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Sprint (missile)

The Sprint was a two-stage, solid-fuel anti-ballistic missile (ABM), armed with a W66 enhanced-radiation thermonuclear warhead used by the United States Army during 1975–76. It was designed to intercept incoming reentry vehicles (RV) after they had descended below an altitude of about 60 kilometres (37 mi), where the thickening air stripped away any decoys or radar reflectors and exposed the RV to observation by radar. As the RV would be traveling at about 5 miles per second (8,047 m/s; 26,400 ft/s; Mach 24), Sprint needed to have phenomenal performance to achieve an interception in the few seconds before the RV reached its target.

Sprint
Sprint anti-ballistic missile interceptor on a test stand.
TypeAnti-ballistic missile
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1975–76
Production history
ManufacturerMartin Marietta[1]
Specifications
Mass7,700 pounds (3,500 kg)
Length26.9 feet (8.20 m)
Diameter53 inches (1.35 m)
WarheadW66 nuclear low kt

Engine
  • 1st stage: Hercules X-265 650,000 pounds-force (2,900 kN);
  • 2nd Stage: Hercules X-271
PropellantSolid fuel
Operational
range
25 miles (40 km)
Flight ceiling19 miles (30 km)
Maximum speed 7,610 miles per hour; 12,300 kilometers per hour; 3,400 meters per second (Mach 10)
Guidance
system
Radio command guidance
Launch
platform
Silo

Sprint accelerated at 100 g, reaching a speed of Mach 10 (12,000 km/h; 7,600 mph) in 5 seconds. Such a high velocity at relatively low altitudes created skin temperatures up to 6,200 °F (3,400 °C), requiring an ablative shield to dissipate the heat.[2][3] The high temperature caused a plasma to form around the missile, requiring extremely powerful radio signals to reach it for guidance. The missile glowed bright white as it flew.

Sprint was the centerpiece of the Nike-X system, which concentrated on placing bases around large cities to intercept Soviet warheads. The cost of such a system quickly became untenable as the Soviets added more ICBMs to their fleet, and Nike-X was abandoned. In its place came the Sentinel program, which used Sprint as a last-ditch defense against RVs that evaded the much longer-ranged LIM-49 Spartan. Sentinel was itself changed to become the Safeguard Program, which was operational only for a few months from October 1975 to early 1976. Congressional opposition[4] and high costs linked to its questionable economics[5] and efficacy against the then emerging MIRV warheads of the Soviet Union, resulted in a very short operational period.

During the early 1970s, some work was carried out on an improved Sprint II, which was mostly concerned with the guidance systems.[6] These were to be dedicated to the task of protecting the Minuteman missile fields. Further work was canceled as US ABM policy changed.

History edit

Nike Zeus edit

The US Army had considered the issue of shooting down theater ballistic missiles of the V-2 missile type as early as the mid-1940s. Early studies suggested their short flight times, on the order of 5 minutes, would make it difficult to detect, track and shoot at these weapons. However, in spite of their much higher performance, intercontinental ballistic missiles' longer flight times and higher trajectories made them, theoretically, much easier to attack.

In 1955, the Army gave Bell Labs, who had developed the earlier Nike missiles, a contract to study the ABM issue. They returned a report saying the concept was within the state of the art, and could be built using modest upgrades to the latest Army surface-to-air missile, the Nike Hercules. The main technological issues would be the need for extremely powerful radars that could detect the incoming ICBM warheads long enough in advance to fire on them, and computers with enough speed to develop tracks for the targets in engagements that lasted seconds.

Bell began development of what became Nike Zeus in 1956, working out of the Nike development center at Redstone Arsenal. The program went fairly smoothly, and the first tests were carried out in the summer of 1959. By 1962, a complete Zeus base had been built on Kwajalein Island and proved very successful over the following year, successfully intercepting test warheads and even low-flying satellites.

New concept edit

During the period Zeus was being developed, a number of problems arose that appeared to make it trivially easy to defeat. The simplest was that its 1950s-era mechanical radars could track a limited number of targets, and it could be easily overwhelmed by numbers; a report by the Gaither Committee suggested a salvo of four warheads would have a 90% chance of destroying a Zeus base. This was of little concern during early development when ICBMs were enormously expensive, but as their cost fell and the Soviets claimed to be turning them out "like sausages", this became a serious problem.

