YDG-67

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YDG-67
TypeSurface-to-air missile
Place of originTír Glas, Menghe
Service history
In service2018-present
Used byMenghe
Production history
Designed2009-2018
ManufacturerBuksŏng Industries Group
Unit cost$3 million (2020)
Produced2016-present
VariantsYDG-66G
Specifications (YDG-66G)
Weight1,480 kg
Length6.48 m
Diameter480 mm
Warhead75 kg
Detonation
mechanism
radio proximity fuse

PropellantDual-thrust solid-fuel rocket
Operational
range
360 km (claimed)
Flight ceiling50,000 meters
SpeedMach 3.5
Guidance
system
Active radar homing with mid-course inertial guidance and command updates
Steering
system
aerodynamic surfaces

The YDG-67 is a type of very-long-range surface-to-air missile developed in Menghe. Unlike the preceding YDG-39, YDG-60, and YDG-62, all of which were licensed copies of foreign long-range missiles, the YDG-67 is a domestic Menghean design. It is fired from a strike-length Mark 41 VLS canister, and can be launched from surface ships using the Mark 41 VLS or from land vehicles with Mark 41 VLS canister adapters. The family of launch vehicles, radar vehicles, and command posts for the YDG-67 is collectively known as Masul Chang ("Magic Spear"), though this name is sometimes applied to the missile itself.

Development

The YDG-67 was likely ordered in response to the rumored development of long-range active-radar-homing missiles in other countries in Septentrion, particularly the S-400 missile system, given Letnia's history of exporting surface-to-air missile systems to Maverica. Rather than pursuing a license agreement, as had been done with the YDG-62, the Menghean government pushed for a domestic design program, reasoning that Menghe's electronics and aerospace sectors were sophisticated enough to produce a high-quality weapon.

Development began at some point in the late 2000s, but experienced repeated delays, apparently due to problems meeting the MoND's demanding range requirements. The missile entered service in 2018.

The seeker on the YDG-67 is derived from the seeker on the YDG-64N, scaled up to fit the larger nose cone and increase acquisition range. The YDG-64N's seeker was reportedly optimized to distinguish small airborne targets, even low-flying or notching ones, from background terrain, although the details of the seeker's capabilities are unclear.

In 2021, it was rumored that an upgraded seeker was in development. This new seeker will have a wider search angle and a longer search range, expanding the size of the target acquisition basket and making it harder for a target to evade the missile on its terminal track. It is expected that the upgraded missile variant will be designated YDG-67N.

Description

The YDG-67 is a relatively large surface-to-air missile, with a diameter of 480 millimeters and a length of 6.48 meters. It has a solid-fuel booster stage which propels it into the air and brings it to altitude, and a solid-fuel cruse stage which brings it the rest of the way to the target after the booster falls away.

Official Menghean sources claim that the YDG-67 has a range of 360 kilometers, though unofficial estimates range from 300 to 450 kilometers. Even the lower estimate would place it among the longest-ranged surface-to-air missile systems in Septentrion. It achieves this range by using an optimized flight trajectory, first climbing to high altitude and then cruising in the much thinner upper stratosphere. This trajectory also allows the missile to descend on its target in the terminal approach, increasing its speed and making evasion more difficult.

Like the YDG-60, YDG-62, YDG-64, YDG-65, and YDG-66, the YDG-67 has a two-stage guidance system. Before launch, predicted intercept coordinates are programmed into the missile, and an inertial guidance system controls the missile in its ascent, pitching it in the correct direction as it emerges from the vertical launch cell and bringing it toward those coordinates. During the cruise phase, the missile receives continuous course mid-course guidance updates, which adjust the location of the planned intercept point if the target changes its speed or course. Without mid-course updates, the missile continues on its last known course to the target. If radar contact with the target is lost and there are multiple missiles approaching it, the launch platform can send a command update signal to spread the missile formation and increase the probability of an active radar lock.

In its mid-course phase, the YDG-67 has full cooperative engagement capability, meaning that it can also receive mid-course updates from a separate radar site or an airborne early warning platform. Separate radar sites and AEW platforms can also transmit target information to a launch platform operating under restrictive EMCON states, allowing the launch platform to launch a missile on an intercept course even if it lacks line-of-sight to the target or has its radar arrays switched off.

