- MIM-14 Nike-Hercules
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MIM-14 Nike-Hercules
Nike-Hercules MissileType Surface-to-air missile Production history Manufacturer Western Electric, Bell Laboratories, Douglas Aircraft Company Specifications Weight 29,000 pounds (13,000 kg) Length 41 feet (12 m) overall
26 feet 10 inches (8.18 m) second stageDiameter booster 31.5 inches (800 mm)
second stage 21 inches (530 mm)Warhead initially W7 (2.5 or 28 kt)[1][verification needed] later W31 nuclear 2 kt (M-97) or 20 kt (M-22)[2] or T-45 HE warhead weighing 1,106 pounds (502 kg) and containing 600 pounds (270 kg) of HBX-6 M17 blast-fragmentation Engine Booster: Hercules M42 solid-fueled rocket cluster (4x M5E1 Nike boosters) 978 kN (220000 lb)
Sustainer: Thiokol M30 solid-fueled rocket 44.4 kN (10000 lb)Wingspan 11 feet 6 inches (3.51 m) booster
6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) second stageOperational
range90 miles (140 km) Flight ceiling 150,000 feet (46,000 m) Speed >Mach 3.65 (ca. 2750 mph or 4,470 km/h) The MIM-14 Nike-Hercules (initially designated SAM-A-25), was a solid fuel propelled two-stage surface-to-air missile, used by US and NATO armed forces for high- and medium-altitude air defense. It could also be employed in a surface-to-surface role.
Contents
Development and deployment
The Nike-Hercules system, a follow-up to the Nike-Ajax missile, was developed during the Cold War to destroy enemy bombers and enemy bomber formations, as well as serve as an anti-ballistic missile system. Western Electric, Bell Laboratories, and Douglas Aircraft Company were chief contractors for the system. Nuclear-armed Nike Hercules missiles were deployed in the United States, Greece, Italy, and Turkey, and with Belgian, Dutch, and U.S. forces in West Germany.[3] Conventionally-armed Nike Hercules missiles also served in the United States, Germany, Denmark, Japan, Norway, and Taiwan.[4] The first deployments in Europe began in 1959[5] and the last nuclear-armed Nike Hercules missiles in Europe were deactivated in 1988.[6] The Nike-Hercules missile systems sold to Japan (Nike J) were subsequently fitted with upgraded internal guidance systems, the original vacuum tube systems being replaced with transistorized ones.
Capabilities
The Nike Hercules could carry either a nuclear warhead or a conventional high explosive warhead (T-45 fragmentation type). Initially the nuclear-armed version carried the W-7 Mod 2E nuclear warhead, with yields of 2.5 or 28 kt. Beginning in FY 1961 the older warheads were replaced by W-31 Mod 0 warheads, with yields of 2 kt (Y1) or 30 kt (Y2).[7][verification needed] The last versions carried the W31 Mod 2 warhead, with yields of 2 or 20 kt.[8] The missile was 41 feet 6 inches (12.65 m) long with a wingspan of 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m). 145 missile batteries were deployed during the cold war. The missile had a range of about 77 miles (124 km).
Guidance
The Nike Hercules was a guided missile controlled from a groundstation. The guidance and control area (Integrated Fire Control, IFC) was located at a distance (about 1 mile) from the area from where the missile was launched (Launching Area, LA). The IFC had a low power acquisition radar (LOPAR) to detect (enemy) aircraft. After detecting and identifying a hostile aircraft with the aid of a Identification friend or foe system, this aircraft was followed or tracked in elevation, azimuth and range by a Target Tracking Radar (TTR). An analog (later digital) computer computed continually a point in the sky where the missile and target should meet (intercept point) after a potential launch of the missile. After the missile was actual launched by the Battery Control Officer (BCO) a Missile Tracking Radar (MTR) tracked the missile and the computer constantly updated the intercept point even if the hostile aircraft performed evasive actions. Steering corrections were sent to the missile by the MTR. When the missile neared the intercept point a command signal was sent to the missile to explode. To measure the range to the target under jamming conditions the IFC was also equipped with a Target Ranging Radar (TRR). Some IFC’s were equipped with a high power acquisition radar (HIPAR) to augment the initial detecting range of hostile aircraft. For command and control the sites were linked with a digitally communication system (initial the AN/MSQ-18 system).