However, other issues also became obvious in the late 1950s. One issue was that nuclear explosions in space had been tested in 1958 and found that they blanketed a huge area with radiation that blocked radar signals above about 60 kilometers (37 mi) altitude. By exploding a single warhead above the Zeus sites, the Soviets could block observation of following warheads until they were too close to attack. Another simple measure would be to pack radar reflectors in with the warhead, presenting many false targets on the radar screens that cluttered the displays.

As the problems piled up, the Secretary of Defense Neil H. McElroy asked ARPA to study the anti-missile concept. ARPA noted that both the radar decoys and high-altitude explosions stopped working in the thickening lower atmosphere. If one simply waited until the warheads descended below about 60 km, they could be easily picked out on radar again. However, as the warheads would be moving at about 5 miles per second (8 km/s; Mach 24) at this point, they were only seconds from their targets. An extremely high-speed missile would be needed to attack them during this period.

Sprint edit

The result of the ARPA study came at the height of the debate over the Zeus system in the early 1960s. The new Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, convinced President Kennedy that Zeus was simply not worth deploying.[1] He suggested using the funds allocated to its deployment to develop the ARPA system, which became known as Nike-X, a name given by engineering professor Jack Ruina when he was reporting on the concept.

Nike-X required great improvements in radars, computers, and especially the missile. Zeus had an attack profile lasting about a minute; Nike-X's interceptions would last about five seconds.

Sprint II edit

Work on initial investigations into "Follow-On Sprint" was underway in second-quarter 1968. Los Alamos were examining two warheads for the Upstage II design variation.[7] By third-quarter 1971, Sprint II was incorporated into a new module for Safeguard called Hardsite Defense (HSD) and a joint Atomic Energy Commission/DoD working group was examining new warheads that would require less tritium.[8] HSD was described as:[8]

... [consisting] of an autonomous module for close-in, low-altitude intercept (≈10,000 to 30,000 ft) and is based upon three radar/data-processor units located about 10 nautical miles apart. The module will have six or seven firing sites containing about 100 modified Sprint interceptors to defend approximately 21 silos.

By first-quarter 1972, the system was renamed Site Defense and its purpose was to defend Minuteman silos. Over the original Sprint missile, the Sprint II interceptor had slightly reduced launch dispersion, increased hardness to the effect of nuclear weapons, and decreased miss distance. Los Alamos staff expected a request for warhead development sometime in FY-1972-1974.[9] A Phase 2 feasibility study report[10] was completed by Los Alamos in third-quarter 1972 and investigations into warhead design continued into first-quarter 1973.[11]

It is unclear when Sprint II was cancelled; however, a report on Sprint II electrical connectors was published in April 1977.[6]

Design edit

The conical Sprint was stored in and launched from a silo. To make the launch as quick as possible, the missile which was ejected by an explosive-driven piston simply blasted through the fiberglass silo cover. As the missile cleared the silo at 0.6 seconds, the first stage fired and the missile was tilted toward its target. The first stage was exhausted after only 1.2 seconds, but produced 650,000 pounds-force (2,900 kilonewtons) of thrust. On separation, the spent first stage disintegrated due to aerodynamic forces. The second stage fired within 1 to 2 seconds of launch. Interception at an altitude of 1 to 19 miles (1.5 to 30 km) took at most 15 seconds.

The first stage's Hercules X-265 engine is believed to have contained alternating layers of zirconium "staples" embedded in nitrocellulose powder, followed by gelatinizing with nitroglycerine, thus forming a higher thrust double-base powder.[12][13]

The Sprint was controlled by ground-based radio command guidance, which tracked the incoming reentry vehicles with phased array radar and guided the missile to its target.

The Sprint was armed with an enhanced radiation nuclear warhead with a yield reportedly of a few kilotons, though the exact number has not been declassified. The warhead was intended to destroy the incoming reentry vehicle primarily by neutron flux.

