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Silkwormmissile

Silkworm missile stored at Umm Qasr in Iraq.

The Shang You or SY-series (Chinese: 上游; pinyin: shàngyóu; literally: "Upstream"), and the Hai Ying or HY-series (Chinese: 海鹰; pinyin: hǎiyīng; literally: "Sea Eagle") were early Chinese anti-ship missiles. They were derived from the Soviet P-15 Termit missile.

The HY-1 and HY-2 received the NATO reporting name Silkworm. However, to confuse matters, Western media also referred to the SY-series, and its export derivatives, the Fei Long or FL-series (Chinese: 飞龙; pinyin: fēilónɡ; literally: "Flying Dragon"), as Silkworms.

SY-series[]

The SY-series were developed from the Soviet P-15 Termit. They were used on small missile boats with limited electronics. The Chinese encountered difficulties making the missile compatible with the more complex systems of larger warships. This could have resulted in premature launches or detonations when the electronics were placed on full power. In response, the HY-series was designed for warships and to replace the SY-series.

The SY-series was initially produced concurrently with the HY-series to arm missile boats and to provide an inexpensive alternative for export.

SY-1[]

This is the original Chinese version of Soviet P-15 Termit missile, and the first was SY-1, produced at Factory 320 (the Nanchang Aircraft Factory [南昌飞机制造厂]);; Chinese sources identify the designers as Li Tongli and Lu Lin. The main difference between P-15 Termit and SY-1 missiles is that the unreliable aneroid altimeter of P-15 Termit was replaced by a much more reliable radar altimeter in SY-1. The successor of SY-1, designed by Peng Lisheng (彭历生) and designated as SY-1A, had a mono-pulse terminal guidance radar seeker replacing the original conical scanning radar seeker. The missile received a NATO reporting name CSS-N-1 Scrubbrush.

The missile has been upgraded to be air-launched, and the air-launched version is known as C-601, which is the first air-launched anti-ship missile in China. The missile received a NATO reporting name CAS-1 Kraken. It was used by Iraqi H-6 during Iran-Iraq War. An upgraded version that is fully solid state with integrated circuitry and new active radar seeker and new radar altimeter entered service as SY-1A in early 1980s.

Specifications:

  • Length: 6.55 metre
  • Diameter: 0.76 metre
  • Wingspan: 2.4 metre
  • Weight: 2,095 kg
  • Warhead: 513 kg shaped charge high explosive
  • Propulsion: One liquid rocket engine and one solid rocket booster
  • Speed: Mach 0.8
  • Range: 150 km [1]
  • Cruising altitude: < 20 meters
  • Guidance: Inertial + active conical scanning terminal guidance radar (SY-1); or inertial + monopulse active radar (SY-1A)
  • Single-shot kill probability: 70%

SY-2[]

The liquid fuel engine was rather hazardous and unreliable, so a solid fuel rocket engine was developed. This engine also made it possible to reduce the size and weight of the missile while providing greater range. The warhead weight is also reduced, but its effectiveness was actually increased when a time-delayed semi-armour-piercing high-explosive design was adopted. The extended version developed is designated SY-2A.

Specification:

  • Length: 6 metre
  • Diameter: 0.54 metre
  • Wingspan: 1.7 metre
  • Weight: 1,720 kg
  • Warhead: 365 kg shape charged high-explosive
  • Propulsion: A solid rocket engine and a solid booster
  • Speed: Mach 0.9
  • Range: 130 km[1]
  • Cruising altitude: 20 metre
  • Guidance: Inertial + active radar
  • Single-shot kill probability: 70%

HY-series[]

HY-1[]

Launch vehicle, inside the Beijing military museum

HY-1 launch vehicle in the Beijing Military Museum.

The HY-1 received two separate NATO reporting name, the CSS-N-2 Safflower for the ship to ship version and the CSSC-2 Silkworm for the land based coastal defense variant.

The HY-1J was intended for use on the Type 051 destroyers. However, the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution prolonged development into the 1980s. As a result, the Type 051s deployed into the Pacific Ocean to support ballistic missile tests without anti-ship missiles.

