DF-3A

Intermediate-range ballistic missile From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The DF-3A (NATO: CSS-2) is a Chinese liquid-fueled, single-stage, nuclear-capable intermediate-range ballistic missile. It entered service with the People's Liberation Army Rocket Force in 1971, and its units were fully converted to the DF-21 by 2014.[5][6] The missile was used as the basis for China's first launch vehicle, the Long March 1.[7]

TypeIRBM
PlaceoforiginChina
Inservice1971–2014 (China)
1988–present (Saudi Arabia)
UsedbyChina, Saudi Arabia
Quick facts Type, Place of origin ...
DF-3A/CSS-2(US)
TypeIRBM
Place of originChina
Service history
In service1971–2014 (China)
1988–present (Saudi Arabia)
Used byChina, Saudi Arabia
Specifications
Length24 m
WarheadNuclear, possibly 3 × 50–100 kt (0.21–0.42 PJ) warheads or 1 × 700–3,000 kt (2.9–12.6 PJ) warhead[1]

Engineliquid fueled (4x YF-1 rocket engines)
Operational
range
4,000-5,000 km[2][3]
Guidance
system
Astro-inertial guidance
Accuracy0.6-2.4 miles (1000-4000 m) CEP[4]
Close

History

Range of various Chinese missiles (2007); DF-3A range in Orange.

Initial production of the DF-3 was rushed due to the Zhenbao/Damansky Island conflict with the Soviet Union.[8]:210 Supplied without a proof test, the weapons were initially rejected by the Second Artillery.[8]:210 A proof test was completed in 1973.[8]:210

Deployment of the missile began in 1971,[1] reaching a peak of 110 by 1984, then shrinking to 50 in 1993.[citation needed] It was estimated by the U.S. DoD that there were 17 missiles and 10 launchers in operation as of 2010 under a single brigade.[5] By May 2014, it appeared that the last unit operating the DF-3A completed conversion to the DF-21 missile from satellite photos of changes to the launch unit site.[6]

The missile was used as the basis for China's first launch vehicle, the Long March 1, which launched China's first satellite, Dong Fang Hong 1, in 1970.[7]

Users

 China
People's Liberation Army Rocket Force
 Saudi Arabia
Royal Saudi Strategic Missile Force
  • In 1988 China sold several dozen (reportedly between 36 and 60) DF-3A missiles to Saudi Arabia.[3][9] Saudi Arabia publicly displayed them for the first time in 2014.[10]

References

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