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It is designed to provide day and night protection for infantry and tank regiments against low-flying aircraft, helicopters, and cruise missiles in all weather conditions. The NATO reporting name for the missile used by the weapon system is SA-19 "Grison". [2]
Detailing the technical specifications, development, and operational history of the SA-19 (Grisom) / 2K22 Tunguska Self-Propelled Air Defense System including pictures.
The Tunguska-M1 vehicle carries eight 9M311-M1 surface-to-air missiles. The missile (NATO designation SA-19 Grison) has semi-automatic radar command to line-of-sight guidance, weighs 40kg with a 9kg warhead. It is 2.5m long with a diameter of 1.7m and wingspan of 2.2m.
The SA-19 GRISON (9M111) is a radar command guided, two-stage surface to air missile mounted on the 2S6 Tunguska Integrated Air Defense System. The 2S6 vehicle is fitted with two banks of four...
The 2S6 Tunguska 2K22 (NATO code SA-19 Grison) is a Russian-made self-propelled air defense system which combines gun and missile armament.
The 2S6M Tunguska-M (SA-19) Russian 30mm Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft System is a gun/missile system for low-level air defense. The system was designed by the KBP Instrument Design...
The 2S6 Tunguska is a self-propelled anti-aircraft gun and SAM system of Soviet origin. It was developed in the 1970's as a more capable successor to the widely used ZSU-23-4 Shilka. The main role of the Tunguska is to protect armor and infantry units against helicopters and ground attack aircraft. The Tunguska was to be more than twice as ...
The 2S6 Tunguska (Western reporting name SA-19 or Grison) is a Russian low-level air-defense system designed to replace the ZSU-23-4 Shilka and 9K31 Strela-1/1M2 systems. It was developed in the mid-'70s and first prototypes were completed in 1980.
The 9M311 is a late Cold War era surface to air missile of Soviet origin. It was developed in the late 1970's for use on the Tunguska self-propelled anti-aircraft gun and SAM system. The NATO reporting name is SA-19 Grison.
The SA-19 Grison **, or 9M311, has a 20-lb (9-kg) HE-fragmentation rod warhead that is activated either by contact fuze or a laser proximity fuze. The lethal radius of the warhead is 16 ft (5 m) and is most commonly used against anti-tank helicopters.