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MILAN
Milan 501607 fh000004
MILAN 1 missile
Type Anti-tank missile
Place of origin Flag of France France
Flag of Germany Germany
Service history
In service 1972–present
Used by See operators
Production history
Designed 1970s
Manufacturer MBDA
Produced 1972
No. built 350,000 missiles, 10,000 launchers
Variants See variants
Specifications
Mass 7.1 kg
Length 1.2 m
Diameter 0.115 m
Warhead tandem HEAT
Detonation
mechanism
contact

Engine solid-fuel rocket
Wingspan 0.26 m
Flight ceiling -
Maximum speed 200 m/s
Guidance
system
SACLOS wire
Steering
system
Jet deflector
Launch
platform
Individual, Vehicle

MILAN (French; English: Anti-Tank Light Infantry Missile, "milan(e)" is French for "kite") is a European anti-tank guided missile. Design of the MILAN started in 1962. It was ready for trials in 1971, and was accepted for service in 1972. It is a wire guided SACLOS (Semi-Automatic Command to Line-Of-Sight) missile, which means the sight of the launch unit has to be aimed at the target to guide the missile. The MILAN can be equipped with a MIRA thermal sight, or MILIS to give it night-firing ability.

History[]

MILAN is a French and German missile that has been license-built by Italy, Spain, Britain and India. As it is guided by wire by an operator, this missile can avoid most countermeasures (flares and chaffs). The drawbacks are its short range, the exposure of the operator, and that it requires a skilled and well-trained operator.

Variants[]

MILAN (2) 1986

MILAN II with stand-off probe which almost doubled penetration

  • MILAN 1: Single, Main Shaped Charge Warhead (1972), calibre 103 mm
  • MILAN 2: Single, Main Shaped Charge Warhead, with standoff probe to increase penetration (1984) - see photo to right, calibre 115 mm
  • MILAN 2T: Single main Shaped Charge, with smaller shape charge warhead at end of standoff probe to defeat reactive armour (1993)
  • MILAN 3: Tandem, Shaped Charge Warheads (1996) and electronic beacon
  • MILAN ER: Extended Range (3000 m) and improved penetration

The later MILAN models have tandem HEAT warheads. This was done to keep pace with developments in Soviet armour technology. Soviet tanks began to appear with explosive reactive armour, which could defeat earlier ATGMs. The smaller precursor HEAT warhead penetrates and detonates the ERA tiles, paving the way for the main HEAT warhead to penetrate the armour behind.

MILAN-VBLB

MILAN launcher mounted on French Army VBL

Targetsight

View through MILAN optical sight

Operators[]

Former Operators[]

Gallery[]

See also[]

References[]

Notes

External links[]

Video link
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at MILAN (missile) and the edit history here.
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