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Oct 23, 2010

Rusia necesita 150 misiles balísiticos Bulava antes de 2020/ Russia to produce 150 Bulava missiles before 2020


Russia necesitará mas de 150 misiles balísticos Bulava antes de 2020 para dotar a los nuevos ocho submarinos clase Borey.
Actualmente no se dispone de esa capacidad, por lo que deberá reforzarse.
El desarrollo del Bulava ha estado lleno de problemas, aunque al parecer en el último lanzamiento se han solventado.
El misil fue lanzado desde el submarino Dmitry Donskoy desde el Mar Negro, alcanzando su blanco en el área de Kura, Kamchatka, en el lejano oriente ruso.
El Bulava (SS-NX-30), es un misil de tres etapas, de alcance intercontinental, con combustible sólido y líquido, diseñado par ser lanzado desde submarinos, y que ha sufrido siete fallos en trece lanzamientos.
Para 2010 se esperan dos pruebas más: una desde el submarino Dmitry Donskoy y otra desde el nuevo submarino Yury Dolgoruky de la clase Borey.
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Russia will need to build more than 150 Bulava ballistic missiles in the next decade, an expert on the Russian arms industry said on Friday.
Igor Korotchenko, editor-in-chief of the National Defense magazine, told RIA Novosti that at least 124 missiles would be required for the eight Borey class nuclear-powered submarines that will enter service over the next decade, and a further 30 or 40 will have to be set aside for test launches.
In order to reach that goal, the capacities of the only plant producing Bulava missiles, near the town of Votkinsk in the Urals, will have to be increased, he said.
The development of the Bulava has been beset by problems, but the latest test launch was successful.
The missile, which was fired from the Dmitry Donskoy submarine in the White Sea on October 7, hit its designated target in the Kura test range in Russia's Far Eastern Kamchatka region.
The Bulava (SS-NX-30), a three-stage liquid and solid-propellant submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), has officially suffered seven failures in 13 tests.
Test launches were put on hold after a failed launch on December 9, 2009, which was caused by a defective engine nozzle.
Two more test launches are planned before the end of the year: one from the Dmitry Donskoy sub, and the other from Russia's newest strategic nuclear-powered submarine, the Borey class Yury Dolgoruky.
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