QW-2 MANPADS

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QW-2
QW-2 of the Bangladesh Army on display
TypeMan-portable air-defense system
Place of origin China
Service history
Used by China
 Bangladesh[1]
 Turkmenistan
Production history
ProducedAfter 1998[2]
Specifications
Length1.59 metres (5.2 ft)[3]

Operational
range
0.5–6 kilometres (0.31–3.73 mi)[3]
Flight ceiling0.01–4 kilometres (0.0062–2.4855 mi)[3]
Guidance
system
Infrared homing
Launch
platform
MANPADS
Ground vehicles[4]

The QW-2 (NATO reporting name: CH-SA-8)[3] is a Chinese man-portable infrared homing surface-to-air missile (SAM) MANPADS. The system has improved performance against targets flying faster and at lower-altitude than the QW-1.[4]

Description[edit]

The Qian Wei-2 (or Vanguard 2, in its export designation) is the third generation of man-portable missiles built by the Shenyang firm Hangtian Xinle Ltd. It is difficult to determine exactly when it was put into service, but it probably came into operation between 1998 and 2002. The QW-2 was first revealed in 1998 at the Farnborough Airshow. The missile and its launcher closely resemble those of the Russian 9K310 “Igla-1” system (NATO designation: SA-16 “Gimlet”), and the two systems are considered to be quite comparable in terms of performance and capabilities.

Variants[edit]

QW-2[edit]

The QW-2 is considered by many Chinese media as the Asian equivalent of the AmericanFIM-92E. It is a further development of the QW-1, the first series of Vanguard missiles.

Compared to the QW-1, the minimum operational altitude of the QW-2 was reduced from 30 m to 10 m, the maximum range was increased from 5000 m to 6000 m, and the missile reaction time was reduced to less than 5 seconds. It is also equipped with a new dual-band passive infrared seeker, providing good resistance to thermal decoys (flares) and parasitic heat sources from the terrain (sun, ground, etc.), while by making it possible to improve the missile's performance in bad weather conditions and at night. It subsequently appeared that an infrared imaging seeker had been substituted.

  • Additional data:
    • Maximum target speed: 400 m/s approaching, 320 m/s moving away.
    • Operating temperatures: −40 °C to +55 °C.

CQW-2[edit]

The prefix "C" here indicates that this is a version of the QW-2 that is mounted on a 4x4 vehicle (from Chinese "Che-Zai", "vehicle-mounted").

It is served by a crew of 3 men (driver, gunner and gunner) and the fire control is made up of an acquisition radar and optronic tracking equipment. Once the target is acquired on radar, guidance returns to the optronic system, which is responsible for tracking and engagement. The on-board system allows the use of missiles one by one or in pairs, and the vehicle has 8 missiles ready for firing in the turret supports. 8 other projectiles are in the hold.

The fire control is mounted in a ball, which includes a thermal camera and a laser rangefinder. Its radar is a variant of the NRIET AS-90, which operates in L-band and ranges to 20 km. The system reaction time is less than 8 seconds.

The CQW-2 missiles are fully interchangeable with the QW-2 portable launcher system. However, this operation cannot be carried out in the field.

QW-12[edit]

QW-12

Uses a laser proximity detonator. Unveiled in November 2014.[5]

Operators[edit]

Bangladesh Army QW-2 during victory day parade

References[edit]

  1. ^ Michael Ashkenazi; Princess Mawuena Amuzu; Jan Grebe; Christof Kögler; Marc Kösling (February 2013). MANPADS - A Terrorist Threat to Civilian Aviation? (PDF) (Report). BICC brief. Vol. 47. Bonn International Center for Conversion. p. 159. ISSN 0947-7322. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
  2. ^ DeClerq, David (October 1999). Trends in Small Arms and Light Weapons Development: Non-Proliferation and Arms Control Dimensions (PDF) (Report). Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Canada. p. 29. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d Dominguez, Gabriel (15 January 2018). "Footage suggests QW-2 MANPADS has entered service with Turkmenistan Army". Janes. Archived from the original on 17 January 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  4. ^ a b Chinese Tactics (2021): page C-2
  5. ^ Shukla, Parth; Udoshi, Rahul (16 February 2022). "China tests QW-12 missile capabilities". Janes. Retrieved 6 March 2022.