The first test of the Sprint missile took place at White Sands Missile Range on 17 November 1965.[14]: 58 

Design predecessors edit

 
White Sands Missile Range Museum HIBEX rocket display

The "HIBEX" (high boost experiment) missile is considered to be somewhat of a design predecessor and competitor to the Sprint missile, as it was a similar high-acceleration missile in the early 1960s, with a technological transfer from that program to the Sprint development program occurring.[15] Both were tested at the White Sands Launch Complex 38. Although HIBEX's initial acceleration rate was higher, at near 400 g, its role was to intercept reentry vehicles at a much lower altitude than Sprint, 20,000 feet (6,100 m), and it is considered to be a last-ditch anti-ballistic missile "in a similar vein to Sprint".[2] HIBEX employed a star-grain "composite modified double-base propellant", known as FDN-80, created from the mixing of ammonium perchlorate, aluminum, and double-base smokeless powder, with zirconium staples (0.125 inches (3 mm) in length) embedded or "randomly dispersed" throughout the matrix.[16]: 162–178, G-24 

The British "Thunderbird" rocket of 1947 produced an acceleration of 100 g with a polysulfide composite propellant, star-grained cross-section solid rocket motor.[17]

Testing edit

The first test of the Sprint missile took place at White Sands Missile Range on 17 November 1965.[14]: 58 

Survivors edit

  • The Air Defense Artillery museum at Fort Sill, Oklahoma has both Safeguard missiles (Sprint and Spartan), plus Nike Zeus and HIBEX on exhibit.[18]
  • The White Sands Missile Range Museum has a HIBEX on exhibit.
  • Remote Site Launch Sprint Missile Historic Museum, RSL #3 missile site, Cavalier, North Dakota (full scale replica on display)[19]

Gallery edit

See also edit

  • 53T6 – Russian anti-ballistic missile

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Army Awards Pact For an Anti-Missile To Martin Marietta". Business & Finance. The New York Times. Vol. CXII, no. 38405 (Western ed.). Washington. UPI. 19 March 1963. p. 9. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. from the original on 23 February 2022. Retrieved 23 February 2022. Mr. McNamara told Congress in January that the Nike-Zeus anti-missile system "would not be effective against a sophisticated (missile) threat in the late 1960's and early 1970's."
  2. ^ a b "Sprint". Nuclear ABMs of the USA. 27 January 2003. from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  3. ^ Parsch, Andreas (n.d.). "Appendix 4: Undesignated Vehicles - Martin Marietta Sprint". Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles. from the original on 21 July 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  4. ^ Boffey, Philip M. (16 May 1969). "ABM: Critical Report by Scientists Brings Sharp Pentagon Rebuttal". Science. American Association for the Advancement of Science. 164 (3881): 807–810. Bibcode:1969Sci...164..807B. doi:10.1126/science.164.3881.807. eISSN 1095-9203. ISSN 0036-8075. JSTOR 1726673. LCCN 17024346. OCLC 1644869. PMID 17840557.
  5. ^ Finney, John W. (12 February 1969). "Pentagon Concedes Sentinel Would Cost More Than Estimate; Pentagon Concedes Costs of Sentinel Would Grow". The New York Times. Vol. CXVIII, no. 40, 562 (Late City ed.). Washington. p. 1,11. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. from the original on 21 March 2022. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  6. ^ a b Nordman, Glenn W. (1 April 1977). The conception, birth, and growth of a missile umbilical system (SPRINT II) (PDF). NASA Technical Reports Server (Technical report). Martin Marietta. 19780011101. from the original on 24 February 2022. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  7. ^ Betty L Perkins (3 November 2003). Tracing the Origins of the W76: 1966-Spring 1973 (PDF) (Report). Los Alamos National Labs. p. V-63. LA-14066-H. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 February 2023. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
  8. ^ a b Tracing the Origins of the W76: 1966-Spring 1973, p. V-92.
  9. ^ Tracing the Origins of the W76: 1966-Spring 1973, p. V-100.
  10. ^ Tracing the Origins of the W76: 1966-Spring 1973, p. I-17.
  11. ^ Tracing the Origins of the W76: 1966-Spring 1973, p. V-101.
  12. ^ Lowther, Scott (27 December 2009). "SPRINT". The Unwanted Blog. from the original on 6 December 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  13. ^ Moorhead, Seth B. (1 July 1974). REFRACTORY AIR VANE AND REFRACTORY MATERIAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT Task II -- Refactory Materials for a Thurst Vector Control Valve (pdf). Defense Technical Information Center (Technical report). Army Materials and Mechanics Research Center. AD0530958. (PDF) from the original on 23 February 2022. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  14. ^ a b Walker, James; Bernstein, Lewis; Lang, Sharon (2005). "Chapter II. Rockets, Communications and Deploying Ballistic Missile Defense, 1958-1975". Seize the High Ground: The U.S. Army in Space and Missile Defense. United States Army Space and Missile Defense Command. Government Printing Office. pp. 37–82. ISBN 978-0160723087. LCCN 2005364289. OCLC 57711369. OL 7380755M – via Internet Archive. p. 58: The first test of the SPRINT itself came in November 1965 at While Sands Missile Range.
  15. ^ "III. HIBEX - UPSTAGE". Alternate Wars. n.d. from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  16. ^ Schwab, D. E. (17 March 1972). Upstage Technology Report: Special Manufacturing And Fabrication (pdf). Defense Technical Information Center (Technical report). McDonnell Douglas. pp. 162–178, with impact sensitivity on G-24. AD0901850. (PDF) from the original on 23 February 2022. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  17. ^ Bedard, Andre (26 June 2002). . astronautix.com. Archived from the original on 6 August 2002. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  18. ^ DeCristo, Daniel (28 May 2011). "ADA park (Fort Sill, Oklahoma)". Flickr. from the original on 24 October 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  19. ^ "RSL #3 Missile Site Tours". Remote Site Launch Sprint Missile Historic Museum. n.d. from the original on 25 December 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2022.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Sprint
  • AT&T Archives: A 20-year History of Antiballistic Missile Systems on YouTube
  • Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles
  • Terminal defense using the Sprint
  • Sprint missile launch
  • "Sprint Gallery 1". srmsc.org.
  • Nike Sprint dual launch during a salvo test at Kwajalein Atoll test range
  • Video of Nike Sprint launch (2 MB .mpg)
  • Chapter 9: Sprint Missile Subsystem from ABM Research and development at Bell Labs
  • Nike Sprint and Spartan Photo Gallery

