RIM-8 Talos explained

Is Missile:yes
RIM-8 Talos
Origin:United States
Type:Surface-to-air missile
Used By:United States Navy
Manufacturer:Bendix
Production Date:1955
Service:1958-1979
Engine:Stage 1: Hercules MK 11 solid-fueled rocket booster,
Stage 2: Bendix ramjet sustainer
Engine Power:20,053lbf, 89.20kN
Weight:7800lb (missile: 3400lb, booster: 4400lb)
Length:32feet
Diameter:28inches
Wingspan:280cm (110inches)
Speed:Mach 3
Vehicle Range:RIM-8J 241 km (130 nm); RIM-8A: 92 km (50 nm)
Ceiling:24400m (80,100feet)
Filling:211kg (465lb) continuous-rod HE warhead or W30 nuclear warhead (2–5 kt)
Guidance:Radar beam riding and (non-nuclear variants) semi-active radar homing
Launch Platform:Surface ship

Bendix RIM-8 Talos was a long-range naval surface-to-air missile (SAM), among the earliest SAMs to equip United States Navy ships. The Talos used radar beam riding for guidance to the vicinity of its target, and semi-active radar homing (SARH) for terminal guidance. The four antennas surrounding the nose were SARH receivers, which functioned as a continuous wave interferometer. A solid rocket booster provided thrust for launch and a Bendix ramjet powered its flight to the target, with the warhead serving as the ramjet's compressor.

History

Talos was the end product of Operation Bumblebee, the Navy's 16-year surface-to-air missile development program for protection against guided anti-ship missiles like Henschel Hs 293 glide bombs, Fritz X, and kamikaze aircraft.[1] The Talos was the primary effort behind the Bumblebee project but was not the first missile the program developed; the RIM-2 Terrier was the first to enter service. The Talos was originally designated SAM-N-6 and was redesignated RIM-8 in 1963. The airframe was manufactured by McDonnell Aircraft in St. Louis; final assembly was by Bendix Missile Systems in Mishawaka, Indiana. The first production versions of the missile cost about $155,000 in 1955 ($1,793,335 in 2022 dollars); however, the price would drop as Bendix increased production.[2]

The Talos saw relatively limited use due to its large size and dual radar antenna system; few ships could accommodate the large missiles with the AN/SPW-2 missile guidance radar and the AN/SPG-49 target illumination and tracking radar.[3] The 9.9-meter-long, 3½-ton missile was comparable in size to a small fighter aircraft.[4] The Talos Mark 7 Guided Missile Launching System (GMLS) was installed in three s (converted light cruisers) with 16 missiles in a ready-service magazine and up to 30 missiles and boosters in a storage area above the main deck. Nuclear-powered and three s (converted Baltimore-class heavy cruisers) carried Mark 12 Guided Missile Launching Systems fed from a 52-round magazine below the main deck.[5]

The initial SAM-N-6b/RIM-8A had an effective range of about 50 nmi and a conventional warhead. The SAM-N-6bW/RIM-8B was a RIM-8A with a nuclear warhead; terminal guidance was judged unnecessary for a nuclear warhead, so the SARH antenna was omitted. The SAM-N-6b1/RIM-8C was introduced in 1960 and had double the range and a more effective conventional continuous-rod warhead. The RIM-8D was the nuclear-warhead version of the -8C. The SAM-N-6c/RIM-8E "Unified Talos" had a warhead that could be swapped while embarked, eliminating the need to waste magazine capacity carrying dedicated nuclear-tipped variants. The RIM-8E also carried an improved continuous-wave terminal homing seeker and had a higher ceiling reach-out. Some RIM-8Cs were retrofitted with the new seeker and designated RIM-8F. The RIM-8G and RIM-8J had further radar homing improvements and a new fuel that extended the range to 130 nm.[6]

The surface-to-air versions also saw action in Vietnam, with a total of four MiGs being shot down by USS Chicago and Long Beach. On May 23, 1968, a Talos fired from Long Beach shot down a Vietnamese MiG at a range of about 65 miles. This was the first downing of a hostile aircraft by a missile fired from a ship. The hit also destroyed a second MiG which flew through the debris. In September 1968, Long Beach scored another MiG destroyed at a range of 61 miles. On May 9, 1972, Chicagos forward Talos battery scored a long-range kill on a MiG.[7] The Talos missile also had surface-to-surface capabilities.[8]

