Is Missile: | yes |
FL-7 | |
Origin: | China |
Type: | anti-ship, and air-to-surface missiles |
Used By: | China |
Manufacturer: | Hongdu Aviation Industry Corporation |
Propellant: | liquid fuel |
Production Date: | 1980s–1990s |
Service: | late 1980s–present |
Engine: | rocket motor |
Weight: | 1.77 ton |
Length: | 6.59 meter |
Diameter: | 0.54 meter |
Wingspan: | 1.86 meter |
Speed: | Mach 1.4 |
Vehicle Range: | 32 km |
Altitude: | 5 to 50 cruising |
Filling: | 360 kg warhead |
Guidance: | ARH |
Detonation: | Semi-armor-piercing |
Launch Platform: | Air & ground |
The FL-7 is the export version of the SY-2 missile, specifically the liquid propellant prototype of SY-2. The export variant of the solid propellant SY-2 is known as the FL-2.[1]
In addition to developing the C-101 and C-301 supersonic anti-ship missiles which are fairly large in size, China has developed FL-7 (FL: Fei Long, meaning Flying Dragon) supersonic anti-ship missile which can be carried on airplanes and warships. The Feilong-7 has an effective range of 32 kilometers and a speed of Mach 1.4. It has powerful anti-jamming capability and its supersonic flight makes terminal interception difficult. The warhead of the FL-7 can pierce solid armor and destroy large and medium-sized surface warships. This missile can be roughly considered as the supersonic counterpart of the subsonic C-704 anti-ship missile. The missile is powered by a liquid fuel rocket motor and a solid rocket booster, which is under the airframe at the rear.
Along with C-101, FL-7 competed for the air-launched supersonic anti-ship missile program in China during the 1990s. However, C-101 was selected because it flies at faster speed and its range is nearly a third greater than that of FL-7, while it only weighs slightly heavier. Being the last Chinese anti-ship missile with rocket motor powered by liquid fuel, the role of FL-7 is decreasing, but not yet immediately phased out. The reason is that the Chinese coastal defense doctrine when using anti-ship missiles: multi-direction, multi-altitude, multiple waves attacks on targets with both supersonic and subsonic anti-ship missiles to make it difficult for the targets to defend itself from such saturated attacks, FL-7 is thus still have a little role to play in such saturated attacks at shorter range. However, it is safe to conclude that as newer missiles becoming widely available, the role of FL-7 would continuously decrease to its eventual retirement.
Western sources have claimed in 1996, with Chinese help in the forms of technology sales, that Iran had begun indigenous production of a medium-range anti-ship missile, based on the technologies of FL-7.