User Panel
Posted: 10/2/2014 3:16:40 PM EDT
I see china just tested a new icbm mobile launcher. Had me wondering if we have some in service, or were those scrapped?
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There were plans for road-mobile ICBMs as well as rail-based, but neither were ever implemented in the US.
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There were plans for road-mobile ICBMs as well as rail-based, but neither were ever implemented in the US. View Quote Not really sure what the need for such a thing would be. Granted, I'm no expert, but it would seem our subs could park missiles pretty much anywhere we needed them. |
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View Quote Pretty much. With the ability to have a shit load of ICBMs hidden in the oceans which covers more than 50% of the earth. Why make a land launcher? |
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I think any of the mexican roach coaches out here that sell taquitos should qualify as miniature mobile ICBM launchers, but that's about it
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The initial deployment plan for MX was on mobile launchers on dedicated "race tracks", moving from one hardened shelter to another. After cost data was analyzed the idea was shelved and they went into fixed silo's for their short service life.
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Not really sure what the need for such a thing would be. Granted, I'm no expert, but it would seem our subs could park missiles pretty much anywhere we needed them. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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There were plans for road-mobile ICBMs as well as rail-based, but neither were ever implemented in the US. Not really sure what the need for such a thing would be. Granted, I'm no expert, but it would seem our subs could park missiles pretty much anywhere we needed them. You get much of the advantage of an air breather, with comparitive cost of a large truck. ICBMs have advantages of rapid response and throwweight. |
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The initial deployment plan for MX was on mobile launchers on dedicated "race tracks", moving from one hardened shelter to another. After cost data was analyzed the idea was shelved and they went into fixed silo's for their short service life. View Quote PK was traded away. It was a monster launch platform. |
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I see china just tested a new icbm mobile launcher. Had me wondering if we have some in service, or were those scrapped? View Quote Ours even work under water. |
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View Quote Best mobile launcher in the world. |
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The Peacekeeper was a real monster.
It was treaty limitations which caused it to go away, not any problem with the missile itself. If we were to actually work at it we probably could have had a new nuke bomb which would fit a 20 MIRV warhead on a Peacekeeper. Sometimes I think we should just call Putin's bluff and agree that it's time to walk away from all those Cold War era treaties. The PRC is the only nation that benefits from them anymore. |
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We are getting rid of silos/nukes. Can't add more to the mix. I don't see mobile launchers as being any more reliable or more secure than our existing sites.
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Quoted: Best mobile launcher in the world. But, but, but.... the Russian ones are BIGGER!!!
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Since the Russians are saying to hell with the IRBM treaty, we need to bring back the GLCM.
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The Peacekeeper was a real monster. It was treaty limitations which caused it to go away, not any problem with the missile itself. If we were to actually work at it we probably could have had a new nuke bomb which would fit a 20 MIRV warhead on a Peacekeeper. Sometimes I think we should just call Putin's bluff and agree that it's time to walk away from all those Cold War era treaties. The PRC is the only nation that benefits from them anymore. View Quote Time to dust off the neutron bomb schematics? |
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I would think security for those things would be a living nightmare.
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View Quote That sucker lives at Wright Patterson AFB Museum on the apron to the east. Still looks badass. |
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Time to dust off the neutron bomb schematics? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Peacekeeper was a real monster. It was treaty limitations which caused it to go away, not any problem with the missile itself. If we were to actually work at it we probably could have had a new nuke bomb which would fit a 20 MIRV warhead on a Peacekeeper. Sometimes I think we should just call Putin's bluff and agree that it's time to walk away from all those Cold War era treaties. The PRC is the only nation that benefits from them anymore. Time to dust off the neutron bomb schematics? The Peacekeeper had 10 MIRV 300 kiloton warheads |
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View Quote If you're gonna spend the tremendous resources to lift something that high might as well be nukes. |
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I see china just tested a new icbm mobile launcher. Had me wondering if we have some in service, or were those scrapped? Ours even work under water. Ever heard of JL-2? Probably not. Everyone knows the PLAN is just a bunch of amateurs that never leave sight of the coast, which precludes submarines from submerging. |
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Quoted: If you're gonna spend the tremendous resources to lift something that high might as well be nukes. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: If you're gonna spend the tremendous resources to lift something that high might as well be nukes. Plus... these could actually be used a lot easier. |
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I believe we used (employed as we fired none) the RR launcher.
