UR-200

Intercontinental ballistic missile
Maximum speed Mach 20 (24,500 km/h; 15,200 mph; 6.81 km/s)
Guidance
system
Inertial

The UR-200 was an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) developed by Vladimir Chelomey's OKB-52 in the Soviet Union. It was known during the Cold War by the NATO reporting name SS-10 Scrag and internally by the GRAU index 8K81. The design was authorized by the Decisions of the Central Committee of the CPSU of March 16 and August 1, 1961, and the draft project was finished in July[clarification needed] 1962. It first flew on November 4, 1963, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. The ninth and final flight was conducted on October 20, 1964.

Description

The UR-200 was a two-stage liquid-propellant universal ICBM for delivery of replaceable[clarification needed] payloads to the range up to 12000 km, launch of interceptor satellites for space defense, naval recon satellites, and orbital maneuvering warheads. It was capable of carrying around 3,175 kilograms (7,000 lb) of payload, and could be launched from flat pads, or missile silos built for the R-16 missile. Unusually for a Soviet missile, the first stage provided attitude control by means of thrust vectoring. Nitrogen tetroxide and UDMH were used as propellants.

FOBS

The FOBS, or Fractional Orbital Bombardment System, was a Soviet programme to place a nuclear warhead into a 150 km low Earth orbit, in order to allow the warhead to approach the enemy from any direction, below missile tracking radar systems. The UR-200 was one of several rockets proposed for this purpose, along with the 8K713 and R-36. The use of the UR-200 for FOBS deployment was cancelled in October 1964, when Nikita Khrushchev was removed from power.

Operational history

The UR-200 was never deployed operationally. The successful development of the storable hypergolic-fuelled R-36 silo-launched missile led to the cancellation of the UR-200 in 1965.

Operators

  •  Soviet Union

Related developments

See also

References

  1. ^ RD-0202. Encyclopedia Astronautica. Accessed 2014-09-28.
  2. ^ RD-0205. Encyclopedia Astronautica. Accessed 2014-09-28.
  3. ^ UR-200. Encyclopedia Astronautica. Accessed 2014-09-28.
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Variants
Main series
UR-100 family
UR-500 family
Launch sites
Baikonur
Plesetsk
Launches
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Air-to-air
(full list)
  • AA-1 Alkali
  • AA-2 Atoll
  • AA-3 Anab
  • AA-4 Awl
  • AA-5 Ash
  • AA-6 Acrid
  • AA-7 Apex
  • AA-8 Aphid
  • AA-9 Amos
  • AA-10 Alamo
  • AA-11 Archer
  • AA-12 Adder
  • AA-13 Arrow
  • K-74M2 (R-73M)
  • K-77M (R-77M)
  • KS-172
Air-
to-surface
(full list)
Anti-tank
guided
(full list)
Surface-
to-air
(full list)
Ground-
based
Naval-
based
Anti-
ballistic
Surface-
to-surface
(full list)
Ground-
based
Naval-
based
Ship-
to-ship
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Russian and former Soviet military designation sequences for radar, missile and rocket systems
Radar
systems
Land-based
Ship-borne
Airborne
Missiles
ICBM
IRBM
MRBM
SRBM
SLBM
Surface-to-surface
(cruise)
Surface-to-surface
(naval)
Surface-to-air
Air-to-surface
Air-to-air
  • K-5
  • R-3
  • R-4
  • R-8
  • R-23
  • R-27
  • R-33
  • R-37
  • R-38
  • R-40
  • R-60
  • R-73
  • R-77
  • R-172
Anti-tank
Unguided
rockets
Air-launched
  • RP-1
  • RP-5
  • RP-6
  • RP-9
  • RP-15
  • RP-21
  • RS-82
  • RS-132
Rocket artillery
Engines


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