Guided Missile, Guided Weapon and Rocket Designations


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AIR-LAUNCHED GUIDED MISSILES AND GUIDED MISSILE LAUNCHERS

Guided missiles are self-propelled objects. After launching, they automatically alter their direction of flight in response to signals received from outside sources. They usually carry high-explosive charges and are equipped with a means to explode them at or near a target. The majority of guided missiles used in the Navy are essentially rockets that are maneuvered while in flight. 

AIR-LAUNCHED GUIDED MISSILES

The purpose of a guided missile is to reach and destroy or damage its target. The type of target involved influences the characteristics of the missile; however, each missile meets the following basic requirements:

It must have sufficient speed to intercept or catch its target.

It must be maneuverable in flight to correct its flight path as required to intercept the target.

It must be capable of inflicting a satisfactory degree of damage to the target on intercept.

It must have an acceptable operating envelope (range/altitude) within which it is effective.

It must be capable of launching when required and at a satisfactory rate.

The missile and its components must be safe to handle, store, and use.

In general, a typical guided missile has a long, cylindrical shape, with an oval or a hemispherical shaped nose. It is fitted with a series of stabilizing or maneuvering fins, wings, or canards around its outer surface.

MISSILE CLASSIFICATION

Guided missiles are classified according to their range, speed, and launch environment, mission, and vehicle type.

Range

Long-range guided missiles are usually capable of traveling a distance of at least 100 miles. Short-range guided missiles often do not exceed the range capabilities of long-range guns. The Navy has air-launched guided missiles that function within these ranges; they are medium-range or extended-range missiles.

Speed

The speed capability of guided missiles is expressed in Mach numbers. A Mach number is the ratio of the speed of an object to the speed of sound in the medium through which the object is moving. Under standard atmospheric conditions, sonic speed is about 766 miles per hour (Mach 1.0). Guided missiles are classified according to their speed as shown below:

Subsonic—Up to Mach 0.8

Transonic—Mach 0.8 to Mach 1.2

Supersonic—Mach 1.2 to Mach 5.0

Hypersonic—Above Mach 5.0

When considering the speed of an air-launched guided missile, the speed of the launching aircraft is added to the speed of the missile. For example, if a missile's speed is Mach 2.5 and the aircraft's speed, at the time of missile launch, is Mach 2.0, the missile's speed is Mach 4.5.

Types of Guided Missiles

Guided missiles are divided into two types—service missiles and nonservice missiles.

SERVICE MISSILES.—These missiles are generally referred to as tactical missiles. Service missiles are fully operational and fully explosive loaded rounds, designed for service use in combat.

NONSERVICE MISSILES.—These include all types of missiles other than service or tactical. They are subdivided as captive air training missiles (CATMs), dummy air training missile  (DATMs), special air training missiles (NATMs), and practice guided weapons (PGWs).

Some practice and training missiles are used for actual launching. They contain live propulsion and guidance systems with inert loaded warheads. They are fitted with pyrotechnic fuze indicator signals and/or tracking flares that give a visual indication of missile/target impact. These missiles can also be fitted with a telemetry-type warhead, which transmits electronic signals to a monitoring station. The monitoring station displays the missile's in-flight performance and missile/target hit. Some types of exercise missiles contain explosive-destruct charges so the missiles destroy themselves in flight. These explosive-destruct charges, when installed, are used as a safety measure so the missile does not travel beyond the established target range.

The CATMs are used for pilot training in aerial target acquisition and aircraft controls/displays. They have both tactical and training components. The DATMs are ground training missiles used to train ground personnel in missile assembly/ disassembly, uploading/downloading, and handling procedures.

The NATMs are used for pilot training during fleet weapon training exercises. 

The PGWs are used for stowage procedures and techniques. All components are completely inert. Service missiles are fired as practice or training missiles when approved by proper authority. Normally, approval is restricted to missiles that are obsolete or to missiles that have exceeded their normal service life. Guided missiles used in naval aviation include air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles. Air-to-air guided missiles are fired by one aircraft against another aircraft. Air-to-surface guided missiles are fired from an aircraft against a target on the land orwater surface. For further information on the classification of guided missiles, you should refer to United States Navy Ammunition Historical and Functional Data, NAVSEA SWO10-AB-GTP-010, and Identification of Ammunition, NAVSEA SW010-AF-ORD-010.

