Vickers Vigilant

Vigilant
Vickers Vigilant
TypeWire-guided anti-tank missile
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Service history
In service1960s
Used byUnited Kingdom, Finland, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Switzerland, United States
Warsnone
Production history
Designed1956
ManufacturerVickers-Armstrong (Aircraft) Ltd
Specifications
Mass31 lb (14 kg)
Length3.5 ft (1.07 m)
Diameter0.12 m
Wingspan0.27 m
WarheadHEAT, 6 kg
Detonation
mechanism
impact

EngineI.C.I. dual-thrust solid fuel rocket
Operational
range
200 m to 1375 m
Maximum speed 348 mph (155.6 m/s)
Guidance
system
MCLOS wire-guided
Steering
system
control surfaces
Launch
platform
infantry or vehicle

The Vickers Vigilant was a British 1960s era MCLOS wire-guided anti-tank missile used by the British Army. It was also licence-built in the United States by Clevite for the US Marine Corps, and sometimes known as Clevite rounds in this case.[1]

Development began at Vickers-Armstrongs' in 1956 as a private project to give the company's Weybridge Guided Missile Department something to do after the cancellation of Red Dean. By 1960 it had completed development and an extensive testing program, but the War Office remained disinterested as they wished for the Weybridge department to be disbanded as part of the ongoing formation of British Aircraft Corporation. On several occasions the Office explicitly stated they did not want to provide any encouragement to the team as this might make it harder to close the division down in the future.

After considerable debate spanning several years, the project eventually won an initial order as it was the only suitable design to arm the Ferret armoured car. By this time the War Office had already decided that their ultimate weapon for this role would be the Swingfire, but it would not be available until 1966 at the earliest. An order for several thousand Vigilant was placed late in 1961 as an "interim weapon". The order immediately resulted in several additional orders from Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Libya and Abu Dhabi, along with Vigilant-armed Ferret sales to the UAE and Yemen. The order also sealed the US decision to license Vigilant for local production.

Swingfire did not arrive until 1969, and during that time the medium-range man portable version had been dropped. This left the Vigilant in use with the infantry and airborne forces well into the 1970s. Approximately 18,000 were produced in total.

  1. ^ Forbat 2006, p. 262.