The RGM-8H Talos-ARM was a dedicated anti-radar homing missile for use against shore-based radar stations. Initial testing of the RGM-8H was performed in 1965, and soon after, it was deployed in Vietnam on Chicago, Oklahoma City, and Long Beach, attacking North Vietnamese SAM radars. Oklahoma City fired the first successful RGM-8H combat shot in US Navy history in early 1972. It was also the first combat surface-to-surface missile shot in US Navy history.[9]

Variants

SAM-N-6:Development and prototype missiles; pre-1962 US Navy designation of the Talos missile.
  • SAM-N-6a:Development and prototype missiles; pre-1962 US Navy designation of the Talos missile.
  • SAM-N-6b:Production missiles deployed with conventional explosive warheads; redesignated RIM-8A.
  • SAM-N-6bw:The -6b missile with a nuclear warhead, omitting terminal guidance and SARH antennas; redesignated RIM-8B.
  • SAM-N-6b1:An improved -6b with much greater range and continuous rod conventional warhead; redesignated RIM-8C.
  • SAM-N-6c:"Unified Talos" with interchangeable nuclear/conventional warheads eliminating the need for storage of both missile types, also fitted with improved terminal homing and higher operating ceiling; redesignated RIM-8E.
  • RIM-8F Talos:Some RIM-8C missiles retrofitted with the new seeker from the RIM-8E (post-1962 only).
  • RIM-8G Talos:Variant with further homing improvements.
  • RGM-8H Talos-ARM:A dedicated surface-to-surface anti-radar homing version for deployment on ships already fitted out for the Talos SAM.
  • RIM-8J Talos:Variant with further homing improvements.
  • MQM-8G Vandal:Talos missiles remaining after removal from active service were converted to super-sonic drone targets, with the inventory being exhausted circa 2008.
  • Chronology

    DateFleet inventoryShipEvent
    28 May 1958[10] 1 × Mk 7 GMLS
    2 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    3 June 1960[11] 2 × Mk 7 GMLS
    4 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    7 September 1960[12] 3 × Mk 7 GMLS
    6 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    9 September 1961[13] 3 × Mk 7 GMLS
    1 × Mk 12 GMLS
    8 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    3 November 1962[14] 3 × Mk 7 GMLS
    3 × Mk 12 GMLS
    12 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    1 December 1962[15] 3 × Mk 7 GMLS
    5 × Mk 12 GMLS
    16 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    2 May 1964[16] 3 × Mk 7 GMLS
    7 × Mk 12 GMLS
    20 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    25 May 1970[17] 2 × Mk 7 GMLS
    7 × Mk 12 GMLS
    18 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Galveston
    31 January 19752 × Mk 7 GMLS
    5 × Mk 12 GMLS
    14 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Columbus
    22 November 1976[18] 1 × Mk 7 GMLS
    5 × Mk 12 GMLS
    12 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Little Rock
    19781 × Mk 7 GMLS
    4 × Mk 12 GMLS
    10 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Long Beach
    1 November 19794 × Mk 12 GMLS
    8 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Oklahoma City
    15 December 19794 × Mk 12 GMLS
    8 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Oklahoma City
    1 March 19802 × Mk 12 GMLS
    4 × AN/SPG-49 RADAR
    Chicago
    29 August 1980Albany

    Fate

    Long Beach had her Talos launcher removed in 1978. Talos was phased out of fleet service with the decommissioning of in 1979, though the Albany-class ships carrying the system soldiered on a few more years with the launchers left in place until they were retired in 1980. After 21 years of fleet service, the missile was replaced by the RIM-67 Standard missile, which was fired from the smaller Mk10 launcher.

    Two Talos missiles are on display at the Military Honor Park located near the entrance of the South Bend International Airport in South Bend, Indiana.

    A Talos missile was displayed in the atrium of the South Bend Regional Airport (historically known as Bendix Field), but was removed in 2021 to be displayed in the Manufacturing Victory exhibit at The History Museum in South Bend. [19] After the exhibit closed, the missile did not return to the airport.

