![]() ![]() This was likely due to the situation in the late 1970s where many nations did not want to rely solely on arms purchases from the Soviets combined with the U.S. In addition, Euromissile received large export orders from Middle East nations at the start of mass production. ![]() HOT initially became operational with the German and French armies fitted to specialized armored antitank vehicles. HOT entered limited production in 1976, with mass production of 800 missiles a month reached in 1978. The missile system is also commonly mounted on light and medium armored vehicles, and attack helicopters. It has become one of the most successful missiles of its class, with tens of thousands of missiles produced, used by no fewer than a dozen countries worldwide, and validated in combat in several wars. In comparison to the SS.11, HOT has longer range, flies faster, and is semi-automatically guided instead of manually. Bölkow and Nord later merged into MBB and Aérospatiale respectively, both of which then formed Euromissile to design and produce the MILAN, Roland and HOT. ![]() ![]() The design was a collaboration between the German firm Bölkow and the French firm Nord. It was originally developed to replace the older SS.11 wire guided missile in French and West German service. The HOT (French: Haut subsonique Optiquement Téléguidé Tiré d'un Tube, or High Subsonic, Optical, Remote-Guided, Tube-Launched) is a second-generation long-range anti-tank missile system. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |