2.25-Inch Sub-Caliber Aircraft Rocket | |
Origin: | United States |
Type: | Training rocket |
Is Missile: | yes |
Used By: | United States Navy |
Filling: | Solid, made from steel, zinc die cast, or cast iron[1] |
Engine: | Mk 15 Mod 0 or Mk 15 Mod 2 solid-fuel rocket |
Speed: | 770mph |
Guidance: | None |
Propellant: | Mk 16 Mod 1 |
The 2.25-Inch Sub-Caliber Aircraft Rocket, or SCAR, was an American unguided rocket developed by the United States Navy during World War II and used for sub-caliber rocket training. Capable of simulating the aerial rockets then coming into operational service, the SCAR was used to train pilots in the use of the new type of weapon, and continued in service throughout the 1950s.
With the introduction of the 3.5-Inch and 5-Inch Forward Firing Aircraft Rockets, a need arose to train aircraft pilots in the proper tactics for the use of the new weapons. This requirement resulted in the development of a dedicated training rocket by the U.S. Navy.[2]
Designated 2.25-Inch Sub-Caliber Aircraft Rocket, the resulting rocket was a joint project between the Bureau of Ordnance and the National Defense Research Committee.[2] As its name implied, the rocket was designed as a sub-calibre weapon compared to the FFAR, being only in diameter, but weighted to be ballistically similar to the larger operational weapons.[2] Varying the amount of propellant in the SCAR's motor could produce accurate simulations of either type of FFAR's flight characteristics.[2]
Following development, SCAR entered full-scale production in January 1945; by July, fully half of the U.S. Navy's rocket production for aircraft use consisted of SCAR rockets.[3] SCAR was widely used during the latter part of World War II as a training round for the FFAR and, later, the High Velocity Aircraft Rocket.[2]
Following the end of the war, it remained in production, continuing in operational service throughout the 1950s.[4] Budget cutbacks prior to the outbreak of the Korean War meant that the SCAR was the only rocket used in training by the majority of pilots.[5]
Despite its small size, SCAR could be hazardous; in 1957, an injury aboard the aircraft carrier was caused by the unintended ignition of a SCAR rocket.[6] As recently as 2004, expended SCAR rockets were still occasionally being found in areas that had been used as bombing ranges during World War II.[7]