So were the Batch 3 Type 42s originally due to get 1030 STIR radar and VL Sea Darts in place of the 1022 and the Twin arm Sea Dart ?
In Brown’s Rebuilding the Royal Navy, Desertcar is fitted to Sea Dart ships, and has the form of the 909, so it looks like a match.As a tangent...where does Desertcar fit in here? Did it become the 909 director?
Chris
So not much detail at all and odd that Friedman seems ignorant of the prototype, but he was probably correct in predicting a similar antenna to Type 1022.This is the full STIR, incorporating a Marconi antenna and transceiver. It is scheduled for operation in 1985, and presumably outwardly resembles Type 1022.
Aye, that's where I saw it. Doesn't get a mention in the index and it's a rather odd name for a navy item!
Chris
Re: Type 1030; Friedman's Naval Radar, 1981 states:
So not much detail at all and odd that Friedman seems ignorant of the prototype, but he was probably correct in predicting a similar antenna to Type 1022.This is the full STIR, incorporating a Marconi antenna and transceiver. It is scheduled for operation in 1985, and presumably outwardly resembles Type 1022.
Re: Desertcar; those plan drawings that feature Desertcar in Brown's Rebuilding the Royal Navy are curious. The escort carrier designs date from 1966, but elsewhere in that book, and in Friedman's British Destroyers and Frigates there are plans of Type 82 and other Sea Dart-equipped escorts that date from 1964 and have the illuminator clearly labelled as Type 909.
But Jordan's article 'Postwar Weapons in the Royal Navy' in Warship 2015 states that the Type 909 was initially known as Desertcar.
Does anyone what the differences were between Type 909 and Type 909M?
GWS 31 was supposed to offer further upgrade to Type 909M so that suggests it had already been fitted to some Batch II ships?
Does anyone what the differences were between Type 909 and Type 909M?
GWS 31 was supposed to offer further upgrade to Type 909M so that suggests it had already been fitted to some Batch II ships?
Did you notice the horse named immediately after it? Someone doing a double on 'Desertcar and Nore Buoy' would definitely catch the RN eye!Also, and this was tickling the back of my brain, but Desertcar was a racehorse of the 50s which was a good hurdler. Funny how that works, I’m not into racing, and thought Desertcar might be a racetrack, but I followed the thread and voila! (And the horse had it’s heyday 15 years before I was born!)
Ref: https://sites.google.com/site/carverwilliamjockey/james-mick
www.collthings.co.uk
See my posts from 2017, I've uploaded the PDFs here.Some of the early files linked early in this thread will have to be reposted because some of them where linked to MegaUpload which has been defunct for years now.
They also mean nasty propellants that can leak out...Vertical Launch is an intriguing requirement.....favours full 360 degree coverage and use on ships.
It also means your silos don't give away your expected threat direction.
Liquid rocket motors could potentially do away with the booster stage......
I've read that Talos broke Mach before it left the rail, so it was at Ramjet ignition speed essentially instantly. Talos' minimum range had more to do with the guidance package than the propulsion.I assuming that the USN Talos and the aborted Typhon Missile has similar issues with their ramjets? Seems like it be obvious but you never read of them...
I've read that Talos broke Mach before it left the rail, so it was at Ramjet ignition speed essentially instantly. Talos' minimum range had more to do with the guidance package than the propulsion.
When was this from... and where did you find it?
Dr Pawley on x (twitter)
claims to be an instructor of ship designers.
?RP1 on this board.
Dr Pawling is absolutely what she claims to be. You have no way of easily checking my credentials (intentionally so), but she and I move in similar professional circles, and have done for nearly twenty years. We've never actually met, but she taught a fair proportion of my colleagues and there are very good links between my employer and her department.Dr Pawley on x (twitter)
claims to be an instructor of ship designers.
Thanks for that Tentative…I was working from (flawed) memory.
I recall that there were suggestions about using Sea Dart, equipped with small nuclear warhead as land-based anti-ballistic missile?Did anybody heard about this Nuclear Seadart proposal before?
Never heard of an ABM Sea or Land Dart, guidance would have been marginal and it was a bit slow for such a rapidly incoming target.