"The Homing Overlay Experiment" Topic
4 Posts
All members in good standing are free to post here. Opinions expressed here are solely those of the posters, and have not been cleared with nor are they endorsed by The Miniatures Page.
Please do not post offers to buy and sell on the main forum.
For more information, see the TMP FAQ.
Back to the Cold War (1946-1989) Message Board
Areas of InterestModern
Featured Hobby News Article
Featured Recent Link
Featured Showcase ArticlePeteMurray takes a look at Microfigs' Soviet T-80B tank and a BMP-1 infantry fighting vehicle in N scale.
Featured Profile Article
Current Poll
Featured Book Review
|
Please sign in to your membership account, or, if you are not yet a member, please sign up for your free membership account.
Tango01 | 06 Jul 2018 3:50 p.m. PST |
"At the Cold War peak in the 1980s, the deployment of weapons and defence systems from space (or at least, extremely high altitude) became the new playthings for both Communist and Western governments. On the US side of the Atlantic, president Ronald Reagan's opposition to the doctrine of mutually assured destruction meant that the US military was investing time into researching the means of defending America against a nuclear strike, rather than the weapons required for a retaliatory attack. Cue the Homing Overlay Experiment (HOE). In 1984, the US Army launched two missiles at each other from either side of the Pacific. One was launched from California with a dummy warhead and a trajectory that would take it 7,242 kilometres (4,500 miles) away to a spot near Kwajalein Atoll. The army waited for the missile to pop up on Kwajalein's radar before launching their experimental counter-measure to intercept it. This was a kinetic weapon that looked much like another missile, until it approached the nuclear dummy outside Earth's atmosphere at more than 185 kilometres (114 miles) altitude. Here, it unfurled a huge, ribbed aluminium net to increase its lethal radius and made directly for the dummy, striking it at such speed that both were practically vaporised. This fourth test was the first to be considered a success and was likened to shooting a bullet out of the air in mid-flight with another bullet…."
Main page weaponsandwarfare.com
Amicalement Armand
|
wardog | 08 Jul 2018 11:59 a.m. PST |
so what happened to it ,seems to have been better than the current gbi system ,mind you i am bit rusty on current system,will need to do some catching up(maybe it gotten better) |
Tango01 | 08 Jul 2018 3:15 p.m. PST |
Glad you like it my friend!. Amicalement Armand
|
Lion in the Stars | 09 Jul 2018 5:08 p.m. PST |
One of the problems with it is fragments. Yeah, it will kill anything it hits, but where do the fragments go? Kessler Syndrome is a real issue. Modern systems intercept at lower altitudes, so fragments are less of an issue. The bigger one is the ABM treaty. |
|