Everything about Air-2 totally explained
The
Douglas Genie (
MB-1 Ding-Dong,
AIR-2) was an unguided
air-to-air rocket with a 1.5kt
W25 nuclear warhead. It was deployed by the
United States Air Force (from the late 1950s) and the
Royal Canadian Air Force (from 1 February 1968 to the 1980s) during the
Cold War. Production ended in 1962 after over 1000 were produced, with some related training and test derivatives occurring later.
Development
The interception of
Soviet bombers was a major military preoccupation of the late
1940s and
1950s. The revelation in
1947 that the
Soviet Union had produced a
reverse-engineered copy of the Boeing
B-29 Superfortress, the
Tupolev Tu-4 (
NATO reporting name 'Bull'), which could reach the continental
United States in a one-way attack, followed by the Soviets developing the
atomic bomb in
1949, produced considerable anxiety.
Against high-speed bombers, the
World War II-vintage
fighter armament of
machine guns and
cannon was inadequate. The use of large volleys of unguided
rockets wasn't much more satisfactory, and true
air-to-air missiles were in their infancy. In
1954 Douglas Aircraft began a program to investigate the possibility of a nuclear-armed air-to-air weapon. To ensure simplicity and reliability, the weapon would be unguided, the large blast radius making relative inaccuracy mostly irrelevant.
The resultant weapon carried a 1.5-
kiloton W25 nuclear warhead and was powered by a
Thiokol SR49-TC-1 solid-fuel
rocket engine of 162 kN (36,500 lbf) thrust. It had a range of slightly under 10 km (6.2 mi). Targeting, arming, and firing of the weapon were coordinated by the launch aircraft's fire-control system. Detonation was by time-delay fuse, although the fuse wouldn't arm the warhead until engine burn-out, to give the launch aircraft time to turn and escape. Lethal radius of the blast was estimated to be about 300 meters (1,000 ft).
The first test firings (of inert rounds) took place in
1956, and the weapon entered service with the designation
MB-1 in
1957. The popular name was
Genie, but it was often nick-named 'Ding-Dong.' About 3,150 rounds were produced before production ended in
1963. In
1962 the weapon was redesignated
AIR-2A Genie. Many rounds were upgraded with improved, longer-duration rocket motors, the upgraded weapons sometimes known (apparently only semi-officially) as
AIR-2B. An inert training round, originally
MB-1-T and later
ATR-2A, was also produced in small numbers.
A live Genie was detonated only once, in
Operation Plumbbob on
19 July 1957. It was fired by a Montana Air National Guard
F-89J over
Yucca Flats Nuclear Test Site at an altitude of 4,500 m (15,000 ft). A group of
USAF officers volunteered to stand underneath the blast to prove that the weapon was safe for use over populated areas. Whether this affected the health of the officers is unknown.
The Genie was cleared for being carried on the
F-89 Scorpion,
F-101B Voodoo,
F-106 Delta Dart, and
F-104 Starfighter in U.S. service. However, the Starfighter never carried it in operational service.
Convair offered an upgrade of the
F-102 Delta Dagger that would have been Genie-capable, but it wasn't adopted. Operational use of the Genie was discontinued in 1988 with the retirement of the F-106 interceptor.
The only non-U.S. user was
Canada, whose
CF-101 Voodoos carried Genies until 1984 via a dual-key arrangement where the missiles were kept under American custody, and released to Canada under circumstances requiring their use. The
RAF briefly considered the missile for use on the
English Electric Lightning.
The F-89J that was used to launch the only live test is on static display at the
Montana Air National Guard in
Great Falls, MT.
Specifications (AIR-2A)
- Length: 2.95 m (9 ft 8 in)
- Diameter: 0.44 m (17.5 in)
- Wingspan: 1.02 m (3 ft 4 in)
- Launch weight: 373 kg (822 lb)
- Speed: Mach 3.3
- Range: 9.6 km (6 m)
- Guidance: Inertial (None)
- Warhead: W25 nuclear fission, 1.5 kiloton yield
- Date deployed: 1957
- Date retired: 1985
Used with
MF-9 Transport Trailer
Survivors
Below is a list of museums which have a Genie rocket in their collection:
Air Force Armament Museum, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida
Hill Aerospace Museum, Ogden, Utah
MAPS Air Museum, Akron-Canton Regional Airport, Ohio ATR-2 with MF-9 trailer
Museum of Aviation at Robins Air Force Base, Georgia ATR-2N with MF-9 trailer
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio
Oregon Military Museum at Camp Withycombe
, Clackamas, Oregon
Selfridge Air National Guard Base Museum
, Harrison Township, Michigan
Western Canada Aviation Museum, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Ellsworth Air and Space Museum
at Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid City, South DakotaFurther Information
Get more info on 'Air-2'.
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