Variants

  • HY-1: Basic developmental version developed from the SY missiles, used only in very small numbers as land-to-ship missile for evaluation purposes. Did not enter series production and was replaced by HY-1J.
  • HY-1J: Ship-to-ship variant for Type 051 DDG
  • HY-1JA: Improved ship-to-ship variant with a new radar seeker for better anti-jamming capability and accuracy
  • HY-1A: Land-to-ship variant based on the HY-1JA
  • HY-1B: Low level target drone for the test of HQ-2A SAM
  • HJ-1YB Target drone for the test of HQ-61 SAM

Specifications

  • Length: 6.60 metre
  • Diameter: 0.76 metre
  • Wingspan: 2.4 metre
  • Weight: 2,300 kg
  • Warhead: 513 kg shaped charge high explosive
  • Propulsion: One liquid rocket engine and one solid rocket booster
  • Speed: Mach 0.8
  • Range: 85 km [2]
  • Cruising altitude: 100~300m (early models); <20m (later models)
  • Guidance: Inertial + active conical scanning terminal guidance radar (early models); or inertial + monopulse active radar (later models)
  • Single-shot kill probability: 70%

HY-2[]

The HY-2 is identical to the HY-1 but with a further stretched body. The missile features a round nose accommodating the radar seeker, a pair of mid-mounted delta wings on the middle section of missile body, and three tail control surfaces. The missile is powered by a liquid-fuel rocket motor, with a solid rocket booster attached under the missile fuselage.

The HY-2 is launched from land-based launcher and flies at an altitude of 1,000m during the initial stage of the flight. After the missile switched to the cruising mode, the flight altitude was reduced to 100~300m. During the final stage of the flight, the missile switched on its radar seeker and dives to an altitude of 8m until it hits the target. The single-shot hit probability is estimated to be 90%. Due to its oversized body, the HY-2 did not develop a ship-to-ship variant. The missile is obsolete and will be replaced by the YJ-8 series in the future.[2]

The HY-2 was widely exported to the Middle East, and was the missile most associated with the silkworm nickname.

Variants

  • HY-2: Basic variant radar-guidance land-to-ship missile *developed from the HY-1 missile
  • HY-2A: IR-guidance variant
  • HY-2AII: Improved variant of the HY-2A
  • HY-2B: Improved radar-guidance variant with a mono-pulse radar seeker replacing the original conical scanning radar
  • HY-2BII: Improved variant of the HY-2B with a newly designed radar seeker
  • C-201: Export designation for air-launched version.
  • C-201W Extended-range variant powered by a turbojet engine replacing the original liquid-fuel rocket motor. Export only

Specifications

  • Dimensions: Length: 7.48 m; Diameter: 0.76 m; Wingspan: 2.4 m
  • Launch weight: 2,998 kg
  • Warhead: 513 kg shaped charge high-explosive
  • Propulsion: One liquid rocket engine and one solid rocket booster
  • Speed: Mach 0.8
  • Range: 200 km [3]
  • Flight altitude: < 20m
  • Guidance: Inertial + active conical scanning terminal guidance radar (HY-2); or inertial + IR guidance (HY-2A); or inertial + monopulse active radar (HY-2B)
  • Single-shot hit probability: 90%

HY-3[]

The HaiYing-3 (HY-3, also known as C-301 in its export name; NATO codename: CSS-C-6 Sawhorse) is the active radar-homing, ramjet-powered supersonic land-to-ship missile developed by China Haiying Electro-Mechanical Technology Academy (CHETA, also known as 3rd Space Academy). The missile was developed in the 1980s based on the design of the HY-2 (C-201) and the ramjet technology of the cancelled YJ-1 (C-101). The development was completed in the early 1990s but the missile did not enter service.

The HY-3 is a large-size missile with a slim forward body and sharp nose, and a fatter rear half with four solid rocket boosters and two ramjet engines located aft of the missile body. There are a pair of front-canards on the front fuselage, four control surfaces on the rear fuselage, and four smaller stabilising fins attached on the solid rocket boosters. The booster motors accelerate the missile to past Mach 1.8 and the kerosene-fuelled ramjet engines accelerate the missile to a cruise speed of Mach 2.0. Its range is variously reported as up to 130 km, and it can fly as low as 50 m in its terminal attack phase. The missile is programmed to dive from cruising altitude to under 30m before the active-radar terminal phase begins, then dive onto the target just prior to impact.