sprint, missile, sprint, stage, solid, fuel, anti, ballistic, missile, armed, with, enhanced, radiation, thermonuclear, warhead, used, united, states, army, during, 1975, designed, intercept, incoming, reentry, vehicles, after, they, descended, below, altitude. The Sprint was a two stage solid fuel anti ballistic missile ABM armed with a W66 enhanced radiation thermonuclear warhead used by the United States Army during 1975 76 It was designed to intercept incoming reentry vehicles RV after they had descended below an altitude of about 60 kilometres 37 mi where the thickening air stripped away any decoys or radar reflectors and exposed the RV to observation by radar As the RV would be traveling at about 5 miles per second 8 047 m s 26 400 ft s Mach 24 Sprint needed to have phenomenal performance to achieve an interception in the few seconds before the RV reached its target SprintSprint anti ballistic missile interceptor on a test stand TypeAnti ballistic missilePlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1975 76Production historyManufacturerMartin Marietta 1 SpecificationsMass7 700 pounds 3 500 kg Length26 9 feet 8 20 m Diameter53 inches 1 35 m WarheadW66 nuclear low ktEngine1st stage Hercules X 265 650 000 pounds force 2 900 kN 2nd Stage Hercules X 271PropellantSolid fuelOperationalrange25 miles 40 km Flight ceiling19 miles 30 km Maximum speed7 610 miles per hour 12 300 kilometers per hour 3 400 meters per second Mach 10 GuidancesystemRadio command guidanceLaunchplatformSiloSprint accelerated at 100 g reaching a speed of Mach 10 12 000 km h 7 600 mph in 5 seconds Such a high velocity at relatively low altitudes created skin temperatures up to 6 200 F 3 400 C requiring an ablative shield to dissipate the heat 2 3 The high temperature caused a plasma to form around the missile requiring extremely powerful radio signals to reach it for guidance The missile glowed bright white as it flew Sprint was the centerpiece of the Nike X system which concentrated on placing bases around large cities to intercept Soviet warheads The cost of such a system quickly became untenable as the Soviets added more ICBMs to their fleet and Nike X was abandoned In its place came the Sentinel program which used Sprint as a last ditch defense against RVs that evaded the much longer ranged LIM 49 Spartan Sentinel was itself changed to become the Safeguard Program which was operational only for a few months from October 1975 to early 1976 Congressional opposition 4 and high costs linked to its questionable economics 5 and efficacy against the then emerging MIRV warheads of the Soviet Union resulted in a very short operational period During the early 1970s some work was carried out on an improved Sprint II which was mostly concerned with the guidance systems 6 These were to be dedicated to the task of protecting the Minuteman missile fields Further work was canceled as US ABM policy changed Contents 1 History 1 1 Nike Zeus 1 2 New concept 1 3 Sprint 1 4 Sprint II 2 Design 3 Design predecessors 4 Testing 5 Survivors 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editNike Zeus edit Main article Nike Zeus The US Army had considered the issue of shooting down theater ballistic missiles of the V 2 missile type as early as the mid 1940s Early studies suggested their short flight times on the order of 5 minutes would make it difficult to detect track and shoot at these weapons However in spite of their much higher performance intercontinental ballistic missiles longer flight times and higher trajectories made them theoretically much easier to attack In 1955 the Army gave Bell Labs who had developed the earlier Nike missiles a contract to study the ABM issue They returned a report saying the concept was within the state of the art and could be built using modest upgrades to the latest Army surface to air missile the Nike Hercules The main technological issues would be the need for extremely powerful radars that could detect the incoming ICBM warheads long enough in advance to fire on them and computers with enough speed to develop tracks for the targets in engagements that lasted seconds Bell began development of what became Nike Zeus in 1956 working out of the Nike development center at Redstone Arsenal The program went fairly smoothly and the first tests were carried out in the summer of 