List of equipment of the Pakistan Air Force
Appearance
The following is an organised list of equipment used by the Pakistan Air Force.
Aircraft
[edit]Air defence
[edit]Equipment | OEM | Origin | Type | Reference | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Air defence systems | |||||
HQ-9BE | CASIC | China | HIMAD | [1] | Used by PAF's air defence branch |
HQ-16FE | CASIC | China | LOMAD | [1] | Used by multiple SAM squadrons of PAF air defence branch |
SPADA-2000 | MBDA | Italy | LOMAD | [1] | 10 Batteries in service. |
Crotale | Thales | France | LOMAD | [1] | Crotale-2000, 3000 and 4000 versions in service with PAF air defence SAM squadrons. |
FN-16 | China | MANPADS | [1] | Operated by multiple PAF AD units. | |
Mistral | Thales | France | MANPADS | [1] | Operated by multiple PAF AD units. |
Anza | GIDS | Pakistan | MANPADS | [2] | Operated by multiple PAF AD units. |
Radars
[edit]Equipment | OEM | Origin | Inducted | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ground Radars | ||||
AN/TPS-77 | Lockheed Martin | United States | 2008 | Inducted as part of PADS-2000 and later PADS-2020 program.[2] |
AN/TPS-43 | Westinghouse Electric Corporation | United States | 1980 | TPS-43G and TPS-43J variants in service. Inducted under PADS-77 project.[3] |
YLC-2 | NRIET | China | 2001 | Acquired in emergency during Operation Sentinel. Being replaced by YLC-2A and YLC-18s.[3][4] |
YLC-6 | NRIET | China | 2005 | Low level radar inducted as part of PADS-2000.[4] |
YLC-18 | NRIET | China | 2020 | Acquired under the PADS-2020 program.[2] |
DR-172/MPDR-90 | Siemens | Germany | 1980 | Low level radar acquired under the PADS-77 project.[3] |
DR-161/MPDR-45 | Siemens | Germany | 1981 | Low level radar acquired under the PADS-77 project.[3] |
Aircraft munitions
[edit]Pod
[edit]Pods | OEM | Origin | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pod | ||||
ASELPOD | Aselsan | Turkey | Targeting pod | Used by PAC JF-17 Thunders. |
Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod | Lockheed Martin | United States | Targeting pod | Used by F-16s.[4] |
ATLIS II | Thomson-CSF | France | Targeting pod | Used by F-16s.[10] |
DB-110 | UTC Aerospace Systems | United States | Reconnaissance pod | [11] |
Vehicles
[edit]Name | Origin | OEM | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
International MaxxPro | United States | International Truck | MRAP & Armoured fighting vehicle | [12] |
MW-240 | Switzerland | MineWolf Systems | Mine Clearance Vehicle | [2] |
Retired Equipment
[edit]Air Defence
[edit]Name | Origin | OEM | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
HQ-2B Black Arrow | China | China Precision Machinery Import-Export Corporation | Surface to Air missile | 10+ Launchers with surplus missiles acquired in 1983. Retired by 2020.[2][5] |
Radars
[edit]Name | Origin | OEM | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Type-13 | United Kingdom | Marconi Electronic Systems | Height finder radar | Inducted in 1952 and retired in 1968.[3][13] |
Type-14 | United Kingdom | Marconi Electronic Systems | Surveillance radar | Inducted in 1952 and retired in 1968.[3] |
Type-15 | United Kingdom | Marconi Electronic Systems | Ground Control/Intercept systems | Inducted in 1955.[3][5] |
Type-21 | United Kingdom | Marconi Electronic Systems | Tactical control system | Inducted in 1952 and retired in 1968.[3][5] |
HF-200 | United Kingdom | Plessey | Height Finder radar | Inducted in 1967.[3] |
AR-1 | United Kingdom | Plessey | Height Finder radar | 6 units acquired between 1968-69.[3] |
AR-15 | United Kingdom | Plessey | Height Finder radar | Mobile version of AR-1. 3 units acquired in 1973, later retired.[3] |
Condor | United Kingdom | Plessey | Height Finder radar | 3 radars acquired in 1966-68 which equipped the No. 400, 403 and 410 squadrons. Later retired in 1990 with one of them put on display at the PAF Museum.[3][14] |
FPS-6 | United States | General Electric | Height finder radar | One radar inducted in 1959 as part of the MDAP program. Retired after 1965 war.[3] |
FPS-20 | United States | Bendix Corporation | Surveillance radar | Single unit inducted in 1959 as part of the MDAP program. Replaced with YLC-2 Radar in the early 2000s.[3] |
P-35 Saturn | Soviet Union | All-Union Scientific Research Institute of Radio Engineering (VNIIRT) | Surveillance radar | 2 units were acquired from the USSR in 1966-1969 time frame. Retired in 1979 due to non-availability of spares from the USSR.[3] |
Munitions
[edit]Name | Origin | OEM | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Air-to-air missile | ||||
AIM-9B | United States | Raytheon | Infrared homing | Historically used on F-86 Sabres and Shenyang F-6s. |
R.530 | France | Matra | semi active radar homing and infrared homing | Used by PAF Mirage-IIIEPs. [5] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Pakistan Air Force Air Defence Development". Quwa.org. 2024-03-17.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Khan, Farhat; Hashmi, Qadeer (2024). History of the Pakistan Air Force (2014-2023): The Next Generation Air Force (1st ed.). ISBN 978-969-7518-01-2.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hashmi, Qadeer. The History of the Pakistan Air Force 1999-2013. Cite error: The named reference "PAF" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b c The Story Of The Pakistan Air Force. A Saga Of Courage And Honour. Shaheen Foundation. 1988.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Trade Registers". armstrade.sipri.org.
- ^ Iqbal, Saghir (2018). JF-17 Thunder: The Making of a Modern Cost-effective Multi-role Combat Aircraft. Saghir Iqbal. p. 106. ISBN 9781984055248.
- ^ "Pakistan Air Force â€" A Comprehensive Story". 11 May 2020.
- ^ "Hafr Runway Penetration Bombs". Pakistan Strategic Forum. 2021-07-08.
- ^ Osman, Ali (17 December 2015). "Pakistan's tool of war: PAF's rolling thunder". Dawn.
- ^ "PAF F-16s". F-16.net.
- ^ "PAF conducted 5,500 bombing runs in Fata since 2008". Express Tribune. 2011-11-14.
- ^ Khan, Bilal (2017-07-13). "Pakistan Air Force enhancing base defence capabilities". Quwa.org.
- ^ "List of British Radars". Marconi Radar History.
- ^ "Condor Radar S-330 at PAF Museum". Flickr. 23 August 2009.