On the IFC the system was operated by a crew of about 9 operators under command of the BCO. Locking on to the target had to be done manually by varying the range, elevation and azimuth of the TTR. For this the LOPAR provided the rough initial azimuth and range. After a 'lock-on' the system could track the missile and target automatically However a manual tracking mode was available in case an automatic track could not be established. The firing of the missile was done manually by the BCO based on the rules of engagement. The crew on the LA, also under command of the BCO, was responsible for preparing and erecting the missile.
Soviet counterpart
The Nike Hercules and Nike Ajax were comparable to the Soviet SA-2 Guideline medium range missile, but few were fired in combat. The Soviet missile saw considerable use during the Vietnam War against US aircraft. Those missiles were quite effective against aircraft flying at moderate or high altitudes, and resulted in elaborate tactics to either fly under the effective minimum altitude, or use powerful and sophisticated jamming pods or dedicated electronic warfare aircraft.
Deactivation
When it became apparent that the greatest threat to US National defense was from missiles instead of bombers, most Nike-Hercules units were deactivated. All CONUS Nike-Hercules batteries, with the exception of the ones in Florida and Alaska, were deactivated by April 1974. The remaining units were deactivated during the spring of 1979. Dismantling of the sites in Florida - Alpha Battery in Everglades National Park, Bravo Battery in Key Largo, Charlie Battery in Carol City and Delta Battery, located on Krome Avenue on the outskirts of Miami - started in June 1979 and was completed by early fall of that year. The buildings that once housed Delta Battery became the original structures used for the Krome Avenue Detention Facility, a federal facility used primarily to hold illegal immigrants awaiting immigration hearings. In Alaska, Site Point was converted into a ski chalet for Kincaid Park.
The US Army continued to use Nike-Hercules as a front-line air defense weapon in Europe until 1983, when Patriot missile batteries were deployed. NATO units from West Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgium, Norway, Greece and Turkey continued to use the Nike-Hercules for high-altitude air defense until the late 1980s. With the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, the units were deactivated.
Replacement
The Patriot missile replaced the Nike-Hercules Missile in the high- and medium-altitude air defense roles. Its advantage over the Nike-Hercules system was its mobility and reliability. While a Nike-Hercules site could take days to be established, Patriot sites can be established in hours. Patriot also uses a more advanced phased-array radar system and has better missile target tracking. Over the years, the non-solid state guidance system as well as the complex fire control systems' radars suffered from diminishing manufacturing source (DMS) issues. In part because of less parts supportability, Western European (4th Allied Tactical Air Force (ATAF) and 2 ATAF) sites essentially became fixed sites and were no longer considered capable of a mobile role. During the last years of their deployment in Europe the issue at hand was more about maintaining security of the nuclear capable missiles, rather than mobility. The DoD invested considerably in upgrading the security of the storage areas of the launcher sections, ultimately installing significant towers that were capable of watching over all three sections within the "exclusion area."
Survivors
Bases
- The best preserved Nike installation is site SF88L located in the Marin Headlands just west of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California. The site is a museum, and contains the missile bunkers, and control area, as well as period uniforms and vehicles that would have operated at the site. The site has been preserved in the condition it was in at the time it was decommissioned in 1974. The site began as a Nike Ajax base and was later converted to Nike Hercules. Three Nike Hercules are displayed in the original bunkers. The base is open to the public. Tours are conducted by members of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area staff.
- The second best preserved Nike installation is site NY-56 at Fort Hancock in Sandy Hook, New Jersey. The site has been restored and contains the original missile bunkers, as well as three Nike Ajax and a Nike Hercules on display. Each fall the base hold a Cold War Day. Tours are held one weekend a month from April to October. The site is on the National Register of Historic Places.
