RSD 58

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RSC/D
Beam-riding
Steering
system
control surfaces
Launch
platform
vehicle or trailer

The RSD 58 is an early production

RSA Missile
developed by the same companies.

Design and development

Contraves-Oerlikon started design work on guided missiles to supplement their

anti-aircraft guns, like the popular 20 mm cannon, in 1947. The company produced a number of designs, including the RSA
, culminating in the RSD 58 of 1958.

The RSD 58 was a liquid-fuelled rocket-powered missile, guided to its target by riding a radar beam. The missile body was made of wrapped tubing and sheet with Araldite bonding while the wings were of sandwich construction.[3]

Targeting was by search radar and beam transmitter with targets tracked by a search radar until a beam riding transmitter locked on, at which point the missile could be fired, riding the beam until impact, proximity fuze or radio signal detonation. Launchers, slaved to the beam transmitter could launch missiles at any angle form 10° to 90° at a sustained rate of fire of up to two launches per minute. Control of the missiles was by vectoring rocket motor combustion chamber at launch and controllable rear fins at higher speeds.[3]

The complete system included a battery command post, target tracking radar, guidance beam transmitter and six twin railed trainable launchers and four diesel generator units.[4] The components were carried on single-axle trailers apart from the diesel generators that were built on two-axle trailers. The entire system, including the launchers, was readily transportable to new locations with mobility claimed to be similar to that of a heavy anti-aircraft gun system.

A parachute recoverable training round, the RSC-57, was developed which was powered by a reduced burn time rocket motor with the recovery parachute replacing the warhead.[4]

Operational use

There were no significant orders, except for the delivery of a training battery to Japan. The

Full Military Museum
and another launcher with two missiles ca be found in the Aviation Museum in Dübendorf.

From 1959, the RSD system was further developed into the

RSE
, which was also unsuccessfully offered for export under as the Micon.

Operators

References

  1. ^ Swiss Firm Turns Out Most Missiles in Italy // Missiles and Rockets, June 1, 1959, p. 22
  2. ^ David A. Anderton, Swiss Build Mobile Anti-Aircraft Missile, Aviation Week, June 30, 1958.
  3. ^ a b "Missiles 1958". Flight International. 5 December 1958. p. 894.
  4. ^ a b "Missiles 1959". Flight International. 6 November 1959. p. 528.

Bibliography

External links

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