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MIM-3 Nike Ajax - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MIM-3 Nike Ajax


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The United States Army's Nike Ajax was the world's first operational surface to air missile (SAM),[1] entering service in 1954. Nike Ajax was designed to attack conventional bomber aircraft flying at high subsonic speeds and altitudes above 50,000 feet (15 km). Ajax was initially deployed in the US to provide defence against Soviet bomber attacks, and was later deployed overseas to protect US bases, as well as being sold to various allied forces. Some examples remained in use until the 1970s. Ajax was given the identifiers SAM-A-7 (Surface-to-air, Army, design 7),[2] and then MIM-3 (Mobile Interceptor Missile, design 3) in 1962.[3] Technological development during the 1950s quickly rendered the Ajax obsolete. It was unable to defend against more capable bombers or multiple targets in formation, and had relatively short range. Even while Ajax was being deployed, these concerns led to the contracts for the greatly improved MIM-14 Nike Hercules, which began deployment in 1959. As Hercules developed, the threat moved from bombers to ICBMs, and the LIM-49 Nike Zeus anti-ballistic missile project started to address these. All of the Nike projects were led by Bell Labs, due to their early work in radar guidance systems during World War II. Part of the Nike Ajax development program designed a new solid fuel rocket motor used for the missile's booster. This had originally been designed for the US Navy's missiles, and was enlarged for the Nike efforts. The rocket was so useful that it found numerous applications outside the military world as the Ajax missiles were decommissioned in the 1960s. Many sounding rockets used the booster as their first or second stage, and many of those used "Nike" in their name.

Nike Ajax

A Nike Ajax in firing position.

Type Place of origin In service Used by Manufacturer Unit cost Produced Weight

Surface-to-air missile United States

Service history
1954 US Army, allies

Production history
Bell Labs, Douglas Aircraft $19,300 (flyaway, 1958), $61,000 total 1952

Specifications

Contents
1 History 1.1 Background 1.2 Project Nike 1.3 Building the team 1.4 Testing 1.5 Accelerating development
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIM-3_Nike_Ajax

32,259 lb (14.6 t) total, 31,051 lb (14.1 t) sustainer, 1,208 lb (0.5 t) booster 32 ft 8 in (9.96 m) overall, 20 ft 11 in (6.38 m) sustainer, 13 ft 2 in (4.01 m) booster 14.6 in (0.37 m) sustainer, 16.2 in (0.41 m) booster
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Length

Diameter

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MIM-3 Nike Ajax - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1.6 Production 1.7 Deployment 1.8 After Ajax 1.9 Nike boosters 2 Description 3 Survivors 3.1 Bases 3.2 Missiles 4 See also 5 References 6 External links

Detonation mechanism Engine

radio command

Solid fuel booster, liquid fuel sustainer 48,00059,000 lbf (210260 kN) booster, 2,600 lbf (12 kN) sustainer

Wingspan Propellant Operational range Flight ceiling Speed

50 in (1.3 m) sustainer, 76 in (1.9 m) booster JP-4 and RFNA/UDMH (sustainer) 30 mi (48 km) 70,000 ft (21,000 m) Mach 2.25 (1,710 mph; 2,760 km/h) (@ 50k ft)

History
Background

Successful anti-aircraft gunnery requires as many rounds to Guidance be fired as possible, increasing the chances that one of the command guidance system rounds will get a "hit". Generally speaking, reaching higher fixed erector/launchers altitudes demands larger shells, which fire at lower repetition Launch rates for various reasons. Increasing the speed of the aircraft platform meant it flew out of range more rapidly. Even with early war propeller designs like the Boeing B-17, an average of 2,800 shells were required to down a single aircraft.[4] The combination of higher altitudes and speeds that the jet engine provided so limited the number of shells that could be fired that the chance of hitting the bomber essentially dropped to zero. As early as 1942, German flak commanders were keenly aware of the problem, and expecting to face jet bombers, they began a missile development program to supplant their guns.[5] The western allies maintained air superiority for much of the war and anti-aircraft was not as fully developed. Nevertheless, by the mid-war period the US Army had reached the same conclusion; flak was simply no longer useful.[6] Accordingly, in February 1944 the Army Ground Forces sent the Army Service Forces (ASF) a request for information on the possibility of building a "major caliber anti-aircraft rocket torpedo". The ASF concluded that it was simply too early to tell if this was possible, and suggested concentrating on a program of general rocket development instead. However, the introduction of German jet-powered bombers late in 1944 led to a reevaluation, and on 26 January 1945 the Army Chief of Ordnance issued a requirement for a new guided missile weapon system. The request was passed to Bell Labs, then a world leader in radar, radio control and automated aiming systems (see Hendrik Wade Bode).[1]