1959 By 1962 a complete Zeus base had been built on Kwajalein Island and proved very successful over the following year successfully intercepting test warheads and even low flying satellites New concept edit Main article Nike X During the period Zeus was being developed a number of problems arose that appeared to make it trivially easy to defeat The simplest was that its 1950s era mechanical radars could track a limited number of targets and it could be easily overwhelmed by numbers a report by the Gaither Committee suggested a salvo of four warheads would have a 90 chance of destroying a Zeus base This was of little concern during early development when ICBMs were enormously expensive but as their cost fell and the Soviets claimed to be turning them out like sausages this became a serious problem However other issues also became obvious in the late 1950s One issue was that nuclear explosions in space had been tested in 1958 and found that they blanketed a huge area with radiation that blocked radar signals above about 60 kilometers 37 mi altitude By exploding a single warhead above the Zeus sites the Soviets could block observation of following warheads until they were too close to attack Another simple measure would be to pack radar reflectors in with the warhead presenting many false targets on the radar screens that cluttered the displays As the problems piled up the Secretary of Defense Neil H McElroy asked ARPA to study the anti missile concept ARPA noted that both the radar decoys and high altitude explosions stopped working in the thickening lower atmosphere If one simply waited until the warheads descended below about 60 km they could be easily picked out on radar again However as the warheads would be moving at about 5 miles per second 8 km s Mach 24 at this point they were only seconds from their targets An extremely high speed missile would be needed to attack them during this period Sprint edit The result of the ARPA study came at the height of the debate over the Zeus system in the early 1960s The new Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara convinced President Kennedy that Zeus was simply not worth deploying 1 He suggested using the funds allocated to its deployment to develop the ARPA system which became known as Nike X a name given by engineering professor Jack Ruina when he was reporting on the concept Nike X required great improvements in radars computers and especially the missile Zeus had an attack profile lasting about a minute Nike X s interceptions would last about five seconds Sprint II edit Work on initial investigations into Follow On Sprint was underway in second quarter 1968 Los Alamos were examining two warheads for the Upstage II design variation 7 By third quarter 1971 Sprint II was incorporated into a new module for Safeguard called Hardsite Defense HSD and a joint Atomic Energy Commission DoD working group was examining new warheads that would require less tritium 8 HSD was described as 8 consisting of an autonomous module for close in low altitude intercept 10 000 to 30 000 ft and is based upon three radar data processor units located about 10 nautical miles apart The module will have six or seven firing sites containing about 100 modified Sprint interceptors to defend approximately 21 silos By first quarter 1972 the system was renamed Site Defense and its purpose was to defend Minuteman silos Over the original Sprint missile the Sprint II interceptor had slightly reduced launch dispersion increased hardness to the effect of nuclear weapons and decreased miss distance Los Alamos staff expected a request for warhead development sometime in FY 1972 1974 9 A Phase 2 feasibility study report 10 was completed by Los Alamos in third quarter 1972 and investigations into warhead design continued into first quarter 1973 11 It is unclear when Sprint II was cancelled however a report on Sprint II electrical connectors was published in April 1977 6 Design editThe conical Sprint was stored in and launched from a silo To make the launch as quick as possible the missile which was ejected by an explosive driven piston simply blasted through the fiberglass silo cover As the missile cleared the silo at 0 6 seconds the first stage fired and the missile was tilted toward its target The first stage was exhausted after only 1 2 seconds but