RBS 56 BILL explained

RBS 56 BILL
Origin:Sweden
Type:SACLOS Anti-tank missile
Is Ranged:yes
Is Explosive:OH YA
Is Missile:yes
Service:1988 – present
Used By:See Operators
Manufacturer:Bofors
Unit Cost:$80,000 (1989)[1]
Production Date:1985 – late 1990s
Number:15,000 +
Weight:36 kg (launcher)
Length:900 mm
Diameter:150 mm
Velocity:250 m/s
Range:150 to 2,200 m
Recoil:TOO MUCH
Guidance:SACLOS

The RBS 56 BILL[2] is a Swedish manportable SACLOS wire-guided anti-tank missile developed by AB Bofors.

History

Development began in 1979 and BILL entered production in 1985. The Swedish Army began receiving the missile in March 1988.[3] BILL stands for (Bofors, Infantry, Light and Lethal).

By 1996, 15,000 missiles had been produced and supplied to the Swedish and Austrian armies. Between 1996 and 1997, Brazil received a number of BILL missiles.

In the late 1990s, production shifted to the RBS 56B BILL 2. The Swedish army received the first deliveries of the BILL 2 in 1999.

Design

A man portable BILL system consists of a missile in a sealed launch tube, tripod, day sight and thermal night-vision sight. The missile's shaped charge warhead is aimed downwards at an angle of 30 degrees and is triggered by a proximity fuze as the missile passes over the intended target.

The top attack warhead allows the missile to strike the thinner top armour of tanks. To enable this to work effectively the missile flies 0.75 meters above the line of sight between the launcher and the target. A secondary effect of this is to enable the missile to be used to engage targets largely behind cover, for example a hull down tank.

When launched the missile is propelled from the launch tube at around 72 meters per second by a gas generator at the rear of the launch tube. Once the missile is clear of the launch tube the sustainer motor engages and accelerates the missile to a speed of 250 meters per second. Once the missile is about 400 meters from the launcher, the sustainer motor cuts out and the missile continues in free flight.

Operators

Current operators

Marines[4] [5]

Ukrainian army[6]

Former operators

through 2010,[7] 3,000 purchased

Purchased in 2006.[8]

Swedish army, 1985–2013[10]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Archived copy . 2018-06-09 . 2019-04-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190422051706/http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/page/trade_register.php . dead .
  2. Web site: RBS 56 BILL Anti-Tank Guided Missile . Military-Today.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20220828125522/http://www.military-today.com/missiles/bill.htm . 2022-08-20. 2022-08-28 .
  3. News: August 1989 . Home and away wins for Bofors . 110 . International Defense Review .
  4. International Institute for Strategic Studies . International Institute for Strategic Studies . 2020 . Chapter Eight: Latin America and the Caribbean . The Military Balance . 120 . 1 . 405 . 10.1080/04597222.2020.1707970. 219623398 .
  5. Web site: Trade Registers . 2023-06-06 . armstrade.sipri.org.
  6. https://mil.in.ua/en/news/ukrainian-military-received-swedish-rbs-56-atgms/
  7. International Institute for Strategic Studies . International Institute for Strategic Studies . 2010 . Chapter Three: Europe . The Military Balance . 110 . 1 . 175 . 10.1080/04597220903545825. 219623422 .
  8. International Institute for Strategic Studies . International Institute for Strategic Studies . 2006 . Europe . The Military Balance . 106 . 1 . 68 . 10.1080/04597220600782820. 219626337 .
  9. https://sofrep.com/news/watch-death-ph/
  10. International Institute for Strategic Studies . International Institute for Strategic Studies . 2015 . Chapter Four: Europe . The Military Balance . 115 . 1 . 140 . 10.1080/04597222.2015.996348. 219628714 .