    Another example can be seen at the Patriots Point Naval & Maritime Museum, located at Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.

    A Talos Missile can also be seen on display at the Muskogee War Memorial Park located in Muskogee, Oklahoma.

    A Talos missile is on display at Naval Weapons Station Yorktown in Yorktown, Virginia.

    A Talos missile is on display at The US Navy's Guided Missile School at Dam Neck, in Virginia Beach, Virginia, just outside of the main building of the NAVGMSCOL.

    Two Talos missiles are on display, in launch position, on the stern of at the Buffalo and Erie County Naval & Military Park located in Buffalo, New York.

    A Talos missile and booster were on display at Rita Blanca Park (home of the XIT Rodeo & Reunion) in Dalhart, Texas, at least from 1981 or earlier, but as of 2017 had been removed.

    A Talos missile is on display in the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center at the Washington Dulles International Airport.

    A Talos missile is on outdoor display in front of the Missiles and More Museum on Topsail Island, NC. Notably, this location is also the birthplace of the RIM-8 Talos missile, having been a result of the research effort on ramjets and surface-to-air missiles which took place on Topsail Island from 1946 to 1948, as part of Operation Bumblebee.[20]

    See also

    References

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: A Brief History of White Sands Proving Ground 1941-1965. New Mexico State University. 2010-08-19. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20141028154222/http://nmsua.edu/tiopete/files/2008/12/wspgcoldbook.pdf. 2014-10-28.
    2. Web site: RIM-8 Talos . Global Security . Global Security . 1 November 2020.
    3. Polmar, Norman . The U.S.Navy: Shipboard Radars . United States Naval Institute Proceedings . December 1978.
    4. The contemporary Soviet MiG-15 jet fighter was 10.1 meters long and weighed 5 tons.
    5. Book: Naval Training Command. Gunners Mate M 1&C. 1972. US Government Printing Office. NAVTRA 10200-B.
    6. Garten Jr.. William. Dean. Frank A.. Evolution of the Talos Missile. Johns Hopkins APL Technical Digest. April–June 1982. 3. 2. 117–122. 0270-5214.
    7. Web site: USS LITTLE ROCK CLG 4 / CG 4 TALOS MISSILE & MISSILE SIGHTINGS.
    8. Web site: USS Oklahoma City - Talos Missile Firing Operations. 2014-05-23.
    9. Web site: Hays. Phillip R.. Details of the First Talos RGM-8H Anti Radiation Missile Combat Firing. USS Oklahoma City CL91 / CLG5 / CG5. 14 March 2017.
    10. Web site: Galveston II (CL-93) . Naval History and Heritage Command . 3 February 2022 .
    11. Web site: Little Rock I (CL-92) . Naval History and Heritage Command . 3 February 2022 .
    12. Web site: Oklahoma City I (CL-91) . Naval History and Heritage Command . 3 February 2022 .
    13. Web site: Long Beach III (CG (N)‑9) . Naval History and Heritage Command . 3 February 2022 .
    14. Web site: USS Albany (CG 10) . Doehring . Thoralf . Unofficial US Navy Site . 3 February 2022 .
    15. Web site: Welcome Aboard. USS Columbus Veterans Association. 2010-08-27. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20101102124521/http://www.usscolumbus.org/USS_Columbus/Welcome_Aboard.htm. 2010-11-02.
    16. Web site: USS CHICAGO (CA 136 / CG 11) . Yarnall . Paul L. . NavSource Online . 3 February 2022 .
    17. Web site: Chronology - U.S.S. Galveston CL-93 / CLG-3. USS Galveston Shipmates Association. 2010-08-27.
    18. Web site: A Brief History of the USS Little Rock. USS Little Rock Association. 2010-08-27. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20101223032403/http://usslittlerock.org/Ship%20History.html. 2010-12-23.
    19. Web site: South Bend airport's Talos missile taken to History Museum for manufacturing exhibit . South Bend Tribune . 15 February 2024.
    20. Missiles and More Museum. (2014, January 26). Operation Bumblebee. Missiles and More Museum. https://missilesandmoremuseum.org/exhibits/operation-bumblebee/