Friday, February 11, 2011

UR-100N, SS-19 Stiletto

The UR-100N (NATO reporting name SS-19 Stiletto) is an intercontinental ballistic missile in service with Soviet and Russian Strategic Rocket Forces. Russia has 136 missiles still in service, and plans to keep them in their arsenal until 2030. At present (2007) the missiles are deployed in Deraznja, Kozelsk, Pervomajsk and Tatiscevo.

The UR-100N is a fourth-generation silo-launched liquid-propellant ICBM similar to the UR-100 but with much increased dimensions, weights, performance, and payload. The missile was not designed to use existing UR-100 silos, and therefore had new silos constructed for it.
UR-100N
Type ICBM
Service history
In service 1982–present
Used by Soviet Union / CIS
Production history
Manufacturer Khrunichev Machine-Building Plant
Specifications
Weight 105.6 tonnes
Length 27 metres
Diameter 2.5 m

Warhead up to 6 (1 as per START II
Blast yield 550 KT (Mod 3), 5 MT (Mod 2)

Engine two-stage liquid fuel
Operational
range
10,000 km
Guidance
system
inertial

The UR-100N reached initial operating capability in 1974, and by 1978 an inventory of 190 launchers were reached. In 1979, the UR-100UTTH became operational and by 1983 had replaced many older missiles and reached maximum inventory of 360 launchers. This had fallen to 300 by 1991, and with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, many in Ukraine became property of that nation. 170 remained in Russia, although treaty obligations required the rearming of the missiles with single warheads. Russia retains some UR-100UTTHs in its inventory with the potential to retain as many as fifty by the end of the decade. Recent political developments have led to plans to rearm the missiles again with MIRV warheads.

The units previously held by Ukraine have been returned to Russia or decommissioned.

In December 2008 Strategic rocket forces had 126 UR-100NUTTH operational missiles. This does not, however, make them the most numerous ICBMs in the Russian arsenal; that distinction belongs to SS-25 ICBMs.

The UR-100N forms the basis of the Rockot space launch system, which was used in several successful launches in the 1990s and early 2000s, and one failed launch of the ESA CryoSat satellite in 2005. After the failure, Rockot launches were suspended. Once the cause was unambiguously identified and corrective measures implemented, Rockot returned to active service on 28 July 2006, with the successful launch of an earth observation satellite for South Korea.

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