Orphan capability? I thought the Russians were making use of the missile themselves - or is the Yakhont export missile distinct from the Oniks? I'm just curious as to how the term orphan capability is defined in this context.
its not an orphan for the russians as they have the ISR, GIS, INT combat systems available to integrate and use it effectively.
the indons don't. they basically have platform specific launch and whatever feeds the launch platform - nowhere anywhere near as sophisticated
Those sensor issues must be a bit of a letdown... I've always been somewhat confused by the design intent behind some of the big Soviet anti-ship missiles like the Granit or Bazalt - they're gigantic, and immensely long-legged for their class of weapon, but how in the hell was the Soviet Navy planning to acquire sufficient sensor data to make use of the range advantage? Publicly the weapons are listed as effective out to 500-600 kilometres, which looks nice on paper but I imagine attacks made at this distance would require some pretty spot-on timing and coverage from an offboard targeting system, wouldn't they? Realistically, could the Soviet Navy deploy sensors with the depth and distribution necessary to carry out missile attacks on surface vessels at such extended ranges?
its a legacy of the soviet philosophy to compensate precision issues with yield and kinetic effect. if you can't effectively update the weapon close to termination, then you take your best shot by increasing blast effect.
To a lesser extent I see the same issue with the more modern BrahMos and Yakhont missiles, in that the weapons are quite capable of out-performing the sensor capacity of small or isolated launch platforms. It seems to me that the missile's size/space requirements make for a somewhat inefficient capability unless you have sufficient sensor platforms and data-sharing capacity to consistently make long range, remotely cued shots. Otherwise why bother with 3 tons and 8 metres of missile? Weight-wise each Yakhont is the equivalent of what, about four Exocets...
personally I think the Indians got hosed on Brahmos, and I think I've outlined it on here as to why prev (but also on SP)
If anything the Indon purchase reinforces it for me.....
its a good weapon for the russians - not so good for everyone else where they don't have the same data sources and/or feeds.
successfull disparate systems are highly dependant on the quality of integration, and the quality of the data sources . IMO Indonesia and India both don't have it and that impacts upon effectiveness as well as value for money