Missiles
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the United States Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
- A Nike Ajax, Nike Hercules, and Nike Zeus are on display at the Redstone Arsenal in Alabama
- A Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules are on display at the Royal Museum of the Army and Military History in Brussels, Belgium
- A Nike missile is on display at Camp San Luis Obispo near Morro Bay, California
- A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Peterson Air and Space Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Cold War Museum Stevnsfort, Denmark Stevnsfortet
- Two Nike Ajax and a Hercules are on display at the Cape Canaveral Space & Missile Museum in Cape Canaveral, Florida
- A Nike Hercules missile is on display at the Auto & Technik Museum Sinsheim in Sinsheim (Baden-Wuerttemberg) Germany.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Air Force Museum of the Bundeswehr in Kladow, Germany
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the National War Museum in Athens, Greece
- A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display in front of the VFW post in Cedar Lake, Indiana
- A Nike missile is on display at the Combat Air Museum in Topeka, Kansas
- A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Aberdeen, Maryland
- Two Nike Ajax and a Hercules are on display at a small Cold War museum in Ft. Meade, Maryland
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the former D-53/54 site in Riverview, Michigan. It was placed on display in the park that now occupies the site in July, 1980, thought this site was never converted from the Nike Ajax.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Selfridge Air Museum in St. Clair Shores, Michigan.
- A Nike Hercules is located in St Bonifacius, Minnesota, though it may not be presently on display.
- A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Militaire Luchtvaart Museum (Military Aviation Museum) in Soesterberg, Netherlands
- A Nike Hercules with its launcher and rails is located at the National Atomic Museum on Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The components are currently disassembled and not on display.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Sandy Hook/Gateway National Recreation Area in Highlands, New Jersey
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History in Albuquerque, New Mexico
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the White Sands Missile Range Missile Park White Sands Missile Range Museum in White Sands, New Mexico.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Buffalo Naval Park dockside next to the Guided Missile Cruiser Little Rock in Buffalo, New York.
- A Nike Hercules is located in a private armour museum in Mattituck, New York.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at The Gardermoen Aircraft Collection in Gardermoen, Norway.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Royal Norwegian Air Force Training Centre located at Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik, Norway.
- Several pieces of Nike equipment including a complete radar unit are on display at The Air Museum at Gardrmoen Airport near Oslo, Norway.
- A Nike Herculus is on display at Kjeller Airfield, outside Oslo, Norway.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at Rygge Air Force Base, Norway.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at Trøgstad Fort in Østfold, Norway.
- Two Nike Ajax and a Nike Hercules are on display near the Bataan Building at Camp Perry, near Port Clinton, Ohio.
- A Nike Ajax and Herclules are on display at the Pennsylvania National Guard Department of Military Arts buiilding at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Cuartel General del Mando de Artillería Antiaérea y del Regimiento de Artillería Antiaérea in Madrid, Spain.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Air Defense Museum in Fort Bliss, Texas
- A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Air Power Park in Hampton, Virginia.
- A Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules are on display in the Berryman War Memorial Park in Bridgeport, Washington.
- A Nike Hercules is on display at the Fort Lewis Military Museum in Fort Lewis, Washington.
- In 2006, a missile that was being transported in South Korea burned in a tunnel.
Operators
- Belgium
- Denmark
- Germany
- Greece
- Italy
- Japan
- Republic of Korea
- Netherlands
- Royal Netherlands Air Force
- Norway
- Taiwan
- Turkey
- United States
Gallery
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Nike missile in a lay-by on Route 70, near western entrance to White Sands Missile Range
See also
- List of missiles
- Project Nike
- W31
- Hyunmoo South Korea
- Oozlefinch
References
- ^ Department of the Army, Army Missiles Handbook January 1960 (formerly SECRET) p.52 Missiles files, United States Army Center of Military History.
- ^ Thomas B. Cochran, William M. Arkin, and Milton Hoenig, Nuclear Weapons Databook Volume I: U.S. Nuclear Forces and Capabilities (Cambridge: Ballinger, 1987) p.45.
- ^ Thomas B. Cochran, William M. Arkin, and Milton M. Hoenig, Nuclear Weapons Databook Volume I: U.S. Nuclear Forces and Capabilities (Cambridge: Ballinger, 1984) p.287; The New York Times December 23, 1959, p.50; Irving Heymont, "The NATO Nuclear Bilateral Forces" Orbis 94:4 Winter 1966, pp.1025-1041; George S. Harris, The Troubled Alliance: Turkish-American Problems in Historical Perspective 1945-1971 (Washington: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1972), p.153.
- ^ Mary Cagle, History of the Nike Hercules Weapon System (formerly CONFIDENTIAL) Historical Monograph #AMC 75M (Redstone Arsenal: U.S. Army Missile Command, 1973) p.155; Jane's Weapon Systems 1986-87 p.186.