Project Nike
Main article: Project Nike Bell accepted the challenge, and Project Nike was officially formed on 8 February 1945.[6] The Bell team was given the task of attacking bombers flying at 500 mph (800 km/h) or more,[N 1] at altitudes between 20,000 and 60,000 feet (6,100 and 18,000 m), and performing a 3G turn at 40,000 feet (12,000 m). Bell reported back on 14
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May 1945 (and a formal report the next day) that such a development was indeed possible.[1] They concluded that:[6] "A supersonic rocket missile should be vertically launched under the thrust of a solid-fuel booster which was then to be dropped; thence, self-propelled by a liquid-fuel motor, the missile should be guided to a predicted intercept point in space and detonated by remote control commands; these commands should be transmitted by radio signals determined by a ground-based computer associated with radar which would track both the target and the missile in flight." This was not the only Army missile project at the time, the US Army Air Force was involved in studies of the "Ground-to-Air Pilotless Aircraft" (GAPA), a much longer-range system based on what was essentially a drone aircraft. Bell initially passed on the GAPA project, as they wanted to concentrate on Nike.[6] GAPA was opened to tender, and was picked up by other companies. As part of the Key West Agreement, GAPA was handed to the newly formed US Air Force in 1948.[7]

Building the team


As the ranges and speeds being considered, even a supersonic rocket will take enough time to reach the target that the missile needs to "lead" the bomber in order to properly intercept it. Given the lead angles required, beam riding with a single radar was not a suitable solution. Bell proposed a system using two radars, one tracking the target, and another tracking the missile. An analog computer would calculate the impact point and send guidance signals to the missile encoded in the radar signals,[1] and detonate the warhead on command (as opposed to a proximity fuse).[8] The Ballistics Research Laboratory was asked to calculate the proper warhead shaping to maximize the chance of a hit. Once determined, Picatinny Arsenal would produce the warhead, and Frankford Arsenal would provide a fuse. Douglas Aircraft would provide the missile airframe and carry out aerodynamic studies, while Aerojet would supply a solid fuel rocket booster for initial launch, and Bell Aircraft would provide a liquid fuel rocket for the upper stage sustainer.[1] The initial design used a thin upper stage with eight JATO-derived boosters that were wrapped around its tail. The resulting cluster looked quite boxy at launch time. It was expected that the 93,000 lbf of booster power would accelerate the missile to supersonic speeds of 1,750 fps (feet per second, ~1200 mph) at the end of a booster phase of 1.8 seconds, increasing almost continually to about 2,500 fps (~1700 mph) at the end of the liquid engine's firing, then decreasing to 1,150 fps (~780 mph) at 96,000 feet during the zooming period.[8] Early in the program it was realized that existing radar systems based on the conical scanning method did not supply the performance needed for a high-speed missile. In particular, conical scanning radars required some time to settle on an accurate track. The decision was made to use a monopulse radar system for Nike. Two systems were considered, one using phased signals, and another using signal timing known as the "amplitude null system,", with the later being selected. This study resulted in the development of tunable magnetrons for the 250 kilowatt X-band radars for tracking, and 1000 kilowatt S-band radar for target detection. Experiments demonstrated that the radar return from the missile at high altitudes was limited, and when calls for an extended altitude of 150,000 feet were added to the requirements, a transponder was added to the missile to boost the return.[8] These changes, and many more, were summarized in a 28 January 1946 report. The project called for four rounds of test launches starting in 1946, with the aim of having a production design by 1949.[1]
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Testing
The first test firing of a static round was carried out at the White Sands Proving Ground on 17 September 1946, and then returned to Douglas in California for study. The next week an unguided example was launched, and similar tests followed until 28 January 1947, when the first test series ended. During one test a missile reached an altitude of 140,000 feet. A second test series followed in September and October 1947, including several improvements in the design in order to address problems with the booster. A further series in 1948, originally planned for 1946, continued to demonstrate problems.[1] Eventually the team was forced to give up on the clustered booster The early model Nike had eight JATO concept. Invariably small differences in thrust between the different bottles in a cluster, demanding large JATO bottles would lead to significant asymmetries, ones that fins for stability. overwhelmed the fins in spite of them being very large. Instead, the project selected a larger booster being developed by the US Navy's Operation Bumblebee, creating a new versions known as the Allegheny JATO T39 2.6DS-51,000.[8] A new series of test firings started in September 1948, but were stopped until May 1949 after a number of modifications were carried out. Funding problems then delayed the program until January 1950. From late January through April another 16 missiles were fired, with much better results.[1]

