YJ-8 | |
---|---|
![]() YJ-8A Missile | |
Type | Anti-ship missiles |
Place of origin | China |
Service history | |
In service | early 1990s to present |
Used by | China |
Wars | Yemeni Civil War (2015–present) Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen[1] |
Production history | |
Manufacturer | China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation |
Unit cost | US$ 0.78 million[2] |
Produced | Late 1980s to present (export) |
Specifications | |
Mass | 815 kg |
Length | 5.81 meter |
Warhead | 165 kg |
Engine | rocket |
Propellant | solid rocket |
Operational range | 42 km |
Flight altitude | 5 or 7 m |
Maximum speed | ≈Mach 0.9 |
Guidance system | Inertial navigation/active radar homing terminal guidance |
Launch platform | Aerial, naval and land-based |
TheYJ-8 (Chinese:鹰击-8;pinyin:yingji-8;lit. 'eagle strike 8';NATO reporting name:CSS-N-4 Sardine) is aChinese surface-launched subsonicanti-shipcruise missile. It is manufactured by theChina Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation (CASIC) Third Academy.[3]
The YJ-8 was developed into air-launched (YJ-81) and submarine-launched (YJ-82) variants.[3]
The YJ-8 is either based on, or is a heavily modified copy of, the MM38Exocet; the two missiles share virtually identical operational profiles. The replication of the MM38's "revolutionary flight profile" in less than ten years and with an immature industrial base strongly suggests that China had access to proven technology.[4]
The YJ-8 was a "radical departure" from China's first anti-ship missiles derived from theP-15 Termit. The YJ-8 carried a smaller warhead, but had the same range and speed while being significantly smaller and lighter.[4]
The development of the YJ-8 was approved in late-1976 following a few years of encouraging work on solid-fuel rockets. According to a 1991 Aerospace China article, development of the missile's engine began in 1978, and flight testing was completed in 1985. The YJ-8 reachinitial operating capability in thePeople's Liberation Army Navy in 1987, the same year the export version—the C-801—was announced.[4]
CASIC received the first National Science and Technology Advancement Award for development of the YJ-8 in 1988.[5]
TheC-801 is the export version of the YJ-8.[4][3] The C-801 was not marketed after 2003.[4]