 |
Produced | 1970 |
Variants | See Models |
Specifications | |
Mass | 11.5 kg (25 lb) |
Length | 1,030 mm (3 ft 5 in) |
Barrel length | 875 mm (2 ft 10 in) without gas generator |
Diameter | 120 mm (4.7 in) |
| |
Muzzle velocity |
80 m/s (180 mph; 290 km/h) at launch 186 m/s (420 mph; 670 km/h) in flight |
Effective firing range | 70–2,500 m (230–8,200 ft) |
| |
Guidance system | SACLOS |
The 9K111 Fagot (Russian: 9K111 «Фагот»; English meaning of the word: "bassoon") is a SACLOS wire-guided anti-tank missile system of the Soviet Union. "9M111" is the GRAU designation of the missile. Its NATO reporting name is AT-4 Spigot.
Development[]
The 9K111 Fagot was developed by the Tula Machinery Design Bureau (Tula KBP). Development began in 1962 with the aim of producing the next generation of SACLOS ATGMs, for use in both the man portable role and the tank destroyer role. The 9K111 Fagot was developed alongside the 9M113 Konkurs; both missiles use similar technology – only differing in size - and can use the same launchers.
The missile entered service in 1970.
History[]
The anti-tank platoon of a Soviet BTR equipped motor rifle battalion had two ATGM squads, each squad with two 9K111 Fagot teams. The team consisted of 3 men - the gunner carries the 9P135 launcher and tripod as a back pack - the other two men carry two launch tubes each. The men also carry assault rifles, but do not carry a RPG - because, unlike the earlier missiles, there is only a small deadzone inside which the missile cannot engage the target. In addition to the four missiles the team carries, they normally have a BTR with an extra 8 missiles.
It can also be deployed from the BMP-1P, BMD-1P, BTR-D and UAZ-469.
Description[]
The missile is stored and carried in a container/launch tube. It is fired from the 9P135 launcher post - a simple tripod. A 9S451 guidance box is fitted to the tripod - with the missile sitting just above. The 9Sh119 sight is fitted to the left side (from the gunners POV). The complete launcher system weighs 22.5 kg. The gunner lays prone while firing. The system can engage moving targets, provided that they are travelling at less than 60 km/h. The launcher post can traverse through 360 degrees horizontally, and +/- 20 degrees in elevation. The sight has a magnification of 10x and a 5 degree field of view. Up to 3 missiles a minute can be fired from a launcher post.
The system uses a gas generator to push the missile out of the launch tube - the gas also exits from the rear of the launch tube in a similar manner to a recoilless rifle. The missile leaves the launch tube at 80 m/s. It is quickly accelerated to 186 m/s by its solid fuel motor. This initial high speed reduces the deadzone of the missile, since it can be launched directly at the target, rather than in an upward arc.
The launcher tracks the position of an incandescent infrared bulb on the back of the missile relative to the target - and transmits appropriate commands to the missile via a thin wire that trails behind the missile. The SACLOS guidance system has many benefits over MCLOS, with the accuracy of the system stated as 90% in some sources, though its performance is probably comparable to the TOW or the later SACLOS versions of the 9K11 Malyutka.
Models[]
Missile[]
- 9M111 Fagot (NATO: AT-4 Spigot and AT-4A Spigot A) Entered service in 1970. Maximum range 2000 m, minimum 70 m. Warhead 400 mm versus RHA or 200 mm towards armour inclined at 60°[1]
- 9M111-2 Fagot (NATO: AT-4B Spigot B) Slightly improved version.
- 9M111M Faktoriya (Trading post) or Fagot-M (NATO: AT-4C Spigot C) Improved motor, longer guidance wire. Maximum range 2500 m, mimimum 75 m. Improved single HEAT warhead; penetration 400 mm versus RHA or 230 mm towards armour inclined at 60°[1][2][3] (some publications claimed 9M111M to have tandem HEAT warhead).
Launcher[]
- 9P135 22.5 kg. Can only fire the 9M111 Fagot series.
- 9P135M Can fire the 9M111 Fagot (NATO: AT-4 Spigot) series as well as the 9M113 Konkurs (NATO: AT-5 Spandrel) series missiles.
- 9P135M1 Updated version of the 9P135.
- 9P135M2 Updated version of the 9P135.
- 9P135M3 Deployed in the early 1990s. Adds 13 kg TPVP thermal imaging night sight - range 2500 m at night.
- 9S451M2 A launcher with a night sight featuring an anti-dazzle system has been developed.
Users[]
- Afghanistan - 100
- Algeria - 100
- Angola - 100
- Armenia - [4]
- Bosnia and Herzegovina - 52
- Belarus - 500
- Bulgaria - 222
- Croatia - 119
- Cuba - 100
- Czechoslovakia - all transferred to both successors after Dissolution of Czechoslovakia
- Czech Republic - 50
- East Germany - all retired after German Reunification
- Ethiopia - 50
- Finland - Several hundred 9P135M-1 launchers (withdrawn from service) and AT-4B as well as AT-5A missiles, known as PstOhj 82 and PstOhj 82M respectively.
- Georgia [5]
- Greece - 262
- Hungary - 50
- India - 100
- Iran -
- Iraq - use by iraqi kurdistan this era
- Kazakhstan -
- Kuwait - 100
- Libya - 100
- Moldova - used on BMP-1
- Mozambique - 10
- North Korea -
- Poland - 100
- Romania - acquired in the 1980s.
- Russia - 1,000
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic - 40-50
- Serbia - 250
- Slovakia - 50
- Slovenia - 10 (withdrawn from service)
- Syria - 100
- Ukraine - 800
- Yemen - 100
- Vietnam
See also[]
References[]
- Hull, A.W., Markov, D.R., Zaloga, S.J. (1999). Soviet/Russian Armor and Artillery Design Practices 1945 to Present. Darlington Productions. ISBN 1-892848-01-5.
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Maksim Sayenko. "Bronya »krylyatoy pyekhoty«" (Armour of "Winged infnatry"). Tekhnika i Vooruzhenie no.02/2007, p. 39 (Russian)
- ↑ ПТРК 9К111 «ФАГОТ» (Russian)
- ↑ [1] ПТУРС «9М111М». Техническое описание и инструкция по эксплуатации. (9M111M military manual). Soviet Ministry of Defence. Moscow 1983 (Russian)
- ↑ Old missiles not so old after all - Russia Today, October 12, 2011.
- ↑ Republic of Égyptien Q42 user:mgbtrust0 ®™✓©§∆∆∆€¢£. "Armament of the Georgian Army". Georgian Army. http://geo-army.ge/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=9&Itemid=9&lang=en. Retrieved 2007-06-25.
External links[]
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