Accelerating development
Through early development, the Nike project had not been considered very important. A series of events in the late 1940s led to a re-appraisal of the situation, including the Soviet atomic test in 1949, the communist victories in China, and the Berlin Blockade. The June 1950 opening of the Korea War brought all of this to a head and new urgency was given to US defence. In October 1950, US Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson appointed Kaufman Keller to newly created position of Director of Guided Weapons to speed their development.[9] Keller examined the various ongoing projects and decided that the Nike was the best developed. He recommended that development of Nike be accelerated, and that an initial production run of 60 launch stations and 1,000 missiles should be completed by 31 December 1952, with continued production of 1,000 a month after that date. In January 1951, Wilson approved the plan, in spite of additional testing being required.[9] A new test series of the proposed production model was carried out starting in October, and on 27 November 1951, Nike successfully intercepted a QB-17 target drone. Twenty-two further tests followed that year. In the new year a new test series started, including a live-fire attack on a QB-17 in April 1952 that was viewed by visiting brass.[9]

Test launch of the production model Nike Ajax missile with the new booster.

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It was also in April that concerns grew over the systems ability to pick out targets in a packed formation. The Nike radar would see several nearby targets as a single larger one, unable to resolve the individual aircraft. The warhead's lethal range was smaller than the resolution, so it might not approach any of the aircraft closely enough to damage it. This led to suggestions about equipping the Nike with a nuclear warhead, which would be able to attack the entire formation with a single round. Bell was asked to study this in May, and they considered two options; one used the WX-9 warhead on the existing missile, which they called "Nike Ajax", while an enlarged missile with the XW-7 warhead was known as "Nike Hercules". The Army selected the Hercules option, ordering it into development in December 1952.[10] At the time, the missiles were known as Nike I and Nike B.[2]

Production
Production was launched in August 1952. By the end of the year, three complete ground systems and 1,000 missiles had been delivered to White Sands. The complete system was set up by January 1953, and an underground launch site first fired on 5 June 1953. Crew training was carried out at Fort Bliss with the missiles fired toward White Sands. In 1957, the National Guard started taking over the anti-aircraft role, replacing regular army units at Bliss.[1] Service deliveries began that year, and eventually a total of 350 launch systems and 13,714 missiles were produced over the production run.[1]

Deployment
Deployment of the Nike I was under the direction of the Army Antiaircraft Command, ARAACOM. ARAACOM initially proposed a series of widespread bases surrounding cities and major military sites. However, while planning the deployment around Chicago, it became clear that Lake Michigan would force sites protecting approach from the east to be located in the city itself. Moreover, various scenarios demonstrated that having a staggered two-layer layout of the sites would offer much greater protection, which argued for some bases to be located closer to the urban centers.[1]

The Nike Ajax assembly line.

