Formerly | OKB-134 |
---|---|
Type | Joint Stock Company |
Industry | Defence |
Founded | 1949 |
Headquarters | , Russia |
Products | Missiles, Anti-ballistic missiles, Anti-aircraft missile systems |
Revenue | $649 million[1] (2014) |
Parent | Tactical Missiles Corporation |
Website | vympelmkb |
Vympel NPO is a Russian research and production company based near Moscow, mostly known for their air-to-air missiles. Other projects include SAM and ABM defenses. It was started in the Soviet era as an OKB (experimental design bureau).
History
Vympel started out after World War II as OKB-134, with Ivan I. Toropov leading the team. The first product they designed was the K-7 missile.[2] Their first missile built in serial production was the K-13 (R-13) in 1958. Toropov moved to Tushino Aviation Facility in 1961 and was replaced by Andrey Lyapin.[3] Somewhere between 1966 and 1968 the OKB got renamed to Vympel. In 1977 Matus Bisnovat of OKB-4 Molniya died, and all missile related work was passed to Vympel. G. Khokhlov led the team until 1981, when Genadiy A. Sokolovski succeeded him.[4]
In 1992 the GosMKB Vympel got started on the basis of the OKB[5] and in 1994 Sokolovski became the director of development at the company.
In May 2004 the Tactical Missiles Corporation was formed and Vympel became a part of it, as the design and development facility.
Notable projects
Air-to-air missiles
Air-to-surface missiles
- Kh-29 (AS-13 "Kedge")
- Terra-3 laser
Surface-to-air missiles
- 3M9 SA missile (SA-6 "Gainful") for Kub missile system.
- ABM-1 Galosh
References
- ↑ Error: Unable to display the reference properly. See the documentation for details.
- ↑ Aviation.ru - GosMKB «Vympel» Archived 2006-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Federation of American Scientists - AA-1 ALKALI Archived 2005-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ eDefense blog - 25 years of service of Russian Kh-29 missile
- ↑ Palms & Company Document - Russia's 200 largest industries available for merger - acquisition
External links
- «Vympel NPO» official site (in Russian)