On terminal approach, the YDG-67 is guided by an active radar seeker which illuminates the target and processes the reflected signal. Combined with the missile's descending trajectory, this allows the YDG-67 to acquire and lock onto targets which have broken line of sight with the launch site by flying low or flying behind mountains. It also eliminates the need for the launch site to emit radar guidance signals at the target, and allows the YDG-67 to be fired at targets beyond the launch site's line-of-sight or outside the range of its target illumination radars.

The YDG-67 is able to engage a wide range of airborne targets, including fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles, anti-ship missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicles. It has some anti-ballistic missile capability, though it is not as effective in this role as the YDG-65 or YDG-68. It also has a secondary anti-ship capability, again using its active radar seeker to acquire the target. The missile's high speed makes it challenging to intercept in the anti-ship role, but because of its small warhead, high trajectory, and high cost, it is not typically used as an anti-ship weapon.

Masul Chang air defense system

Description

Masul Chang ("Magic Spear") refers to the full system of vehicles and radars associated with the land-launched YDG-67, though the term is sometimes incorrectly applied to the missile itself. All heavy vehicles in the system are based on the Taekchŏn T512 8×8 heavy utility lorry, balancing offroad mobility with on-road speed.

To fully exploit the missile's long range and active radar terminal guidance, the Masul Chang system places a great emphasis on the networked transmission of targeting information between distant radar sites and launch batteries. Each launch battery is provided with a radar antenna for sector search, but this is normally switched off to avoid revealing the launch battery's location. It also lacks the necessary detection distance to exploit the YDG-67 missile's maximum range.

Each Masul Chang launch battery carries a mix of surface-to-air missiles: typically, there are four YG-60B1 transporter erector launchers with four YDG-67 missiles each, and two YBR-66/64 TELARs with a mix of YDG-64 and YDG-66 missiles, up to 16 each. These missiles provide an inner defensive layer around the battery, protecting it against loitering munitions, UAVs, and anti-radiation missiles, which may be within the minimum range of the YR-287 battery air search radar and the YDG-67 missile.

The Masul Chang air defense system is used by both the Menghean Army and the Menghean Navy, in the latter case serving with coastal defense formations.

Role

While the tracked Chŏlgung air defense system is a corps-level asset which follows the advance and retreat of Army formations, the Masul Chang air defense system is an Army-level asset which is normally stationed in the rear areas of an Army's zone of jurisdiction. This provides a broad zone of coverage over friendly rear-area targets, and can fill gaps between front-line SAM defenses.

The long range of the YDG-67 also allows it to be used offensively, targeting aircraft in the enemy's operational depth. Even a launch site 100 kilometers from the front line would be able to engage targets 260 kilometers into hostile territory. Such a deployment of the YDG-67 system could be used to target aircraft taking off and landing at airfields near the front line. The YDG-67's long range also allows it to target enemy tanker aircraft, SIGINT aircraft, and AEW platforms operating behind the front line, or otherwise force these high-value targets to operate further away from suspected launch sites.

A 2020 press release on the Masul Chang air defense system mentioned that its long-range effect was "area interference rather than area denial:" enemy fighter aircraft may be able to evade a missile by accelerating, dropping to low level, and breaking line-of-sight with a forward radar site or AEW platform, but this would involve burning fuel in afterburner, losing altitude, and potentially jettisoning tanks and munitions to allow hard maneuvers. Thus, even if a Masul Chang battery fails to shoot down its target, it can disrupt strike or patrol operations, or place an enemy fighter squadron in a disadvantageous low-level, low-energy position compared with a nearby friendly fighter squadron. An online video recording of this statement was taken down a month after its release.

Battalion structure

  • Battalion headquarters
    • YR-423 E/F-band radar
    • YR-452 D-band radar
    • YR-374 A-band radar
  • 3× Masul Chang battery
    • YG-60JS command post
    • 4× YG-60B1 TEL (4× YDG-67 each)
    • 2× YBR-66/64 Pyobŏm TELAR (8× YDG-64 and 8× YDG-66 each)
  • Missile technical battery
    • 12× Taekchŏn T512 with crane (4× YDG-67 each)
    • 6× Samsan S915 with crane (8× YDG-64 and 8× YDG-66 each)
  • Logistics company