For range safety reasons, launch sites had to have considerable empty This Nike Ajax site is on full alert, land around them in the event of an accidental warhead explosion. with missiles ready for launch on all Originally this would require about 119 acres of land per site. This sixteen launch sites. This image presented a serious problem for the planners, and especially the Corps of appears to be taken from the control Engineers Real Estate Offices. As early as 1952 they had asked for a area (IFC) which was separated from solution, which led to design architect Leon Chatelain, Jr. developing an the launch area to allow its radars to underground configuration. As the missile batteries were now protected see the missiles as they launched. and accidental explosions would be contained, the safe area was dramatically reduced, and that cut the land requirement down to 40 acres.[11] This was the system tested at White Sands in 1953, and on 28 October 1953 ARAACOM directed that most deployments would use this option. The system used a basic building block with four aboveground launching stations over an underground battery with additional missiles. Missiles were raised to the surface on an elevator and then pushed, by hand, along rails to their launchers.[12]
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The first site to build their Nike I system was Fort Meade, who started receiving their missiles in December 1953, replacing their 120 mm M1 guns.[13] This site reached initial operational status in March 1954, and went on full round-the-clock combat status on 30 May. The Army considers 30 May to be the "birth date" of the Nike system. On 15 November 1956 the missile was officially renamed as the Nike Ajax, as part of DA Circular 700-22.[1] Over the next four years, 265 batteries were constructed around the majority of major northern and coastal cities.[14] They replaced 896 radar-guided anti-aircraft guns, leaving only a handful of 75 mm Skysweeper emplacements as the only anti-aircraft artillery remaining in use by the US. All of the Skysweepers were removed from service by 1959. A Nike Ajax missile exploded accidentally at a battery in Leonardo, New Jersey on 22 May 1958, killing 6 soldiers and 4 civilians. A memorial can be found at Fort Hancock in the Sandy Hook Unit of the Gateway National Recreation Area.[15][16]

Nike bases were arranged around major cities and military sites.

After Ajax
The nuclear-armed Nike B, Hercules after 1956, was originally going to be a slightly larger Nike I, large enough to carry the new warhead. But during early development the decision was made to move to a solid fuel upper stage. This required a larger fuselage, and was heavier as well. In order to get the new missile into the air, the booster engine was replaced with a new design with four of the original boosters strapped together. The new missile offered interception altitudes well above 100,000 feet and ranges on the order of 75 miles. The LOPAR was supplanted with the higher power HIPAR, and more powerful tracking radars were also needed. But with those exceptions, Hercules was operationally similar to Ajax, and designed to operate at existing Ajax sites, using their launchers and underground facilities.[1] Conversion from Ajax to Hercules began in June 1958. Initially the Hercules was deployed at new bases, providing coverage over existing Ajax areas. But plans had been made to convert existing Ajax sites to The Nike missile family, with the Hercules where possible, or close the Ajax base where it was not. As the Zeus B in front of the Hercules and Hercules had over double the range of the Ajax, fewer sites were needed Ajax. to provide the same coverage. A total of 134 Hercules bases were commissioned, down from Ajax's 240. The last US Ajax site, outside Norfolk, Virginia, closed in November 1963.[1] Ajax remained in active service in overseas locations for some time. The Japan Self-Defense Forces operated theirs until they were replaced by the Hercules-based Nike J in the 1970s. As the original Bell Nike team worked on Hercules, the nature of the strategic threat was changing. By the late 1950s the concern was the ICBM and little interest in the threat of bombers remained,and was concluded that the bomber threat could be countered by deployment of U.S. and Canadian jet intercepters equiped with AIR-2 Genie atomic warhead air to air missiles. Even before Hercules deployed, Bell was once again asked to consider the new threat. They concluded that the Nike B (Hercules) could be adapted into an anti-ballistic missile with relatively few changes to the missile. The role would require considerably greater upgrades to the radars and computers instead.
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These efforts gave rise to the Nike II project in 1958,[17] soon known as LIM-49 Nike Zeus. Unlike the earlier Nike efforts, the Zeus would never reach operational status. Like the Ajax and Hercules, Zeus could only attack a single target at a time, which was fine when the threat was a few dozen missiles. As it became clear that the Soviets were placing almost all of their effort into ICBMs, Zeus looked increasingly unable to deal with the hundreds of targets that would result. Serious technical problems also arose, including electromagnetic pulse and similar effects that blocked radar, questions about the missile's ability to damage enemy warheads, and above all, rapidly rising costs. Development was cancelled in January 1963.[18]

Nike site D-57/58 was used both both Ajax and Hercules until 1974, and is now in an advanced state of decay.

Nike boosters
As Ajax missiles were removed from service, thousands of unused booster rockets were left over from the program, and more when the Hercules was removed from service years later. These proved perfect for all sorts of roles, notably as the boosters for various sounding rockets. These designs often, but not always, included "Nike" in their name. Examples include the Nike-Cajun, Nike-Apache, Nike-Smoke and many others. The original booster design from the Navy is also widely used in this role, under the Terrier or Taurus name.

Description
A complete Nike Ajax system consisted of several radars, computers, missiles and their launchers. Sites were generally arranged in three major sections, the administration area, area A, the magazine and launcher area with the missiles, L, and the Integrated Fire Control area with the radar and operations center, or IFC. Most sites placed the A and IFC on one parcel of land with the L on another, but some sites used three entirely separate areas. The IFC was located between 1,000 yards and a mile from the launchers, but had to be within the line-of-site so the radars could see the missiles as they launched.[12]
The TTR and MTR radars used a The launch area normally consisted of two or three underground facilities fresnel lens made of thin metal plates and their aboveground launchers. Sites with four to six launchers were arranged in a frame. The feed horn is not unknown. A single launcher site normally held twelve missiles, eight in at the bottom of the A-shaped the service area and four in the underground ready area or on their supports. launchers. When an alert was received, the missiles were transferred to the surface one at a time using an elevator, then pushed along rails on the surface leading to the launchers. The launchers bisected the rails, so the missiles were simply pushed over the launchers, connected to the electrical hookups, and then raised to about 85 degrees by the launchers. The missile launch area also contained a separate fueling area surrounded by a large berm, a required safety precaution given the hypergolic fuels, and a variety of service areas.[12]

Long distance surveillance was handled by the ACQ or LOPAR radar, short for "Low-Power Acquisition Radar." LOPAR included an IFF system and a system for handing off targets to the tracking radars. Two monopulse tracking radars were used, the Target Tracking Radar (TTR) to track the target handed off by the LOPAR, and the
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Missile Tracking Radar (MTR) to track the missile as it flew toward the target.[19] Launch of the missile was accomplished by lighting the solid fuel booster, which provided 59,000 lbf of thrust for three seconds. The booster pushed the missile through the sound barrier, and it remained supersonic for the rest of its flight. The MTR picked up the missile as the booster fell away, and then tracked it continually after that point. Data from the TTR and MTR were sent to the analog tracking computer, which continually calculated the impact point and sent radio commands to the missile to guide it. In order to maximize range, the missile was normally flown almost vertically to a higher altitude than the target, where the thinner air lowered drag and allowed the missile to descend on its target. At the correct time, the missile's three warheads were triggered by a signal from the computer.[19] The warheads were surrounded by metal cubes providing a blast-fragmentation effect. The Nike Ajax system could attack only one target at a time,[20] a problem it shared with its descendants. As the various Ajax missile sites were overlapped, this led to the possibility that two sites might attack one target while another flew past both. ARADCOM initially set up a coordination system not unlike the Royal Air Force's plotting room from the Battle of Britain, with commands from a central manual plotting room being sent to batteries over telephone lines. This was clearly inadequate, and in the late 1950s the Interim Battery Data Link was introduced to share data between batteries. This allowed command to be devolved to the battery commanders, who could see which targets other batteries were attacking.[1] This system was further improved with the introduction of the Missile Master system, which replaced manual plotting with a computer-run system, and then the simpler and smaller Missile Mentor and BIRDIE systems.[21][22]

The ACQ radar was the primary search radar for the Ajax, and was also used for short-range duties with the Hercules as LOPAR.

The Nike batteries were organized in Defense Areas and placed around population centers and strategic locations such as long-range bomber and important military/naval bases, nuclear prodution facilities and (later) ICBM sites. The Nike sites in a Defense Area formed a circle around these cities and bases. There was no fixed number of Nike batteries in a Defense Area and the actual number of batteries varied from a low of 2 in the Barksdale AFB Defense Area to a high of 22 in the Chicago Defense Area. In the US the sites were numbered from 01 to 99 starting at the north and increasing clockwise. The numbers had no relation to actual compass headings, but generally Nike sites numbered 01 to 25 were to the northeast and east, those numbered 26 to 50 were to the southeast and south, those numbered 51 to 75 were to the southwest and west, and those numbered 76 to 99 were to the northwest and north. The Defense Areas were identified by a oneor two-letter code which were related to the city name. Thus those Nike sites starting with C were in the Chicago Defense Area, those starting with HM were in the Homestead AFB/Miami Defense Area, those starting with NY were in the New York Defense Area, and so forth. As an example Nike Site SF-88L refers to the launcher area (L) of the battery located in the northwestern part (88) of the San Francisco Defense Area (SF).[14]

This Nike Ajax site has only two launch areas, the oval shaped areas in the middle of the image. The rectangular openings are elevators that raise the missiles from their underground storage areas, and the four launchers are the small squares on either side. To the left of the launchers is the refueling area, surrounded by a high berm in case one of the missiles exploded.

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Studies throughout the Nike project considered mobile launchers, but none were developed for the Ajax system. Missile sites were "relocatable" or "transportable", and all of the support equipment was built into trailers or otherwise provided road wheels.[23]

Survivors
Bases
The best preserved Nike installation is site SF88L located in the Marin Headlands just west of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California. The site is a museum, and contains the missile bunkers, and control area, as well as period uniforms and vehicles that would have operated at the site. The site has been preserved in the condition it was in at the time it was decommissioned in 1974. The site began as a Nike Ajax base and was later converted to Nike Hercules. The second best preserved Nike installation is site NY-56 at Fort Hancock in Sandy Hook, New Jersey. The site has been restored and contains the original missile bunkers, as well as three Nike Ajax and a Nike Hercules on display. The site is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Missiles
A Nike Ajax, Nike Hercules, and Nike Zeus are on display at the Redstone Arsenal in Alabama A Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules are on display at the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels, Belgium A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Peterson Air and Space Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado Two Nike Ajax and a Hercules are on display at the Cape Canaveral Space & Missile Museum in Cape Canaveral, Florida A Nike Ajax is on display at the War Museum in Athens, Greece A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display in front of the VFW post in Cedar Lake, Indiana A Nike Ajax is on display in Marion, Kentucky A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Aberdeen, Maryland A Nike Ajax is on display in front of the VFW post in Hancock, Maryland Two Nike Ajax and a Hercules are on display at a small Cold War museum in Ft. Meade, Maryland A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Dutch Air Force Museum in Soesterberg, Netherlands A Nike Ajax is on display at The Space Center in Alamagordo, New Mexico A Nike Ajax is on display near the administrative buildings at the former Nike site in Rustan, about 40 km to the southwest of Oslo, Norway Two Nike Ajax and a Nike Hercules are on display near the Bataan Building at Camp Perry, near Port Clinton, Ohio. A Nike Ajax is on display near the Toledo Rockets Glass Bowl Stadium on the campus of the University of Toledo in Toledo, Ohio. A Nike Ajax is displayed in front of an Army Surplus store located near the Letterkenny Army Depot in Pennsylvania. A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Pennsylvania National Guard Department of Military Arts building at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania. A Nike Ajax and Hercules are on display at the Air Power Park in Hampton, Virginia.
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A Nike Ajax missile cutaway, as well as a complete Nike Ajax missile are on display at the Udvar-Hazy Center of the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum at Washington Dulles International Airport, in Washington D.C. A Nike Ajax and Nike Hercules are on display in the Berryman War Memorial Park in Bridgeport, Washington. A Nike Ajax is on display at the Ft. Lewis Military Museum in Tacoma, Washington. A Nike Ajax on its launcher is on display outside an American Legion hall in Okauchee Lake, Wisconsin A Nike Ajax on its transporter (trailer) is on display outside a public storage (former site MS-20) facility in Roberts, Wisconsin A Nike Ajax is on display in front of the American Legion Post in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania A Nike Ajax is on display in front of the Combat Air Museum in Topeka, Kansas.

See also
MIM-14 Nike Hercules and LIM-49 Nike Zeus, Ajax's children S-25 Berkut and S-75 Dvina, Soviet counterparts to the Ajax English Electric Thunderbird and Bristol Bloodhound, UK counterparts

References
Notes
1. ^ Cagle says 600 mph, but many other sources put it at 500 or more.

Citations
1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o FAS 1999. 2. ^ a b Cagle 1959, VI. 3. ^ Western Electric SAM-A-7/M1/MIM-3 Nike Ajax (http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/m-3.html) 4. ^ Westerman 2001, p. 197. 5. ^ Westerman 2001, p. 11. 6. ^ a b c d Cagle 1959, I. 7. ^ "GAPA (Ground-to-Air Pilotless Aircraft)" (http://www.boeing.com/boeing/history/boeing/gapa.page), Boeing 8. ^ a b c d Cagle 1959, III. 9. ^ a b c Lonnquest & Winkler 1996, p. 56. 10. ^ Lonnquest & Winkler 1996, p. 57. 11. ^ Cagle 1959, VII. 12. ^ a b c Morgan & Berhow 2002, p. 9. 13. ^ Merle Cole, "Nike Missiles: Army Air Defense Installations In Anne Arundel County: 1950-1973" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIM-3_Nike_Ajax

A Nike Ajax missile at the Belgian Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels.

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14. 15. 16.

17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22.

23.

Arundel County: 1950-1973" (http://www.ftmeade.army.mil/museum/Museum_AAA_Missiles.html), Fort George G. Meade Museum ^ a b Lonnquest & Winkler 1996, pp. 570-572. ^ "Nike Battery NY-53 Middletown, NJ" (http://alpha.fdu.edu/~bender/NY53.html) ^ "Nike Ajax Explosion - Sandy Hook, NJ" (http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMB1F2_Nike_Ajax_Explo sion__Sandy_Hook_NJ) ^ Barry Leonard, "History of Strategic and Ballistic Missile Defense: Volume II: 1956-1972", DIANE Publishing, 2011, p. 180. ^ Donald Baucom, "The Origins of SDI, 1944-1983", University Press of Kansas, 1992, p. 19. ^ a b Morgan & Berhow 2002, p. 10. ^ Morgan & Berhow 2002, p. 17. ^ Morgan & Berhow 2002, p. 15. ^ Considerable detail on the battlefield control systems are available in "Air Defense Artillery Control Systems" (http://edthelen.org/digest2.html#chapter2), US Army Air Defense Digest, 1966, pp. 34-41. ^ Ed Thelen, "Nike was 'mobile'?" (http://edthelen.org/overvu.html#Mobile), Ed Thelen's Nike Missile Web Site.

Nike site SF-88L missile status board.

Bibliography
Cagle, Mary (30 June 1959). Nike Ajax Historical Monograph (http://ed-thelen.org/mono-1-2.html#table). U.S. Army Ordnance Missile Command. Federation of American Scientists (29 June 1999). "Nike Ajax (SAM-A-7) (MIM-3, 3A)" (http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/airdef/nike-ajax.htm). Lonnquest, John; Winkler, David (November 1996). "To Defend and Deter: The Legacy of the United States Cold War Missile Program" (http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc? Location=U2&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf&AD=ADA337549). USACERL Special Report 97/01. Morgan, Mark; Berhow, Mark (1 June 2002). Rings of Supersonic Steel: Air Defenses of the Uniter States Army 1950-1979 (http://books.google.ca/books?id=vagljMKPYrkC). Hole In The Head Press. ISBN 9780615120126. Westerman, Edward (2001). Flak: German Anti-Aircraft Defenses, 1914-1945 (http://www.nazi.org.uk/military%20pdfs5/Flak%20German%20AntiAircraft%20Defenses%20-%2019141945%20.pdf). University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0700614206.

Further reading "Nike: the U.S. Army's Guided Missile System" (http://nikemissile.org/AJAX/PDFAJAX.pdf), Western Electric The Continental Air Defense Collection (http://www.history.army.mil/reference/Finding%20Aids/contair.htm) at the United States Army Center of Military History

External links
Nike Historical Society (http://www.nikemissile.org/) Nike Hercules in Alaska (http://nikealaska.org/) Nike Ajax Explosion Marker: Gateway National Recreation Area (http://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?
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MIM-3 Nike Ajax - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

marker=22642) The short film Big Picture: Pictorial Report Number 20 (http://www.archive.org/details/gov.archives.arc.2569600) is available for free download at the Internet Archive [more] Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MIM-3_Nike_Ajax&oldid=577788643" Categories: Project Nike Nuclear anti-aircraft weapons Nuclear missiles of the Cold War This page was last modified on 19 October 2013 at 01:31. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIM-3_Nike_Ajax

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