maglomanic said:
First off you totally ignored the picture that i posted from the same source that clearly shows Tercom/DSMAC/infrared imaging seeker all together.
The picture is not a schematic of both the versions. It shows the radar as well as IIR seeker in one picture; else they would have to draw 2 near-identical pictures to show slight changes.
In both cases you have a radar that guides through the terrain until the missile reaches the terminal phase where it has to find the target. Thats when DSMAC opens up and it can either use an optical seeker or IR seeker.
No. As mentioned by your own site, the anti-ship version uses IR seeker(for terminal guidance) and the terrain version uses DSMAC for terminal guidance and radar altimeter for TERCOM. The anti-ship version does not use TERCOM because it has to cruise over the sea and hence does not use a radar altimeter either.
Look at the last entry in the chart it mentions IIR/FLIR/DSMAC combined with your very own optical correlator.
It means that the Optical correlator is DSMAC II (version), the EO seeker is FLIR/IIR and the datalink is Walleye.
However this missile is not operational but proves the point that you can have more than one kind of seekers for different phases. Even if infrared seeker is not there Tomahawk DOES use an optical image seeker to feed into it's DSMAC to identify it's target.
DSMAC is not a seeker; at least not in the sense of IR or radar seeker. It is another technology altogether just like GPS/INS guidance or guidance from accessing waypoints from memory (go 5 kms north at x kms/hour etc.).
GPS/INS, DSMAC, wire-guidance (for anti-tank missiles)
are not seeker technologies, but different technologies altogether, because they involve comparisons from a pre-recorded memory. In case of GPS, the waypoints have to be calculated and stored before launch, in DSMAC the image of the target must be known and stored prior to launch, and wire-guidance for anti-tank missiles is not a seeker technology.
Command guidance does not mean the pilot, sailor, or soldier guides the missile. The computer does it.
I'm afraid that is debatable. Launch-platform guidance (like AMRAAM) is not 'command' guidance. The target is NOT changed mid-way or the missile's direction changed abruptly. Command guidance can do all that. It is a system in which a personnel who guides the missile to the target, till the missile is close enough to seek its own target by using its own seeker (IR or radar) i.e. by active guidance.
The P-6 and P-35 missiles, which differ only in minor ways, were fitted with the same guidance system and warhead. After launch, the missile climbed to a high altitude, accelerated to Mach 1.5, and started searching the front area with its radar seeker. The resulting picture was transmitted to the launching ship via a TV channel. When a target was acquired, the operator on the ship verified whether it was the desired target (e.g., the aircraft carrier in the group). If so, the operator designated it as such and turned the missile's seeker on automatic-track mode.
Source:
One can refer to ANY site that discusses AIM-120 AMRAAM. None mention "command guidance".
Examples of command guided missiles are the P-6D, P-500, Moskit, and other out-dated Soviet missiles.
However, the Arrow 2 BMD also uses command guidance in which an operator points the fast moving ballistic missile to the Arrow literraly like controlling a character in a video-game.
Anyway even this is getting obsolete as US endeavours in this direction eliminate this need.
Another thing, like I said before it's important to differentiate between MID-COURSE guidance and TERMINAL guidance.
I know that. I've had heated discussions with vincelee regarding the Brahmos in the Indian Army and Navy News thread.
As an example, I've told him that the Brahmos will have a datalink to a UAV/helicopter or LEO satellite to be guided to the target, while it is in mid-course.....as compared to the Moskit's guidance where a sailor on the launch-ship guides the moskit to the target.
Wingman said:
That would be the best type for no-warning engagement. And you won't run into the problem of having to put both a radar receiver and IR seeker in the same missile. I believe there are also some missiles with command guidance modes where you don't have to lock on to the target at all, just designate it. With that combination, the target will receive no warning at all.
I disagree. A warning will be recieved, because the target has to be illuminated by the source-aircraft or AWACs anyway.