Vipera (missile)

Revision as of 16:16, 27 February 2021 by SanSilv (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Vipera
Aspide launch.jpg
Vipera being fired
TypeAir-to-air missile
Surface-to-air missile
Place of originSylva
Service history
In service1981-Present
Used bySylva
Sieuxerr
Maracaibo
Production history
DesignerSelenia
Designed1972-1981
ManufacturerSelenia
Produced1981
VariantsBlock 1
Block 2
Block 3
Block 3VL
Block 4VL
Specifications (Block 3VL)
Weight220 kg
Length3.66 m (missile)
4.3 (VLS)
Diameter235 mm
Warhead weight35 kg
Detonation
mechanism
HE-FRAG

EngineSolid fuel rocket
Operational
range
40+ km (Block 3VL)
SpeedMach 3.7
Guidance
system
Active-radar homing with mid-course update datalink
Launch
platform
Ship

The Vipera or Viper missile is a family of Sylvan air-to-air and surface-to-air launched missiles. It was developed by Selenia in the early-1970s into the 1980s and would become a mainstay of the Sylvan Air Force and Sylvan Navy. Vipera was developed with influences from froeign missile designs that were in service at the time. It was replaced by the Meteor and MICA missiles in the air-to-air role, however it has seen expanded use as a naval-based surface-to-air missile, becoming the standard medium-range air-defense missile. It replaced the Aster-15 in this role. The missile is notable for being one of the first missiles to employ active-radar homing on a wide scale.

In the air defense role the missile originally was employed with an 8-missile box-launcher, typically the launcher had a magazine of 16 to 24 missiles, however some ships were known to not have an internal magazine. With the development of vertical-launch systems in the 1990s, the Sylvan Navy developed MAD ahead of the EC-wide SYLVER system. MAD was only used with the Vipera missile in single-missile cells. Later a quad-pack system was developed for the SYLVER cells by the mid-2000s.