Yes, the Army later developed the M429 VT fuze. However, this was late-Vietnam era and would detonate itself due to interference if you fire more than one at a time.Would have it been possible to fit these rockets with proximity fuzes? How was the fire control system supposed to work for the crew, did a gunsight automatically account for the range determined by the radar?
It definitely doesn't give much confidence in the rocket armament of some of these early interceptors. Sure a Soviet bomber is a bigger target, but it would also be shooting back if the interceptors got too close which tends to have a disruptive affect on aiming.
That story is so baffling... I wonder whether they should have tried the old trick used by Spitfires against V-1s: wingtip to wingtip.
... then again, it also happened to F-102s. When they went chasing cruise missiles (Matador or Snark, can't remember) gone rogue, and never caught up. One of the cruise missiles was later found... in south america jungle.
A VT fuze on the rocket would eliminate most of its lethality against a bomber. The rocket penetrates through the skin then explodes, destroying the aircraft primarily by structural failure from the blast. A proximity fuzed weapon generally kills by striking critical components with fragments. In a bomber the volume fraction of these components is far smaller than in a fighter so fragments are less likely to score a debilitating blow. Continous rod warheads were created to have this structural failure effect while utilizing a proximity fuze but even then it was far less reliable.Would have it been possible to fit these rockets with proximity fuzes? How was the fire control system supposed to work for the crew, did a gunsight automatically account for the range determined by the radar?
It definitely doesn't give much confidence in the rocket armament of some of these early interceptors. Sure a Soviet bomber is a bigger target, but it would also be shooting back if the interceptors got too close which tends to have a disruptive affect on aiming.