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NIKE-HERCULES MISSILE

Nike Hercules missile

'Nike-Hercules Missile', designation 'MIM-14' (initially 'SAM-N-25') was a solid fuel propelled 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. 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. In addition to the US Army, systems were sold to West Germany, Netherlands, Belgium and Greece with deployments in West Germany beginning in 1963 until late 1980's. Nike-Hercules missile systems were also sold to Japan (Nike J), which subsequently upgraded the internal guidance systems by replacing the original vacuum tube systems with transistorized ones.
The Nike-Hercules Missile could be fitted with a nuclear warhead, W31 type, or a conventional T-45 fragmenting warhead. The missile was 41 feet 6 inches (12.6 m) long with a wingspan of 6 feet 2 inches (1.9 m). 145 missile batteries were deployed during the cold war. The missile had a range of about 77 miles (110 km). Because of the missile's effectiveness against certain ICBMs, it was made a part of the SALT I treaty.
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. It should be noted that 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.
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, Belgium, 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.
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. 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.
In 2006, a missile that was being transported in South Korea burned in a tunnel. Many former Nike sites in the USA and abroad still exist though only a few have been preserved. One north of the Golden Gate
is being maintained as a national park site, complete with an operating underground missile shelter. These underground shelters are reminiscent of and may have inspired the elaborate installations of the Thunderbirds (TV series) which featured aircraft stored and launched from underground shelters.
The Nike Hercules and Nike Ajax was 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.

Contents
Specifications
Survivors
See also
External links

Specifications


'Missile' 'Nike Hercules'
'Length' 12.53 m overall 8.18 m second stage
'Diameter' 0.80 m booster 0.53 m second stage
'Fin span' 3.50 m booster 1.88 m second stage
'Mass' 4850 kg at launch 2505 kg second stage
'Max speed' Mach 3.65 (ca. 4 470 km/h)
'Range' 140 km
'Ceiling' 45,700 m
'First stage' Hercules M42 solid-fueled rocket cluster (4x M5E1 Nike boosters) 978 kN (220,000 lbf) total
'Second stage' Thiokol M30 solid-fueled rocket 44.4 kN (10,000 lbf)
'Warhead conventional' T-45 HE warhead weighing 1106 lb (500 kg) and containing 600 lb (272 kg) of HBX-6 M17 blast-fragmentation
'Warhead nuclear' W31 nuclear 2 kt (M-97) 20 kt (M-22) 40 kt (M-23)

Survivors


Below is a list of museums which have a Nike-Hercules missile in their collection:

★ Air Force Space and Missile Museum, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida

★ Nike Missile Site SF-88L, near San Francisco, California

★ Peterson Air and Space Museum, Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado

★ White Sands Missile Range Missile Park White Sands Missile Range Museum

★ Airforce Museum of the Bundeswehr, Kladow, Germany

★ Selfridge Air Museum, Selfridge Field, Michigan

★ Dutch Air Force Museum, Soesterberg, Netherlands Airforce Museum

★ Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History, Brussels, Belgium Royal Museum

★ Ordnence Museum, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland

★ Combat Air Museum, Topeka, Kansas

★ Air Defense Museum Fort Bliss, Texas

★ National War Museum Athens, Greece

★ Fort Lewis Military Museum, Fort Lewis, Washington

Trøgstad Fort, Østfold, Norway

The Gardermoen Aircraft Collection, Gardermoen, Norway
(The above list is incomplete, please help us complete this list)
During the 60's, missile-based air defense installations were set up in small towns around selected major cities, particularly in the northern tier of states. One such installation was built near Minneapolis - St Paul MN, in the tiny town of St Bonifacious. When the Air Force finally shut it down and pulled out, the city fathers persuaded them to leave a symbol of the town's contribution to national defense. To this day, a defused Nike-Hercules missile stands in St Bonifacious' city park.

See also



List of missiles

Project Nike

W31

Hyunmoo South Korea

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 unit

Missile deployment during 1958 Taiwan Cold War Crisis

Nikes at the Gardermoen Aircraft Collection


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