MISSILE DESIGNATION

The Department of Defense established a missile and rocket designation sequence. The basic designation of every guided missile are letters, which are in sequence. The sequence indicates the following:

1. The environment from which the vehicle is launched

2. The primary mission of the missile

3. The type of vehicle Examples of guided missile designators common to the Aviation Ordnanceman are as follows:

  1. AGM- Air-launched Surface-attack guided missile
  2. AIM- Air-launched intercept-aerial guided missile
  3. ATM- Air-launched training guided missile
  4. RIM- Ship-launched intercept-aerial guided missile

A design number follows the basic designator. In turn, the number may be followed by consecutive letters, which show a modification. For example, the designation of AGM-88C means the missile is an air-launched (A), surface-attack (G), missile (M), eighty-eighty missile design (88), third modification (C).

In addition, most guided missiles are given popular names, such as Sparrow, Sidewinder, and Harpoon. These names are retained regardless of subsequent modifications to the original missile.

First letter designating launch environment

A Air Air launched
B Multiple Capable of being launched from more than one environment
C Coffin Stored horizontally or at less than a 45 degree angle in a protective enclosure and launched from the ground
F Individual Carried and launched by one man
M Mobile Launched from a ground vehicle or moveable platform
P Soft Pad Partially or unprotected in storage and launched from the ground
U Underwater Launched from a submarine or other underwater device
R Ship Launched from a surface vessel such as a ship, barge, etc.

Second letter designating mission symbol

D Decoy Vehicles designed or modified to confuse, deceive, or divert enemy defenses by simulating an attack vehicle
E Special Electronic Vehicles designed or modified with electronics equipment for communications, countermeasures, electronic radiation sounding, or other electronic recording or relay missions
G Surface Attack Vehicles designed to destroy enemy land or sea targets
I Intercept-Aerial Vehicles designed to intercept aerial targets in defensive roles
Q Drone Vehicles designed for target reconnaissance or surveillance
T Training Vehicles designed or permanently modified for training purposes
U Underwater attack Vehicles designed to destroy enemy submarines or other underwater targets, or to detonate underwater
W Weather Vehicles designed to observe, record, or relay data pertaining to meteorological phenomena

Third letter designating vehicle type symbol

M Guided Missile An unmanned, self-propelled vehicle with remote or internal trajectory guidance
R Rocket A self propelled vehicle whose flight trajectory cannot be altered after launch
N Probe A non-orbital instrumented vehicle used to monitor and transmit environmental information
An "X" preceding the first letter indicates an experimental round

A "Y" preceding the first letter means the round is a prototype


AIM-120

Air

Intercept-Aerial

Guided Missile

MISSILE IDENTIFICATION

The external surfaces of all Navy guided missiles, except radome and antenna surfaces, are painted white. The color white has no identification color-coding significance when used on guided missiles. There are three significant color codes used on guided missiles and their components—yellow, brown, and blue. These color codes indicate the explosive hazard in the missile component. If components are painted blue on a practice missile and have a yellow or brown band painted on them, the component has an explosive component that doesn't have a comparable part in a service missile.

Each component of the missile, besides being color coded, is identifiable by lettering stenciled on the exterior surface of the component. The lettering on a component gives information such as the  Mark and Mod, type and weight of explosive filler, loading activity symbol and date of loading, temperature range restrictions, and unit serial number.

All missiles used in naval aviation are assigned missile serial numbers. These numbers are shipped with the missile's logbook. The missile serial number is normally the serial number of the leading component of the missile, such as the guidance and/or control components. The serial number is important because it is the number used to track the missile from assembly at a weapons station until it is fired or discontinued from service. For further information concerning identification of guided missiles, refer to NAVSEA SW010- AF-ORD-010/NAVAIR 11-1-117, Identification of Ammunition (latest revision).


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