The 3.5t missile is launched from a land-based launcher. Each firing unit consists of four launchers, a target acquisition radar, a fire-control unit, a power unit, and 8~12 missile reloading vehicle (each with one missile).[3]

Specifications

  • Length: 9.85m
  • Diameter: 0.76 m
  • Wingspan: 2.24 m
  • Weight: 3,400 kg
  • Warhead: 300~500 kg time-delayed semi-armour-piercing high-explosive
  • Propulsion: Two side-mounted ramjet engines; four solid propellant boost motors
  • Speed: Mach 2.5
  • Range: 180 km [4]
  • Flight altitude: 50 m
  • Guidance: Inertial and terminal active radar

HY-4[]

The HY-4 development of the C-201 is a mid-range ground-, air-, and ship-launched cruise missile. Development of the C-201 HY-4 is believed to have started in the mid-1970s, replacing the C-201 HY-2 liquid propellant sustainer motor with a small turbojet engine, and adding a monopulse active radar seeker. Apart from the substitution of the turbojet engine, the overall configuration of the HY-4 variant of the C-201 missile is similar to the HY-2 variants of the C-201, with two delta wings and tri-form rudder and tail. The missile has a radio altimeter which allows the cruise height to be varied between 70 and 200 m altitude, followed by a steep dive onto the target. The air-launched version is designated as C-401

Specifications

  • Developer: China Sea Eagle Electro-Mechanical Technology Co.
  • Length: 7.36 m
  • Diameter: 0.76 m
  • Wingspan: 2.4 m
  • Weight: 1,740 kg
  • Speed: Mach 0.8 – 0.85
  • Range: 300–500 km [4][5]
  • Cruising altitude: 8 m[6]
  • Propulsion: one turbojet engine and one solid rocket booster

FL-series[]

The FL-series was designed as land-based counterparts to the SY-series, and had a much longer production run than the SY-series. The FL-series was less expensive since it did not have to deal with more demanding conditions at sea. An added benefit was the ability to locate the missiles separately from the targeting and control systems, which improved survivability and flexibility. The SY-, HY-, and FL-series all shared the same systems.

A supersonic version, the FL-7, was also developed but differed significantly from the SY-series and its immediate derivatives.

FL-1[]

The FL-1 (NATO designation CSS-NX-1) was a SY-1 with a high-frequency monopulse seeker. It used a radar altimeter to cruise at 30 metres.[7]

FL-2[]

The FL-2 anti-ship missiles was the land-based derivative of the SY-2. It was produced at the Nanchang Aircraft Factory (南昌飞机制造厂).

SFQ-1[]

SFQ-1 was an unarmed test vehicle deriative of the Silkworm missile family. The test vehicle was used in the Chinese development of small turbojets that were designed to improve the range of the Chinese anti-ship cruise missiles, as well as powering the experimental versions of land attack YJ-4 cruise missiles. The entire project was reportedly named as Kunpeng (鲲鹏) Project, which first started in the early 1970s. SFQ-1 was specifically developed to test mini turbojet engines WP-11 and FW-41, the Chinese reverse engineered western turojet engines for UAVs and missiles.

YJ-4[]

YJ-4 is a family of experimental land-attack cruise missiles developed by China in the 1970s and early 1980s. Due to the limitation of Chinese industrial and technological bottleneck at the time, the YJ-4 only entered the Chinese services in extremely limited numbers, mainly serving as a foundation for more successful Chinese cruise missiles developed later, such as Changfeng missile. Two versions of YJ-4 family were developed: YJ-4I, which is also frequently but erroneously referred as YJ-41, and YJ-4II, which is also frequently but erroneously referred as YJ-42. The two missiles only differed in their respective powerplant, YJ-4I was equipped with WP-11, the Chinese version of Turbomeca Marboré, while the longer ranged YJ-4II was equipped with an engine that was twice as powerful, FW-41, the Chinese version of Teledyne CAE J69, reversed engineered from downed American Ryan Firebee.

