See far right for biggest missile they could fit in a MMIII silo.You dont use MX, you use Midgetman. MX was the biggest missile you could stuff into a Minuteman silo, if you are going road-mobile, you go with a very different design. Something that if one gets taken out you lose 1 warhead, not 10.
Is that what China and Russia does? Walls off everywhere their mobile ICBMs go? Because I'm not seeing the need. Few civies go out in the desert wastes where these things would be (they wouldn't be tooling around Moab and the Grand Canyon) The biggest concern would just be looking for would-be saboteurs trying to cross the desert - and shooting them.Let’s face it: unless you can wall off millions of acres of public lands and use deceptive shelter basing, the best mobile ICBMs are probably SLBMs.
That graph is misleading. The silo stuffer would technically fit into the silo (with absolutely zero room to spare), but it would be impossible to fit it and the necessary shock isolation suspension systems that allow attaining 2000 psi hardness ratings. Without those systems, even minor shocks will destroy the missile.See far right for biggest missile they could fit in a MMIII silo.
I would have replaced MMIII with a missile as large with massive upload.
I’m kidding or am I?
So it would fit notwithstanding?That graph is misleading. The silo stuffer would technically fit into the silo (with absolutely zero room to spare), but it would be impossible to fit it and the necessary shock isolation suspension systems that allow attaining 2000 psi hardness ratings. Without those systems, even minor shocks will destroy the missile.
Peacekeeper was about the longest possible missile that could fit into a minuteman silo while retaining the shock isolation systems. For anything longer than that, you'd need to dig new deeper silos.
Above 2.11m diameter you need to use a cold launch system though. So the maximum diameters are 2.11m (hot) and 2.34m (cold).See far right for biggest missile they could fit in a MMIII silo.
I would have replaced MMIII with a missile as large with massive upload.
I’m kidding or am I?
Without shock isolation systems, it's worthless.So it would fit notwithstanding?
Still takes a 3-axle trailer and might just barely fit into a 53ft trailer envelope.You dont use MX, you use Midgetman. MX was the biggest missile you could stuff into a Minuteman silo, if you are going road-mobile, you go with a very different design. Something that if one gets taken out you lose 1 warhead, not 10.
Effectively, yes. Their missile guards were known for shoot-first-ask-questions-of-the-family enforcement.Is that what China and Russia does? Walls off everywhere their mobile ICBMs go?
You greatly underestimate how many people go out into the desert to get the hell away from all the other people. Ignoring the hippies at Burning Man, of course, but they'd also be the ones protesting and otherwise interfering with operations.Because I'm not seeing the need. Few civies go out in the desert wastes where these things would be (they wouldn't be tooling around Moab and the Grand Canyon) The biggest concern would just be looking for would-be saboteurs trying to cross the desert - and shooting them.
You'd have a bigger problem, I think, in needing to completely revamp and set aside existing security practice for nuclear warheads if you were disguising them in regular traffic.
I have heard rumors that the NNSA trucks supposedly hauling the pointy things have serious defenses built into the trailers. The driver said he was warned to never ever touch the trailer.For America, this mostly means defense against random carjackings or attempted muggings in America's heartland, and anti-nuclear protests, which are not strictly military threats. The NNSA just use submachine guns or handguns and a couple armed guards in the cab. Combine this with a Flock camera system or something to watch the route in real time, and AF SecFo call ins to the local sheriff's office, and you'd have a fairly effective anti-protester/anti-carjacking defense.
By making the vehicle externally indistinguishable to commercial truck traffic, and making the missile servicing areas and launchers mixed in with commercial depots, you pretty much eliminate the ability to track the missile fleet reliable for preemptive attack. Given that the American major urban/population centers are already the intended targets for both the PRC and Russian strategic arsenals, both during the Cold War and even more so now when their arsenals cannot spare the luxury of wasting shots on counterforce targets, this is not exactly adding much risk.
I have heard rumors that the NNSA trucks supposedly hauling the pointy things have serious defenses built into the trailers. The driver said he was warned to never ever touch the trailer.
They technically do. China puts all their stuff in the tunnel network and the Rocket Force has specific heavily guard territories to parade their missile convoys around.Walls off everywhere their mobile ICBMs go?
Is that what China and Russia does? Walls off everywhere their mobile ICBMs go? Because I'm not seeing the need. Few civies go out in the desert wastes where these things would be (they wouldn't be tooling around Moab and the Grand Canyon) The biggest concern would just be looking for would-be saboteurs trying to cross the desert - and shooting them.
B-2s are no n issue over the US,
so the threat would be Spetnaz teams and suicide drones.
What document does this come from?See far right for biggest missile they could fit in a MMIII silo.
I would have replaced MMIII with a missile as large with massive upload.
I’m kidding or am I?
It was from a 1974 AW&ST issue shared on this site on another thread (can’t recall)What document does this come from?
I believe that the Chinese and Norks have adopted this CONOPS for their "road-mobile" missiles.I included one interesting image that shows a launch mode where the tubs is pushed out the end of the shelter, erected, and launched.
There's also the possibility of them getting lost. The Air Force does occasionally misplace nukesYou'd have a bigger problem, I think, in needing to completely revamp and set aside existing security practice for nuclear warheads if you were disguising them in regular traffic.
I'd think the Russians would've wanted to protect their own cities, planning bureaus, and factories.It certainly wasn't the Soviet plan, which was to focus all nuclear firepower on the cities and their stock exchanges and factories, because that's where America's strengths are.
At least the Soviet military was fully prepared to have Moscow destroyed and continue fighting for some length of time.I'd think the Russians would've wanted to protect their own cities, planning bureaus, and factories.
Yeah, and the American military was prepared to lose Washington. That doesn't mean anything.At least the Soviet military was fully prepared to have Moscow destroyed and continue fighting for some length of time.
A psychiatrist most probably wouldn't even know where to begin...Lovely slide deck here showing MX MPS (I think). The slides look a bit repetitive; wish it came with the speaker's note that would have accompanied the presentation. I included one interesting image that shows a launch mode where the tube is pushed out the end of the shelter, erected, and launched. The deck also shows what looks like the breakout launcher that was supposed to erect through the shelter roof.
MX MISSILE — writer/editor/reporter
www.sambiddle.com
I'd think the Russians would've wanted to protect their own cities, planning bureaus, and factories.
It's funny how this divide mirrored itself on both sides of the iron curtainIt would be a terrible burden that the international proletariat would remember forever.
The Red Army, which became the sole organization for nuclear planning after the mid-1970s, felt there was a sufficient redundancy in infrastructure and distribution of mechanized equipment that these losses would not interfere with combat operations subsequent to nuclear war.
If the Americans had 20 tanks after the nuclear war and rifle company to defend Western Europe with, the Red Army would have 200 tanks and a motor rifle regiment to attack with, thus victory is assured.
The CPSU disagreed, and this was lodged by refusing to participate in plans where their immediate survival was assumed to be irrelevant, so the war plans of the late Brezhnev era took on rather fatalistic overtones.