Sarna News: Bad 'Mechs - Icestorm

Difference between revisions of "Cruise Missile 90"

(Initial load of page content.)
 
m (Removed sectionstub.)
Line 26: Line 26:
 
   
 
   
 
==Models==
 
==Models==
{{sectionstub}}
 
 
As the Cruise Missile 90 is still experimental, there is no information about manufacturers or models.
 
As the Cruise Missile 90 is still experimental, there is no information about manufacturers or models.
  

Revision as of 10:27, 16 June 2010

191px
Cruise Missile 90
Production information
Type Artillery (Missile)
Tech Base Inner Sphere Experimental
Year Availability 3065[1]
Technical specifications
Heat 90
Damage 90 (Artillery)
Minimum Range -
Short Range -
Medium Range -
Long Range 120 mapsheets
Tons 100
Ammo Per Ton 1/45 (each missile weighs 45 tons)
Cost (unloaded) 2,550,000
Ammo Cost (per ton) 90,000/missile
BV (2.0) 1530 (launcher)/191 (missile)[2]

Description

Until the Federated Suns started researching them, the Cruise Missile had been resigned to history. Using the large nuclear warhead equipped missiles used by factions on pre-spaceflight Terra, the Cruise Missile was designed to provide artillery support to ground forces. By exchanging the nuclear warhead for a conventional explosive, the engineers assigned to the project created a large version of the Arrow IV missile. In 3065, the AFFS began testing the Cruise Missile. The Cruise Missile cannot escape a planetary atmosphere, but it can reach almost anywhere on a planet's surface. Due to their size and range, the cruise missile launch systems are most likely going to be installed in static fortifications or large mobile structures. Even if an individual combat unit could carry the launcher, the sheer size of the missile makes it difficult for the vehicle to carry additional rounds. Unlike the Arrow IV missile system, there is no "guided" or "homing" cruise missile. This relative inaccuracy offsets the tremendous damage they cause.

The Cruise Missile 90 weighs as much as an Atlas. Their missiles are more difficult to transport than a Phoenix Hawk or Vindicator. They haven't been seen in action yet, and no information about their deployment is known.

Models

As the Cruise Missile 90 is still experimental, there is no information about manufacturers or models.

References

  1. Tactical Operations, p. 410-411
  2. Tactical Operations, p. 383

Bibliography