K745A1 Red Shark

South Korean anti-submarine missile

Maximum speed 45+ knots (83+ km)

The K745A1 Red Shark (Korean: 홍상어; RRHong-sang-eo) torpedo, also called the K-ASROC, is a vertically launched anti-submarine missile successively developed and tested by Korea University of Science and Technology, the Agency for Defense Development (ADD) and the Republic of Korea Navy in 2009.[2] The Red Shark missile has a range of 12 miles (19 km)[3] and carries a K745 Blue Shark torpedo that is deployed by parachute near the intended target. After release, the Blue Shark independently searches for the target.

The missiles are planned to be deployed on KDX-II and KDX-III destroyers starting in 2010. Each destroyer will carry between 8 (KDX-II) and 16 (KDX-III) of the missiles. The development cost of the program was around US$ 80 million,[3] with a production cost of about $14 million.[3] They were designed in order to combat the potential threat of North Korean submarines.[3]

Production Phase Production Date Production number Notes
Phase 1 2010-2012 60-70[4] -
Phase 2 2013-2015[5] n/a -

Ships

The Red Shark missiles are fitted to the following ship classes

See also

  • K731 White Shark
  • K745 Blue Shark
  • K761 Tiger Shark

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era

References

  1. ^ a b c d "홍상어" (PDF). Agency for Defense Development. p. 3
  2. ^ Yonhap News - S. Korea builds guided missile tipped with torpedo 6/22/2009
  3. ^ a b c d "South Korea to produce Red Shark torpedoes". UPI. 21 August 2009. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  4. ^ Yonhap News - S. Korea to deploy advanced anti-sub missiles on destroyers 8/13/2009
  5. ^ "Chosun Daily - 軍, 2012년까지 홍상어 60~70여기 배치 8/13/2009". Archived from the original on 16 September 2009. Retrieved 6 November 2009.

External links

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