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Naval Decoy IDS300

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mk 59 missile decoy launch from USS Ramage (DDG-61) in 2014

Naval Decoy IDS300 (Inflatable Decoy System) is a passive, off-board, octahedral, corner reflector decoy of the Royal Navy's Type 45 destroyer and the US Navy's Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, forming part of a layered defence to counter anti-ship missiles.[1] Unlike chaff, the decoy is persistent and will float for up to three hours in sea state 4.[2]

Jane's was first to report the United Kingdom was looking for a new floating decoy as part of a program known as the Naval Passive Off-Board Decoy (N-POD), on March 3, 2019.[3] In US Navy service, it is designated as the Mk 59 decoy launching system.[4] The system is made by Irvin Aerospace Ltd, Hertfordshire in the United Kingdom.[5]

Decoy recovered by USS Ramage

Deployment

The decoy is launched out of a deck-mounted tube and self-inflates on the sea surface before being released to free-float past the stern to mimic a ship's radar and radio signatures. The deployment and inflation process takes seconds and the decoy is completely independent, requiring no further input from the ship. Typical ship fitment is four launchers, fitted using eight bolts and an electrical feed. The system is most effective in littoral waters with a calm sea state.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Naval Decoy IDS300, Ship Deployed Floating Naval Countermeasure". Airborne Systems. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  2. ^ FDS3 inflatable RF decoy at Think Defence
  3. ^ Royal Navy use inflatable anti-ship missile decoys
  4. ^ US Navy decoy contract
  5. ^ British Patent No. 2189079 - Passive defense as a floatable decoy

External links

This page was last edited on 9 December 2022, at 18:24
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