BGM-71 TOW hoán tank tō-tān

Wikipedia (chū-iû ê pek-kho-choân-su) beh kā lí kóng...
BGM-71 TOW

An M41 tripod-mounted TOW ITAS-FTL with PADS of the U.S. Army in Kunar Province, Afghanistan, in May 2009.
Luī-hîng Anti-tank missile
Guân-sán-tē United States
Ho̍k-i̍k kì-lo̍k
Ho̍k-i̍k kî-kan 1970–present
Sú-iōng tsiá See Operators
Tsèn-tsing
Sing-sán li̍k-sú
Set-kè-tsiá Hughes Aircraft Company
Gián-huat li̍t-kî 1963–1968
Tan-kè $93,640 (2B Aero), $54,956 (Bunker Buster) FY2021[4]
£8,500 (1984)[5]
Ki-pún tsu-guân
Tn̂g-tōo 1.16–1.17 m with probe folded
1.41–1.51 m with probe extended
(some variants have no probe)
Ti̍t-kìng 152 mm

Warhead weight 3.9–6.14 kg (penetration 430–900 mm RHA)[6]

I̍k-tén 0.46 m
Ūn-tsok huān-uî Basic TOW 3,000 m, most variants 3,750 m
Siōng-kuân sok-tōo 278–320 m/s
Tō-ín hē-thóng Optically tracked, wire-guided (wireless radio-guided in RF variants)

BGM-71 TOW huán tank tō-tān (BGM-71 TOW ("kóng huat-siā, kong tui-tsong, suànn-tō", huat-im /ˈt/)[7]sītsi̍t-tsióng Bí-kok huán tank tō-tān. TOW tshú-tāi SS.10 hām ENTAC tíng-tíng sè tsiânn-tsē ê tō-tān, thê-kiong tāi-iok nn̄g-puē ê iú-hāu siā-tîng, koh-khah kiông-tāi ê tān-thâu; í-ki̍p tsiânn-tuā kái-tsìn ê puànn tsū-tōng sī-suànn tsí-līng (SACLOS), iah-koh ē-tàng phuè-pī iā-kan âng-guā-suànn liap-iánn-ki ê sú-iōng.

TOW tī 1970-nî thâu-tsi̍t-pái sing-sán, sī sú-iōng siong kóng-huàn ê huán-tank tō-tān tsi-it.[8] BGM-71 TOW i ē-tàng teh kok-tsióng tshiú-tōng hê-tsah hām tshia-tsài hîng-sik tsiàn-tàu-tshia lāi-té tshuē--tio̍h, iah kóng-huàn iōng-teh ti̍t-sing-ki tíng-kuân. BGM-71 TOW tsit-ê bú-khì siong-tāi-sing siû Hughes hui-ki kong-si tī 1960 nî-tāi sóo siat-kè, bo̍k-tsiân iû Raytheon kong-si sing-sán.

Tsù-kái[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]

  1. FUNKER530 – Veteran Community & Combat Footage (28 December 2011). "DOUBLE BARREL TOW MISSILE HEADED FOR INSURGENTS – NO SLACK". goân-loē-iông tī 25 November 2013 hőng khó͘-pih – via YouTube. [better source needed]
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Etat islamique: comment les djihadistes emploient les missiles antichars pour appuyer leurs offensives". France-Soir (ēng Hoat-gí). 4 May 2017. 6 September 2018 khòaⁿ--ê. [bû-hāu liân-kiat]
  3. "Pakistani troops use a BGM-71 TOW to destroy an Indian Bunker". YouTube. 
  4. "Missile Procurement, Army (FY2021)" (PDF). 
  5. Pattie, Geoffrey. "Weapons and Equipment (Costs)". millbanksystems. millbanksystems. goân-loē-iông tī 17 June 2016 hőng khó͘-pih. 21 May 2016 khòaⁿ--ê. 
  6. ARG. "TOW Anti-Tank Guided Missile – Military-Today.com". military-today.com. goân-loē-iông tī 22 September 2017 hőng khó͘-pih. 
  7. "Official US Army history of TOW (9th paragraph)". goân-loē-iông tī 3 July 2015 hőng khó͘-pih. 
  8. "M-220 Tube-launched, Optically-tracked, Wire-guided missile (TOW)". fas.org. goân-loē-iông tī 3 November 2013 hőng khó͘-pih. 2 November 2013 khòaⁿ--ê. 

Tsham-khó bûn-hiàn[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]

Tsham-ua̍t[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]

  • MAPATS
  • Nag ATGM
  • Swingfire
  • HOT (missile)
  • AT-5 Spandrel
  • AT-4 Spigot
  • AT-14 Kornet
  • OMTAS
  • Shershen
  • M47 Dragon
  • FGM-148 Javelin
  • ALAS (missile)
  • HJ-8
  • AGM-179 JAGM
  • History of UAVs decoys
  • List of U.S. Army Rocket Launchers By Model Number
  • Abu TOW
  • Sin sè-kài tia̍t-sū (im-bô͘-lūn)

Guā-pōo liân-kiat[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]