XW-41[]

A developed version based on HY-4, known as the XW-41, has been developed. This latest version of the C-201 missile family is said to have a 300 km range with additional GPS/GLONASS guidance. However, due to the availability of more advanced anti-ship missile with similar range, such as the C-602, the future of XW-41, like others in the Silkworm missile family, is uncertain despite its successful trials. Although still a member of Silkworm missile, the developer considers the missile was different enough to be a listed as a separate category of its own due to the amount of new technologies adopted. After the Gulf War, United Arab Emirates ordered 30 of these shore-based version for coastal defense, and accordingly to Jane's Defence Weekly, these missiles are referred by the general name Silkworm missiles, but domestic Chinese sources have claimed that these were XW-41s, though there are reports claiming these missiles are other models of Silkworm series.

YJ-63 (C-603)[]

XW-41 and its predecessor HY-4 lost their intended market when the wars in middle east ended, so XW-41 was converted to the first indigenously developed air-to-surface precision strike missile. The developmental work begun in the mid-1990s when Sea Eagle Mechanical-Electrical Research Academy (海鹰机电技术研究院) received support of Chinese military and the project was completed in 2002. The resulting new missile was named as YJ-63, also known as C-603. In comparison to XW-41, the original radar guidance was changed to TV guidance. The original inverted Y-configuration of tail control surfaces was changed to X-configuration. Like its predecessor, XW-41, turbojet engine was adopted instead of liquid fuel rocket engine used on HY-2.

KD-63[]

Newest version of YJ-63 series that entered service in 2004 - 2005. This land attack version is almost identical to C-603 in appearance, except it has a solid nose instead of a window for TV guidance optronics. The solid nose indicates that the guidance of this air-to-surface missile adopts other means of guidance such as radar, but the exact type remain unknown.

C-611[]

Upgraded version of C-601 and other earlier models of the air-to-surface missiles of Silkworm family. Not all upgrades are necessarily the same due to difference between various versions, but electronics for all versions are upgraded to the latest standard. The seeker of the missile is modernized to include semi-active and passive homing capability, and the missile can be used against coastal ground targets. Cruise altitude is decreased while the range is increased.

  • Range: 200 km
  • Minimum cruise altitude: 20 meter
  • Guidance: active / passive / semi-active homing
  • Seeker: monopulse radar

Operational history[]

The Silkworm was developed at the Institute of Mechanics under Qian Xuesen, a Chinese scientist who did his graduate studies at MIT and Caltech, before being deported by the United States in 1955 after being suspected of Communist ties. A book about this scientist's life was written by Iris Chang, entitled Thread of the Silkworm.

Iran-Iraq War[]

The Silkworm gained fame in the 1980s when it was used by both sides in the Iran–Iraq War; both countries were supplied by China. During 1987, Iran launched a number of Silkworm missiles from the Faw Peninsula vicinity striking the Liberian-flagged tanker Sungari and US-flagged tanker Sea Isle City in October 1987[8] and 5 other missiles struck areas in Kuwait earlier in the year. In October 1987, Kuwait's Sea Island off shore oil terminal was hit by an Iranian Silkworm which was observed to have originated from the Faw peninsula. The attack prompted Kuwait to deploy a Hawk missile battery on Failaka Island to protect the terminal.[9] In December 1987, another Iranian Silkworm was fired at the terminal, but it struck a decoy barge instead.[10] Prior to these attacks the missile's range was thought to be less than 80 kilometres (49.7 mi), but these attacks proved that the range exceeded 100 kilometres (62.1 mi) with Kuwaiti military observers seeing that the missiles originated from the area and tracking them on radar along with US satellite imagery of the launch sites.[11]

In March 1988, China agreed to stop supplying Iran with HY-2 missiles, though it is reported that supply continued into 1989.[citation needed] Iran has since developed the capability to manufacture these missiles itself.

