RT-2

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The RT-2 was an intercontinental ballistic missile deployed by the Soviet Union from 1969 through 1996. It was assigned the NATO reporting name SS-13 Savage and carried the industry designation 8K98. It was probably designed by the V.N. Nadradze Missile Design Bureau and about 60 were built by 1972.

The RT-2 was the first solid-propellant ICBM in Soviet service, and was a development of the earlier RT-1 series. It was a three-stage inertially-guided missile that is comparable to the American Minuteman III. It was armed with a single 600 kiloton warhead and was silo-launched, although a rail-based version was contemplated by Soviet planners. It was deployed in the Yoshkar Ola missile field.

The two upper stages of the RT-2 were used to develop the RT-15 mobile IRBM system. The RT-2PM Topol is supposedly a modernised version of the RT-2

Contents

[edit] General Characteristics

A view of a Soviet SS-13 intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
A view of a Soviet SS-13 intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
  • Length: 20m (65.6ft)
  • Diameter: 1.7m (5.57ft)
  • Launch Weight: 34,000kg (33.46 tons)
  • Guidance: inertial
  • Propulsion: solid, three-stage
  • Warhead: 600kt nuclear
  • Range: 8000km (4970 miles)

[edit] Operators

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Hogg, Ian (2000). Twentieth-Century Artillery. Friedman/Fairfax Publishers. ISBN 1-58663-299-X


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