- ^ The New York Times April 9, 1959, p.7 and December 23, 1959, p.50.
- ^ The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists October 1988, p.55
- ^ Department of the Army, Army Missiles Handbook January 1960 (formerly SECRET) p.52 Missiles files, United States Army Center of Military History.
- ^ Thomas B. Cochran, William M. Arkin, and Milton Hoenig, Nuclear Weapons Databook Volume I: U.S. Nuclear Forces and Capabilities (Cambridge: Ballinger, 1987) p.45.
External links
- Nike Hercules at Designation-Systems.net
- Nike Missile page
- NATO's Nike belt in W-Germany (German)
- Nike Historical Society
- San Francisco Nike missile site open to the public
- Nike Hercules
- A destroyed Nike-site in germany
- Nike Missile information
- The last operational North American unit
- Missile deployment during 1958 Taiwan Cold War Crisis
- Nikes at the Gardermoen Aircraft Collection
- The NIKE and Hawk launch areas in Sigerslev, Hoejerup and the Stevns Fort, Denmark. English/Danish
United States Tri-service missile and drone designations post-19621–50 MGM-1 • RIM-2 • MIM-3 • AIM-4 • MGM-5 • RGM-6 • AIM-7 • RIM-8 • AIM-9 • CIM-10 • PGM-11 • AGM-12 • CGM-13/MGM-13 • MIM-14 • RGM-15 • CGM-16 • PGM-17 • MGM-18 • PGM-19 • ADM-20 • MGM-21 • AGM-22 • MIM-23 • RIM-24 • HGM-25 • AIM-26 • UGM-27 • AGM-28 • MGM-29 • LGM-30 • MGM-31 • MGM-32 • MQM-33 • AQM-34 • AQM-35 • MQM-36 • AQM-37 • AQM-38 • MQM-39 • MQM-40 • AQM-41 • MQM-42 • FIM-43 • UUM-44 • AGM-45 • MIM-46 • AIM-47 • AGM-48 • LIM-49 • RIM-50
51–100 MGM-51 • MGM-52 • AGM-53 • AIM-54 • RIM-55 • PQM-56 • MQM-57 • MQM-58 • RGM-59 • AQM-60 • MQM-61 • AGM-62 • AGM-63 • AGM-64 • AGM-65 • RIM-66 • RIM-67 • AIM-68 • AGM-69 • LEM-70 • BGM-71 • MIM-72 • UGM-73 • BQM-74/MQM-74 • BGM-75 • AGM-76 • FGM-77 • AGM-78 • AGM-79 • AGM-80 • AQM-81 • AIM-82 • AGM-83 • AGM-84/RGM-84/UGM-84 • RIM-85 • AGM-86 • AGM-87 • AGM-88 • UGM-89 • BQM-90 • AQM-91 • FIM-92 • XQM-93 • YQM-94 • AIM-95 • UGM-96 • AIM-97 • YQM-98 • LIM-99 • LIM-100
101–150 RIM-101 • PQM-102 • AQM-103 • MIM-104 • MQM-105 • BQM-106 • MQM-107 • BQM-108 • BGM-109 • BGM-110 • BQM-111 • AGM-112 • RIM-113 • AGM-114 • MIM-115 • RIM-116 • FQM-117 • LGM-118 • AGM-119 • AIM-120 • CQM-121 • AGM-122 • AGM-123 • AGM-124 • RUM-125/UUM-125 • BQM-126 • AQM-127 • AQM-128 • AGM-129 • AGM-130 • AGM-131 • AIM-132 • UGM-133 • MGM-134 • ASM-135 • AGM-136 • AGM-137 • CEM-138 • RUM-139 • MGM-140 • ADM-141 • AGM-142 • MQM-143 • ADM-144 • BQM-145 • MIM-146 • BQM-147 • FGM-148 • PQM-149 • PQM-150
151– See also: MA-31 • ASALM • Brazo • Have Dash • Wagtail
United States tri-service rocket designations post-1962Categories:- Cold War surface-to-air missiles of the United States
- Surface-to-air missiles of the United States
- Nuclear anti-aircraft weapons
- Cold War nuclear missiles
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