My work made the forgings for the assembly. |
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Not really. Nukes actually suck. They are not as powerful as people think they are, they are mechanically complex and are comprised of material that by it's very nature decays without use. Plus... these could actually be used a lot easier. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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If you're gonna spend the tremendous resources to lift something that high might as well be nukes. Plus... these could actually be used a lot easier. Put a reserve tank of the consumables (tritium, etc) up there with it to account for decay and you'd be covered for a bit. It's really expensive to lift something like that up there especially with how heavy those tungsten rods are, and the kinetic effects aren't gonna be as awesome as a nuke. In all the proposals I have seen they don't even equate to 1kt. Rods from god or other kinetic bombardment ideas dont really pass cost benefit analysis due to how prohibitively expensive it is having to lift them out of the gravity well, and the effects of a tungsten cylinder reaching terminal velocity would be underwhelming. The real advantage in such a system would be lack of warning. |
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The only country that has them active as of right now are the Russians. (RS-24 Topel, Topel M with MIRV warheads)
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Time to dust off the neutron bomb schematics? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Peacekeeper was a real monster. It was treaty limitations which caused it to go away, not any problem with the missile itself. If we were to actually work at it we probably could have had a new nuke bomb which would fit a 20 MIRV warhead on a Peacekeeper. Sometimes I think we should just call Putin's bluff and agree that it's time to walk away from all those Cold War era treaties. The PRC is the only nation that benefits from them anymore. Time to dust off the neutron bomb schematics? Putin has broken all of those treaties. He doesn't care. |
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We shouldn't either................we should deploy any and everything we can
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Putin has broken all of those treaties. He doesn't care. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Peacekeeper was a real monster. It was treaty limitations which caused it to go away, not any problem with the missile itself. If we were to actually work at it we probably could have had a new nuke bomb which would fit a 20 MIRV warhead on a Peacekeeper. Sometimes I think we should just call Putin's bluff and agree that it's time to walk away from all those Cold War era treaties. The PRC is the only nation that benefits from them anymore. Time to dust off the neutron bomb schematics? Putin has broken all of those treaties. He doesn't care. |
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Obama wants us to go back to diesel subs...http://whysoblu.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Close-quarters-www.whysoblu.com_.jpg View Quote Solar |
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View Quote I'd hate to be the one who had to back that up for the picture. |
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PK was traded away. It was a monster launch platform. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The initial deployment plan for MX was on mobile launchers on dedicated "race tracks", moving from one hardened shelter to another. After cost data was analyzed the idea was shelved and they went into fixed silo's for their short service life. PK was traded away. It was a monster launch platform. Yup, when we agreed to take the ten MIRVs off of them we might as well have scrapped the program at the same time. Utter stupidity IMO, but most all nuclear disarmament treaties are. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Since the Russians are saying to hell with the IRBM treaty, we need to bring back the GLCM. This. GLCM is tits. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGM-109G_Ground_Launched_Cruise_Missile |
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The BGM 109 airframe is still around and better than ever (Tomahawk). I wonder if any of the physics packages survived... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGM-109G_Ground_Launched_Cruise_Missile View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Since the Russians are saying to hell with the IRBM treaty, we need to bring back the GLCM. This. GLCM is tits. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGM-109G_Ground_Launched_Cruise_Missile Wiki seems to think the airframes were destroyed, but not the W84 warheads. The W84 warheads are in Enduring Stockpile storage; the GLCM missiles which previously carried them have been destroyed to comply with the INF treaty, but the warheads are being maintained in case a future application is required http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W84 |
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But, but, but.... the Russian ones are BIGGER!!! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Best mobile launcher in the world. But, but, but.... the Russian ones are BIGGER!!! But, but, but the Russians have a shit ton and are still operational while our Community Organizer hates nukes. That's how you win Thermonuclear War. Think if the Russians launched first, Prez-o-dent Zero would respond? I seem to remember him having to be dragged into making a decision on getting Bin Laden. From all I've seen, he could weather having a major US city getting dusted, because gosh, if we responded, why that'd be nuclear war! Can't campaign on nuclear war! |
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Quoted: Wiki seems to think the airframes were destroyed, but not the W84 warheads. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W84 View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Since the Russians are saying to hell with the IRBM treaty, we need to bring back the GLCM. This. GLCM is tits. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGM-109G_Ground_Launched_Cruise_Missile Wiki seems to think the airframes were destroyed, but not the W84 warheads. The W84 warheads are in Enduring Stockpile storage; the GLCM missiles which previously carried them have been destroyed to comply with the INF treaty, but the warheads are being maintained in case a future application is required http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W84 It's a pity none of it will ever happen. |
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Barack Obama - Keeping the world safe for major conventional endless land wars.
Moat of us older guys would not be alive now if it weren't for the bomb. |
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There were plans for road-mobile ICBMs as well as rail-based, but neither were ever implemented in the US. View Quote Funny story my uncle told me about this subject just recently. He was a project manager on the MX missile for MacDoug back in the day. Anyway, they were having some type of meeting and a tour with some top generals and congress critters when the topic of putting launchers on rail came up. Then one of the congressman had a Guam capsizing moment and asked the general wouldn't launching a missile from rail destroy the tracks. My uncle said the general stared at the guy for a moment and then straight faced said "Who gives a SHIT! <pause>....we're in the middle of nuclear war, damaged rail is the least of our problem". The congressman didn't open his mouth the rest of the tour. Just thought it was funny, would have loved to been a fly on the wall. |
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Funny story my uncle told me about this subject just recently. He was a project manager on the MX missile for MacDoug back in the day. Anyway, they were having some type of meeting and a tour with some top generals and congress critters when the topic of putting launchers on rail came up. Then one of the congressman had a Guam capsizing moment and asked the general wouldn't launching a missile from rail destroy the tracks. My uncle said the general stared at the guy for a moment and then straight faced said "Who gives a SHIT! <pause>....we're in the middle of nuclear war, damaged rail is the least of our problem". The congressman didn't open his mouth the rest of the tour. Just thought it was funny, would have loved to been a fly on the wall. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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There were plans for road-mobile ICBMs as well as rail-based, but neither were ever implemented in the US. Funny story my uncle told me about this subject just recently. He was a project manager on the MX missile for MacDoug back in the day. Anyway, they were having some type of meeting and a tour with some top generals and congress critters when the topic of putting launchers on rail came up. Then one of the congressman had a Guam capsizing moment and asked the general wouldn't launching a missile from rail destroy the tracks. My uncle said the general stared at the guy for a moment and then straight faced said "Who gives a SHIT! <pause>....we're in the middle of nuclear war, damaged rail is the least of our problem". The congressman didn't open his mouth the rest of the tour. Just thought it was funny, would have loved to been a fly on the wall. Thats a good story. Will remember that one. |
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