produced 650 000 pounds force 2 900 kilonewtons of thrust On separation the spent first stage disintegrated due to aerodynamic forces The second stage fired within 1 to 2 seconds of launch Interception at an altitude of 1 to 19 miles 1 5 to 30 km took at most 15 seconds The first stage s Hercules X 265 engine is believed to have contained alternating layers of zirconium staples embedded in nitrocellulose powder followed by gelatinizing with nitroglycerine thus forming a higher thrust double base powder 12 13 The Sprint was controlled by ground based radio command guidance which tracked the incoming reentry vehicles with phased array radar and guided the missile to its target The Sprint was armed with an enhanced radiation nuclear warhead with a yield reportedly of a few kilotons though the exact number has not been declassified The warhead was intended to destroy the incoming reentry vehicle primarily by neutron flux The first test of the Sprint missile took place at White Sands Missile Range on 17 November 1965 14 58 Design predecessors editSee also Nike Zeus nbsp White Sands Missile Range Museum HIBEX rocket displayThe HIBEX high boost experiment missile is considered to be somewhat of a design predecessor and competitor to the Sprint missile as it was a similar high acceleration missile in the early 1960s with a technological transfer from that program to the Sprint development program occurring 15 Both were tested at the White Sands Launch Complex 38 Although HIBEX s initial acceleration rate was higher at near 400 g its role was to intercept reentry vehicles at a much lower altitude than Sprint 20 000 feet 6 100 m and it is considered to be a last ditch anti ballistic missile in a similar vein to Sprint 2 HIBEX employed a star grain composite modified double base propellant known as FDN 80 created from the mixing of ammonium perchlorate aluminum and double base smokeless powder with zirconium staples 0 125 inches 3 mm in length embedded or randomly dispersed throughout the matrix 16 162 178 G 24 The British Thunderbird rocket of 1947 produced an acceleration of 100 g with a polysulfide composite propellant star grained cross section solid rocket motor 17 Testing editThe first test of the Sprint missile took place at White Sands Missile Range on 17 November 1965 14 58 Survivors editThe Air Defense Artillery museum at Fort Sill Oklahoma has both Safeguard missiles Sprint and Spartan plus Nike Zeus and HIBEX on exhibit 18 The White Sands Missile Range Museum has a HIBEX on exhibit Remote Site Launch Sprint Missile Historic Museum RSL 3 missile site Cavalier North Dakota full scale replica on display 19 Gallery edit nbsp Closeup of Sprint anti ballistic missile nosecone in its silo The nose would deflect slightly to steer the missile in flight nbsp Sprint anti ballistic missile on a test stand before launch nbsp Final assembly of a Sprint missile before a test See also edit53T6 Russian anti ballistic missileReferences edit a b Army Awards Pact For an Anti Missile To Martin Marietta Business amp Finance The New York Times Vol CXII no 38405 Western ed Washington UPI 19 March 1963 p 9 ISSN 0362 4331 OCLC 1645522 Archived from the original on 23 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Mr McNamara told Congress in January that the Nike Zeus anti missile system would not be effective against a sophisticated missile threat in the late 1960 s and early 1970 s a b Sprint Nuclear ABMs of the USA 27 January 2003 Archived from the original on 14 September 2021 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Parsch Andreas n d Appendix 4 Undesignated Vehicles Martin Marietta Sprint Directory of U S Military Rockets and Missiles Archived from the original on 21 July 2021 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Boffey Philip M 16 May 1969 ABM Critical Report by Scientists Brings Sharp Pentagon Rebuttal Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 164 3881 807 810 Bibcode 1969Sci 164 807B doi 10 1126 science 164 3881 807 eISSN 1095 9203 ISSN 0036 8075 JSTOR 1726673 LCCN 17024346 OCLC 1644869 PMID 17840557 Finney John W 12 February 1969 Pentagon Concedes Sentinel Would Cost More Than Estimate Pentagon Concedes Costs of Sentinel Would Grow The New York Times Vol CXVIII no 40 562 Late City ed Washington p 1 11 ISSN 0362 4331 OCLC 1645522 Archived