Orange William

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PlaceoforiginUnited Kingdom
Inservicedid not enter service
Designed1956–1960
Orange William
TypeAnti-tank guided missile
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Service history
In servicedid not enter service
Production history
Designed1956–1960
ManufacturerFairey Engineering
Specifications
Mass223 lb (101 kg)[1]
Length86.5 in (2.2 m)[1]
Wingspan34 in (0.86 m)[1]
WarheadHESH
Warhead weight37 lb (17 kg) plastic explosive
Detonation
mechanism
impact

Propellant2-stage solid fuel rocket
Operational
range
up to 6,000 m (20,000 ft)
Guidance
system
SACLOS
Steering
system
control surfaces
Launch
platform
vehicle

Orange William was a British project to develop a long-range anti-tank missile as a possible alternative to the Malkara being developed in Australia. The project was drawn up in 1954 and the resulting contract won by Fairey Engineering in 1956. It was very similar to Malkara in form and layout, including the Malkara's distinctive square fuselage.[citation needed] It differed primarily in its guidance system (semi-automatic command to line of sight) and the use of an infrared command link replacing the Malkara's manual wire guidance. The name is a randomly selected "rainbow code".

The initial contract called for testing in 1960 with a 1962 in-service date[citation needed]. Problems with the command link proved difficult to solve and later appeared to require outright replacement. The project was cancelled in September 1959 as it would not enter service before the Chieftain tank which was considered able to deal with any Soviet tank available. Malkara was purchased for its original intended use to give airborne infantry forces the ability to deal with heavy tanks.

As a new heavy anti-tank missile was still desirable, new projects started as the Quickfire and Swingfire weapons. The latter would go on to be the British Army's primary heavy anti-tank weapon into the 1990s.

References

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