Sea Oryx

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sea Oryx Missile Launcher
Sea Oryx Missile Launcher Display at MND Hall in 2015

The Sea Oryx (Chinese: 海劍羚飛彈系統) is a lightweight, infrared homing short-range air defense system developed for the Republic of China (Taiwan) Navy. Based on the TC-1L surface-to-air missile, it is designed to defend against anti-ship missiles, helicopters, and low flying fixed-wing jet airplanes.[1][2][3]

Development[]

A concept model was displayed in 2015 as a TC-1 modified with an imaging infrared seeker, folding control surfaces, free-rolling tailfins, a more-powerful rocket motor, and a trainable launcher with either eight or sixteen all up rounds and a FLIR sensor on its left-hand side.[1]

The design was finalized in 2017, which saw the missile's aft section enlarged in diameter to accommodate more rocket fuel and its four rolling tailfins replaced with eight smaller, fixed ones. The launchers have also evolved into two more-distinct variants: one that is integrated into the ship's central combat management system (as well as being completely reliant on it for targeting information) and has a capacity of 24 missiles but no onboard sensors, and an "autonomous" version that houses only twelve missiles but has its own rotating search/tracking radar and FLIR/Electro-Optical sensor, along the same concept as the SeaRAM system.[4] In 2021 a Sea Oryx system was tested aboard the test ship ROCS Kao Hsiung.[5]

Variants[]

Land based[]

During the 2019 Taipei Aerospace & Defense Technology Exhibition, NCSIST presented a concept video showing the Sea Oryx system mounted on a truck defending Taiwan's AN/FPS-115 PAVE PAWS early warning radar against a Chinese cruise missile attack.[4]

See also[]

External links[]

  • Manufacturer’s videos: [1][2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "Sea Oryx". Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance.
  2. ^ "Taiwan's CSIST Unveiled the Sea Oryx Naval Air Defense System Similar to RAM at TADTE 2015".
  3. ^ Minnick, Wendell (8 August 2017). "Taiwan Defense Show Exhibits New Weapons".
  4. ^ a b Trevithick, Joseph. "Taiwan Reveals Land-Based Variant Of Naval Point Defense Missile System To Guard Key Sites". www.thedrive.com. The Drive. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  5. ^ Chen, Kelvin. "Taiwan Navy conducts new air defense missile, radar system trials". www.taiwannews.com.tw. Taiwan News. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
Retrieved from ""