Military Wiki
ATMACA
Atmaca Füzesi Sinop'da gerçekleşen deneme atışı
Missile firing from a land based launcher
Type Anti-ship cruise missile
Surface-to-surface missile (KARA Atmaca)
Place of origin Turkey
Service history
Used by See Users
Production history
Designer ROKETSAN
Designed 2009-2018
Manufacturer ROKETSAN
Variants See Variants
Specifications
Mass 750 kg (Anti-ship version), 890 kg (KARA Atmaca)
Length 4,800 - 5,200 mm
Diameter 350 mm

Effective firing range > 220 km[1]/250 km[2]/+ 280 km (KARA Atmaca)[3]
Warhead High-explosive penetrating warhead
Warhead weight 220 kg (Anti-ship variant), 250 kg (KARA Atmaca)

Engine Safran Microturbo TRI-40 / Kale KTJ-3200
Wingspan 1.4 m
Maximum speed 0.85-0.90 Mach[citation needed]
Guidance
system
INS/GPS+RA+DL
Launch
platform
Page Template:Plainlist/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "wikitext").

ATMACA (Accipiter) is an all weather, long range, precision strike, anti-ship cruise missile, developed by Turkish missile manufacturer ROKETSAN.[1][4] The Atmaca will enter service with the Turkish Navy to gradually replace the country's existing inventory of Harpoon missiles.

Development[]

The program was initiated in 2009 when Turkey's Undersecretary For Defense Industries (SSM) signed a contract with Roketsan for designing a surface-to-surface cruise missile for the requirements of the Turkish Naval Forces. The prime contractor, Roketsan, started the design studies in September 2012, after receiving the results of its previous research and development contract with Turkey's Undersecretary For Defense Industries under the coordination of Navy Research Center Command (ARMERKOM). The missile is planned to be developed for multiplatforms, capable of launching not only from warships but also from submarines, aircraft, coastal batteries, including land-attack operations.[citation needed]

After completing various tests, first land-based firing of the Atmaca took place in March 2017. The serial production contract for Atmaca was signed between Roketsan and the Presidency of Defense Industry on 29 October 2018. The missile will be deployed to Turkish Navy's Ada-class corvettes, Istanbul-class frigates, G-class frigates and planned TF-2000 class destroyers.[5][6][7]

Timeline[]

  • On 3 November 2019, the Turkish Naval Forces successfully conducted its first ship-launched firing from the Ada-class corvette TCG Kınalıada in the Black sea[8]
  • On 1 July 2020 the Atmaca missile successfully hit its target from a >200 km range[9]
  • On February 3, 2021, the Atmaca anti-ship missile successfully hit the target in the test fire with the TCG Kınalıada corvette using a "live warhead" in Sinop.[10]
  • In June 2021 the Atmaca missile successfully hit the ex-TCG Işın (A-589) ship under the certification test. Marking its start of its serial production.[11][12]
  • In June 2021, the Atmaca completed 20 successful test firing and expected to be certified this year for Ada-class corvette.[13]

Design[]

The missile makes use of its global positioning system (GPS), inertial navigation system, barometric altimeter and radar altimeter to navigate towards its target, while its active radar seeker pinpoints the target with high precision. With a range of more than 220 kilometres (140 mi), this guided missile poses a major threat for targets situated beyond the line of sight due to its high explosive fragmentation warhead. Its modern data-link provides ATMACA with the ability to 3D mission planning, update targets, reattack and terminate the mission.[1] Missile is ultra sea-skimming as it approaches the target.[1]

Operators[]

 Turkey

See also[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "ATMACA ANTI-SHIP MISSILE". Roketsan. https://www.roketsan.com.tr/en/product/atmaca-anti-ship-missile/. Retrieved 25 January 2021. 
  2. "Archived copy". https://www.trthaber.com/haber/gundem/atmacanin-menzili-dengeleri-degistirecek-519186.html#:~:text=ROKETSAN%20Genel%20Müdürü%20Murat%20İkinci,savunma%20sanayiinin%20sahaya%20etkilerine%20çevirdi.. 
  3. https://www.roketsan.com.tr/en/products/kara-atmaca-surface-surface-cruise-missile
  4. "Atmaca ASCM". https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/europe/atmaca.htm. 
  5. "ATMACA ANTI-SHIP MISSILE – Roketsan". https://www.roketsan.com.tr/en/product/atmaca-anti-ship-missile/. 
  6. "New Turkish ATMACA anti-ship missile launched from TCG Kınalıada corvette has successfully destroyed target". https://www.navyrecognition.com/index.php/news/defence-news/2021/february/9652-new-turkish-atmaca-anti-ship-missile-launched-from-tcg-k-nal-ada-corvette-has-successfully-destroyed-target.html. 
  7. Ozberk, Tayfun (2021-01-23). "Turkey launches the lead ship of I-class frigates "Istanbul"" (in en-US). https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/2021/01/turkey-launches-the-lead-ship-of-i-class-frigates-istanbul/. 
  8. "ATMACA, TCG KINALIADA'dan Başarıyla Ateşlendi – Roketsan". 2019-11-09. https://www.roketsan.com.tr/atmaca-tcg-kinaliadadan-basariyla-ateslendi/. 
  9. "ATMACA'nın Son Güdümlü Uçuş Testi Başarıyla Sonuçlandı – Roketsan". 2020-10-22. https://www.roketsan.com.tr/atmacanin-son-gudumlu-ucus-testi-basariyla-sonuclandi/. 
  10. "ATMACA Milli Gemisavar Güdümlü Mermi Atışları Başarıyla İcra Edildi - Defence Turkey Magazine". 2021-02-04. https://www.defenceturkey.com/tr/icerik/atmaca-milli-gemisavar-gudumlu-mermi-atislari-basariyla-icra-edildi-4373. 
  11. "Turkish Navy has successfully conducted firing test of Atmaca anti-ship missile from TCG Kinaliada corvette" (in en-gb). https://www.navyrecognition.com/index.php/naval-news/naval-news-archive/2021/june/10341-turkish-navy-has-successfully-conducted-firing-test-of-atmaca-anti-ship-missile-from-tcg-kinaliada-corvette.html. 
  12. "Erdogan annonce l'essai réussi du missile antinavire national Atmaca". https://www.aa.com.tr/fr/turquie/erdogan-annonce-lessai-réussi-du-missile-antinavire-national-atmaca/2278786. 
  13. GDC (2021-06-24). "Turkey Test Fires Domestic anti-ship Atmaca missile" (in en-US). https://www.globaldefensecorp.com/2021/06/25/turkey-test-fires-domestic-anti-ship-atmaca-missile/. 
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Atmaca and the edit history here.