Penguin missile

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The Penguin anti-ship missile (U.S. designation AGM-119), made by Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace (KDA)<ref>Early development of the Penguin was done by the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (NDRE; Norw. FFI) during the 1960s.</ref> <ref>Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace (KDA) was formerly a part of Kongsberg Våpenfabrikk (KV) (1814–1986) and Norsk Forsvarsteknologi (NFT) (1987–1994), and is now part of Kongsberg Gruppen (KOG).</ref> of Norway from the early 1970s and continually upgraded since, is a passive-IR seeker based short-to-medium range naval cruise missile. It was the first AShM of the western world with an IR seeker (contrary to the commonly used active radar technology).

Image:Pngnsh60.jpg The Penguin can be fired singly or in coordinated-arrival salvoes. Propelled by a solid rocket engine, it performs random weaving maneuvres at terminal target approach and hits the target close to the waterline. The modified 120 kg Bullpup warhead detonates inside the target (ship) by using a delay fuse.

In its various versions, the Penguin can be launched from a number of different weapons platforms:

KDA's successor to the Penguin will be the Naval Strike Missile (NSM), scheduled to be offered from 2005 onwards. NSM will feature an imaging IR-seeker, GPS navigation, a turbojet sustainer engine (for much longer ranges: 150+ km), and significantly more computer performance and digital signal processing power.

Operators

</ref> as the AGM-119

Notes

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External links

no:Penguin