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DRDO Anti Tank Missile: ATGM: Wire guided: 1.6 km (0.99 mi) 91 m/s HEAT - Cancelled [26] Nag: Prospina: Land-attack ATGM: Charge-coupled device Infrared homing: 4 km (2.5 mi) 230 m/s Tandem HEAT 8 kg 2016 In service [27] HeliNa/Dhruvastra: Air-launched ATGM: 10 km (6.2 mi) TBD In development [28] Stand off Anti-Tank missile: Standoff Air ...
Army operates more than 400 Spike MR and Spike LR-II missiles while Indian Air Force procured Spike-NLOS for Mi-17 helicopters. [109] [110] Possible future procurements or currently under trials Amogha missile: Anti-tank guided missile — India: The Amogha will be configured to be used on HAL Rudra and HAL Prachand. Variants will include a ...
Anti-tank guided missile India: 9M119 Svir (AT-11 Sniper) 25,000 India Russia: Status: In service. Gun-launched ATGM used on the Indian Army's T-90S and T-72 tanks. Bharat Dynamics Limited signed a contract with MOD for Invar anti-tank guided missiles on 19-Aug-2013. [315]
The proposal has been shelved and superseded by the QRSAM and VL-SRSAM missiles for the use of the Indian Army and Indian Navy respectively. QRSAM: Quick reaction surface-to-air missile 30 km (19 mi) 10 km (6.2 mi) 2022 Being inducted [129] VL-SRSAM: Short-range surface-to-air missile 50 km (31 mi) High-explosive, pre-fragmented warhead Being ...
On 25 December 2022, Ministry of Defence (MoD) cleared the order for 120 missiles for the Indian Air Force. [39] Two more units of 250 Pralay missiles worth ₹7,500 crore are in advance stages of acquisition as of April 2023. [40] [41] The purchase of a Pralay regiment for the Indian Army was approved by the Ministry of Defence on 17 September ...
The Prithvi missile (from Sanskrit पृथ्वी pṛthvī "Earth") is a family of tactical surface-to-surface short-range ballistic missiles (SRBM) and is India's first indigenously developed ballistic missile. Development of the Prithvi began in 1983, and it was first test-fired on 25 February 1988 from Sriharikota, SHAR Centre ...
In a test, the missile was launched with an extended range of 350 km (220 mi) and had improved navigation due to an improvement in inertial navigation system. The missile features measures to deceive anti-ballistic missiles. [citation needed] The missile was inducted into India's Strategic Forces Command in 2003. [13]
In March 2011, a report indicates that the Indian Army has ordered 2 Akash regiments – approximately 2,000 missiles – worth ₹ 14,180 crore (equivalent to ₹ 290 billion or US$3.3 billion in 2023). [105] These will replace the Indian Army's 2 SA-6 Groups (25 systems with 1,500 missiles each), which were inducted between 1977 and 1979. [106]