Red Angel
Contents
Description
The Red Angel rocket is an unguided rocket with 40 kilograms of TNT designed as an anti-shipping rocket to counter soviet ships in the 1960's.
Vehicles equipped with this weapon
General info
Rocket characteristics | |
---|---|
Mass | 478 kg |
Maximum speed | 390 m/s |
Explosive mass | 39.91 kg TNTeq |
Warhead type | SAP-HE |
The Red Angel is very similar to other large rockets, such as the Tiny Tim or Uncle Tom. It's a large, slow rocket, with a devastating payload, that usually doesn't even need a direct hit to destroy even heavily-armoured targets.
Effective damage
The Red Angel's high explosive TNT warhead explodes immediately on impact. Damage is caused mostly by blast overpressure and fragmentation.
Comparison with analogues
Give a comparative description of rockets that have firepower equal to this weapon.
Usage in battles
The Red Angel was designed as an anti-ship rocket and is best used as such.
Pros and cons
Pros:
- High explosive payload
- Large damage radius, near-misses are very forgiving against lightly armoured targets
- Deals overpressure damage
- Good flight characteristics
Cons:
- Extremely heavy
- Low velocity
- Heavy payload that will affect flight performance
- Planes can only carry 2 rockets
History
Examine the history of the creation and combat usage of the weapon in more detail than in the introduction. If the historical reference turns out to be too long, take it to a separate article, taking a link to the article about the weapon and adding a block "/History" (example: https://wiki.warthunder.com/(Weapon-name)/History) and add a link to it here using the main
template. Be sure to reference text and sources by using <ref></ref>
, as well as adding them at the end of the article with <references />
.
Media
- Images
See also
Links to the articles on the War Thunder Wiki that you think will be useful for the reader, for example:
- reference to the article about the variant of the weapon;
- references to approximate analogues by other nations and research trees.
External links