HD-1

Chinese anti-ship missile From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

HD-1 is a supersonic land-attack and anti-ship missile developed by Guangdong Hongda Mining Company. The HD-1 is powered by a ramjet engine and a solid rocket booster.[4][5]

Quick facts Type, Place of origin ...
HD-1
HD-1 mockup at IDEX 2023
TypeAnti-ship/land-attack cruise missile
Place of originPeople's Republic of China
Service history
Used byPeople's Liberation Army Navy
Production history
ManufacturerGuangdong Hongda
Specifications
Mass2,200 kg launch weight[1]
Length8.3 m (27 ft)[1]
Diameter0.375 m (1.23 ft) missile body[1]
Warhead240–400 kg (530–880 lb) Unitary or cluster

Engineintegrated ramjet with solid rocket booster
Operational
range
290 km[1]
Flight altitude15 km (cruise), 5-10 m (attack)[2]
Maximum speedMach 2.2 to Mach 3.5 (depending on the flight profile)
Guidance
system
Inertial navigation system (INS)/Satellite guidance
Terminal radar/infrared guidance
Launch
platform
Aircraft, ships [3]
Close

History and development

The HD-1 is a private, export-oriented missile project developed by the Guangdong Hongda Mining Company, a Guangzhou-based company specializing in industrial explosives.[4][1]

The HD-1 missile technology was reportedly sold to Pakistan, used to develop the latter's Fatah-3 supersonic cruise missile.[6]

Design

The HD-1 is a family of supersonic cruise missiles powered by a combination of a solid rocket booster and a ramjet engine. The booster is used to launch the missile into optimal speed and initiate the ramjet engine.[7] The missile features tapered control surfaces for maneuvers. The missile has a reported range of 290 km (180 mi). This figure could be higher in reality, as the number could be intentionally conservative to follow the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR).[1]

See also

Related development

Comparable missiles

References

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