On February 25, 1991 a shore-based launcher fired two Silkworm missiles at the USS Missouri (BB-63) which was in company with the USS Jarrett (FFG-33) and HMS Gloucester. A Sea Dart missile from HMS Gloucester shot down one Silkworm and the other missed, crashing into the ocean.[12]

During the 2003 Gulf War, Iraq used the Silkworm as a surface to surface missile by firing at least two of them at the coalition positions in Kuwait.[13]

Lebanon 2006[]

During the 2006 Lebanon War, it was initially reported that Hezbollah guerillas fired a Silkworm missile at an Israeli warship off the shores of Lebanon. Israeli sources later said that the missile used instead was a more sophisticated Chinese C-701. Notably, Syria and Egypt employed Soviet Styx missiles—the Russian-made precursors to the Silkworm—against Israeli warships in both the 1967 War of Attrition following the Six-Day War and the 1973 Yom Kippur War. While the missiles were ineffective during the Battle of Latakia in 1973, four Styx missiles sank the Israeli destroyer Eilat in October 1967, marking the first time that ship-to-ship missiles were successfully used in combat.

While it is not a particularly sophisticated missile when compared to newer generations of anti-Ship missiles such as the French Exocet, the Silkworm's unusually large warhead ensures that a single hit will inflict very serious damage.

Nomenclature[]

Chinese industrial designation Export type designation NATO reporting name NATO/U.S DOD code Remarks
Shang You (SY-1) FL-1 SCRUBBRUSH CSS-N-1 tbd
Shang You (SY-2) FL-2 SABBOT CSS-N-5 tbd
Hai Ying (HY-1) tbd SAFFLOWER CSS-N-2 ship-launched
Hai Ying (HY-1) tbd SILKWORM CSSC-2/CSS-N-2 land-launched
Hai Ying (HY-2) C-201 SEERSUCKER CSSC-3 land-launched
Hai Ying (HY-3) C-301 SAWHOUSE CSSC-6 land-launched
Hai Ying (HY-4) C-401 SADSACK CSSC-7 land/air-launched
Ying Ji (YJ-4I) not applicable none none land/air-launched
Ying Ji (YJ-4II) not applicable none none land/air-launched

Operators[]

  • Flag of Bangladesh Bangladesh[14]
  • Flag of Cuba Cuba (made under license)
  • Flag of Egypt Egypt (as of Yom Kippur War)
  • Flag of the People's Republic of China People's Republic of China
  • Flag of Pakistan Pakistan
  • Flag of Iran Iran (as of Khomeini's Era)
  • Flag of Iraq Iraq (as of Saddam's Era)
  • Flag of Myanmar Burma
  • Flag of North Korea North Korea
  • Flag of Sudan Sudan
  • Flag of the United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates
    • Yemen

References[]

  1. http://www.sinodefence.com/navy/navalmissile/sy2.asp
  2. http://www.sinodefence.com/navy/navalmissile/hy2.asp
  3. http://www.sinodefence.com/navy/navalmissile/hy3.asp
  4. "Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States". Federation of American Scientists. http://www.fas.org/irp/threat/missile/rumsfeld/pt2_gormley.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-19. 
  5. "HY-4". MissileThreat.com. http://www.missilethreat.com/cruise/id.60/cruise_detail.asp. Retrieved 2009-04-19. 
  6. http://www.sinodefence.com/navy/navalmissile/hy4.asp
  7. Friedman, Norman (2006). The Naval Institute Guide to World Naval Weapon Systems (5th ed.). Naval Institute Press. pp. 514. ISBN 1-55750-262-5. 
  8. U.S. Flag Tanker Stuck by Missile in Kuwaiti Waters; First Direct Raid. The New York Times. October 17, 1987.
  9. The Gulf Punch, Counterpunch. Time magazine.
  10. Iranian Silkworm strikes decoy barge; Daniel J. Silva. St. Petersburg Times. St. Petersburg, Fla.: December 8, 1987. pg. 14.A.
  11. Counter-Memorial and Counter-claim submitted by the United States of America. June 23, 1997.
  12. Rostker, Bernard (December 2000). "TAB H – Friendly-fire Incidents". Depleted Uranium in the Gulf (II). United States Department of Defense. http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/du_ii/du_ii_tabh.htm. Retrieved 2007-02-25. 
  13. friendly printed version:Iraq’s missile and rocket activity during spring 2003, according to the 32d Army Air and Missile Defense Command
  14. http://www.bdmilitary.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=276&Itemid=122

External links[]

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The original article can be found at Silkworm (missile) and the edit history here.
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