Here's a post I made on another forum in regards to CIWS v.s. Supersonic seaskimmers:
[...]
Gun-based CIWS will all fail, Russian, Chinese, American, against anything moving at Mach 2 at 10 meters altitude or lower.
I believe you pull "facts" from that article that aren't facts after all.
First, when the article sais target track started at 7.3km, I think it means that the threat was detected before that by the search radar of Phalanx, that it cued the gun & the tracking radar and then it started to track already.
These are also just small radars that just have a short range anyway, because it's all they need.
If you're 5m above the waterline, looking at an object at the same hight, you'll se it at almost 16km away before it disappears behind the horizon. So Phalanx won't have difficulties engaging real sea skimmers at the same distance.
Unless of course there's bad weather conditions, but these will be even more challanging for the AShM.
Second, it's not a fault of the system that destruction of the threat only happens a few hundred meters away. Phalanx already is a last ditch, "close in" defense. Better there then not at all.
I have no hint at all that a Moskit has TVC. Do you have more than your exspectation that it has?
Finally, I believe that people are overstretching the advantage that an end-game maneuvering missile has against a defender, by a large margin, sometimes.
Especially with the speeds involved, turn radii will become really big, and a big, heavy missile also can only pull so many Gs.
If I got my stuff right, the picture looks roughly as follows:
A missile traveling at 815m/s (almost M2.5) in a level turn (20Gs) has a turn radius of close to 3.400m and turns almost 14 degrees per second. In the end, however, it still has to fly towards a rather small point in space, the ship. So it's maneuver options are rather limited.
In the pic below from the 3sec to impact point to the 1sec point, with the target traveling at 30kts against the missile turn, the angular difference from a gun on the ship between the two points is 12°. That means the CIWS mount has to turn at 6°/s to stay on target.
Taking a 530m/s (M1.6) missile at 20G, the radius shrinks to 1400+m and the missile turns a good 21°/s. From the 4sec to the 1sec to impact point the angle changes by 49° with the same assumptions as above. For the gun that means moving 16,5°/s.
Up & down truns will change the radii a bit, and all maneuvers will change speed (=slow down), wich in turn changes radii again.
But the # sound absolutely possibly. So (gun based) CIWSs do have their legitimacy to intercept leakers in the last moment.
Last edited: