Sidewinder
The missile that has rattled enemy pilots since 1958.
- By Preston Lerner
- Air & Space magazine, November 2010
During Desert Storm, most fighters packed Sidewinders: F-16s armed with the missiles await the next mission.
USAF/TSGT Fernando Serna
May 1956. Holloman Air Force Base, Alamogordo, New Mexico. The preflight briefing took place in the office of the base’s commanding general, but the center of attention was a cocky young Navy pilot named Glenn Tierney. He was dead certain that he was about to win a shoot-off between two weapons competing to become the United States’ first self-guided air-to-air missile. The Air Force was betting on the radar-guided Falcon, built by a vast engineering group at Hughes Aircraft. Representing the Navy, Tierney was betting on the heat-seeking Sidewinder, developed by a small cadre at the Naval Ordnance Test Station in China Lake, California.
Tierney, the commander of Guided Missile Unit 61, had already demonstrated the lethality of the Sidewinder, blowing up a surface-to-surface Matador missile a few hours earlier. Now, he told his skeptical audience, he planned to fly as a wingman while an Air Force pilot who had never before fired a Sidewinder destroyed a second Matador. When the general scoffed, Tierney told him, “I’ll cover all the bets in the room up to $100.”
After $85 was collected, Tierney and an Air Force lieutenant took off in a pair of F-100 Super Sabres. At 30,000 feet and Mach 0.8, they lined up two miles behind a Matador already in the air. “You got signal?” he radioed to the other pilot.
“I got good signal,” said the pilot, referring to the distinctive growl in his headset, which meant that the heat-seeker in the nose of his Sidewinder had locked onto the infrared radiation of the Matador’s exhaust.
“Well, let her go,” said Tierney.
“It was a turkey shoot—nothing to it,” Tierney recalls with a chuckle. “The Sidewinder blew that son of a bitch right out of the sky.” Tierney flew back to China Lake with $85 of Air Force money in his wallet.
Despite the Sidewinder’s success at Holloman, the Air Force chose to put its own missile, the Falcon, into service in 1956. The missile was so finicky that in Vietnam, it became synonymous with failure. The Sidewinder, on the other hand, which entered service in the Navy a few months after the Falcon, scored the world’s first guided-missile kill: a Chinese MiG-17 that a Taiwanese F-86 shot down in 1958. Since then, the Sidewinder, later designated the AIM-9 (for Air Intercept Missile), has claimed dozens of victims in Vietnam, several Arab-Israeli conflicts, the Falkland Islands War, and Operation Desert Storm.
The missile has been built by the hundred thousands not only in the United States but also under license in several NATO countries. Working with stolen plans, the Soviets copied it so faithfully that the Vympel K-13 shared the Sidewinder’s parts numbers. The Soviet missile was exported en masse to Warsaw Pact countries and later copied by the Chinese. But new-and-improved ’Winders continue to be assembled by Raytheon in Tucson, Arizona, and the missile has progressed through the alphabet from the AIM-9A to today’s AIM-9X.





Comments (10)
The story behind the development of the sidewinder is more interesting than the missile. If I have my facts correct, the early development occurred without authorized funding of any kind, and it was only much later in the development cycle that the project was legitimized.
Posted by robert jansen on September 15,2010 | 02:54 PM
Can somebody explain how the "expanding rod warhead" worked on the sidewinder ? I've never really figured that one out......
Posted by Jim Page on September 21,2010 | 11:37 AM
Expanding rod warheads - used on a variety of missles including the Talos (don't know if any current missles use them) - are pretty neat. A circle of heavy wire is spooled around the explosive charge. The charge is fired by a proximity fuse when the missle is in the right location relative to the target aircraft. When detonated the wire expands at very high speed in an enlarging ring. When the wire impacts on the plane the wire slices through a large length of the aircraft's skin, weakening the integrated structure so the aircraft fails structurally and goes down.
GP
Posted by Gregory Paul on September 25,2010 | 02:29 PM
I believe Jansen is right. An engineer at China Lake figured out that a plain old 5" HVAR could be configured with a heat seeker and fins to guide it. He put them together and they worked! Great weapon. To my knowledge there were no expanding rod warheads. They did not need them since they flew right up the tailpipe of the target aircraft and exploded.
From the PI, we flew P5Ms on the Formosa Patrol in '54 and '55. We were there to ensure that the Chinats and Chicoms did not go at it. One night at 6000 ft with darkened ship, a large flight of F86s crossed dead ahead of us going west to China. We assumed they were headed for White Cloud, a new Chicom airfield near Canton. Next day we heard on the QT that those Chinats were armed with new sidewinders and blew some 20 MIGs out of the air. The Chicoms were screaming bloody murder and violations of international law.
Note: Paul's description is correct. I saw movies of expanding rod warheads used on old target drone B17s. They were nasty and cut the tail off the aircraft.
Posted by L.K.Weber, CDR USN (Ret) on October 3,2010 | 02:35 PM
In the 1980's my company sent me to a conference on aerospace instrumentation. At one of the mixers I found myself talking to an engineer from one of the Navy test ranges. He explained that Sidewinders, even with the warhead removed, had a proclivity for hitting the drone and knocking it out of the sky. Because drones are expensive, they deliberately programmed an offset into the Sidewinder’s guidance system to ensure it would miss the drone. He then commented that the Falcon missile never needed an offset programmed in, as it always missed the drone. Around the target range the Falcon was known as the "friendly missile".
Posted by Jeff Tonn on October 19,2010 | 11:16 PM
" ... ( the missile ) shared several qualities with another heat-seeking predator native to the Mojave Desert: the sidewinder rattlesnake ... ( so ) the name Sidewinder was adopted. "
Really ? I always thought it was the serpentine motion after launch in the early days that gave the Sidewinder its name.
Posted by Chris Black on October 24,2010 | 11:48 PM
Anybody out there involved with Vulcan/Chapparal in the late 60's.
Chapparal used the Sidewinder for outgoing, Vulcan (20mm cannon) for incoming aircraft.
Chapparal on a tracked modified cargo carrier, Vulcan on a modified armored personnel carrier.
As senior gunner I fired three Sidewinders. the Vulcan/ Chapparal was not used in combat that I know of.
Posted by Bruce R. Colbert on October 29,2010 | 10:27 AM
I remember Wally Schirra describing some of the early aerodynamics tests on the original AIM-9. Dr McLean mounted a gadget on the passenger's side of an automobile to suspend a scaled-down model with a couple of guys in lab coats taking measurements as the vehicle raced up and down the flats. As Wally liked to say, "It was crude but it worked better than most computers."
Posted by Barrett Tillman on November 6,2010 | 06:53 PM
The expanding-rod warhead consists of adjacent steel rods running the length of the warhead all the way around the circumference. The rods are welded to each other at alternate ends, forming a continuous ring of steel that, on detonation, opens in an accordion fashion. See Wikipedia's entry for "continuous-rod warhead."
Posted by Cliff Lawson on December 2,2010 | 12:54 PM
Folks,
In addition to the correct description of a continuous rod warhead, they are not as effective against smaller targets and if the missile comes in from the side and explodes there is a good chance the expanding ring will miss. But against large aircraft targets, they are hell to play.
Jack E. Hammond
.
Posted by Jack E. Hammond on December 6,2010 | 02:29 AM