from the original on 21 March 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 a b Nordman Glenn W 1 April 1977 The conception birth and growth of a missile umbilical system SPRINT II PDF NASA Technical Reports Server Technical report Martin Marietta 19780011101 Archived from the original on 24 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Betty L Perkins 3 November 2003 Tracing the Origins of the W76 1966 Spring 1973 PDF Report Los Alamos National Labs p V 63 LA 14066 H Archived PDF from the original on 15 February 2023 Retrieved 18 November 2022 a b Tracing the Origins of the W76 1966 Spring 1973 p V 92 Tracing the Origins of the W76 1966 Spring 1973 p V 100 Tracing the Origins of the W76 1966 Spring 1973 p I 17 Tracing the Origins of the W76 1966 Spring 1973 p V 101 Lowther Scott 27 December 2009 SPRINT The Unwanted Blog Archived from the original on 6 December 2021 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Moorhead Seth B 1 July 1974 REFRACTORY AIR VANE AND REFRACTORY MATERIAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT Task II Refactory Materials for a Thurst Vector Control Valve pdf Defense Technical Information Center Technical report Army Materials and Mechanics Research Center AD0530958 Archived PDF from the original on 23 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 a b Walker James Bernstein Lewis Lang Sharon 2005 Chapter II Rockets Communications and Deploying Ballistic Missile Defense 1958 1975 Seize the High Ground The U S Army in Space and Missile Defense United States Army Space and Missile Defense Command Government Printing Office pp 37 82 ISBN 978 0160723087 LCCN 2005364289 OCLC 57711369 OL 7380755M via Internet Archive p 58 The first test of the SPRINT itself came in November 1965 at While Sands Missile Range III HIBEX UPSTAGE Alternate Wars n d Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Schwab D E 17 March 1972 Upstage Technology Report Special Manufacturing And Fabrication pdf Defense Technical Information Center Technical report McDonnell Douglas pp 162 178 with impact sensitivity on G 24 AD0901850 Archived PDF from the original on 23 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Bedard Andre 26 June 2002 Composite Solid Propellants astronautix com Archived from the original on 6 August 2002 Retrieved 23 February 2022 DeCristo Daniel 28 May 2011 ADA park Fort Sill Oklahoma Flickr Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 23 February 2022 RSL 3 Missile Site Tours Remote Site Launch Sprint Missile Historic Museum n d Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Further reading edit Freedman Lawrence 1 January 1977 US Intelligence and the Soviet Strategic Threat First ed Palgrave Macmillan pp 89 148 ISBN 978 1349033997 JSTOR j ctt7ztzzz LCCN 77007525 OCLC 1004379442 OL 29356452M via Internet Archive Krips Jack Holllngshead Charles 22 September 1975 Ballistic Missile Defense System Guidance Manufacturing Technology PDF Missile Manufacturing Technology Conference Held At Hilton Head Island South Carolina on 22 26 September 1975 Defense Technical Information Center No AD A017 242 Hilton Head Island South Carolina National Technical Information Service Army Materiel Command pp 97 132 Archived PDF from the original on 9 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Yanarella Ernest J 1 December 1977 5 Exit Zeus Enter Nike X The Missile Defense Controversy Technology in Search of a Mission First ed University Press of Kentucky pp 79 101 ISBN 978 0813113555 JSTOR j ctt2jcrcd LCCN 76046034 OCLC 1204958636 OL 4901409M via Internet Archive External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sprint missiles Sprint AT amp T Archives A 20 year History of Antiballistic Missile Systems on YouTube Directory of U S Military Rockets and Missiles Terminal defense using the Sprint Sprint missile launch Sprint Gallery 1 srmsc org Nike Sprint dual launch during a salvo test at Kwajalein Atoll test range Video of Nike Sprint launch 2 MB mpg Encyclopedia Astronautica Sprint Chapter 9 Sprint Missile Subsystem from ABM Research and development at Bell Labs Nike Sprint and Spartan Photo Gallery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sprint missile amp oldid 1204734613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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