The Mk47 mod 0 and Mk60 mod 0 motors have high smoke.
The Mk47 mod 1 has reduced smoke.
No AIM-54 ever featured with a smokeless motor.
The Mk47 mod 0 and Mk60 mod 0 motors have high smoke.
The Mk47 mod 1 has reduced smoke.
No AIM-54 ever featured with a smokeless motor.
this was a heatblur thing and is outdated even they no longer follow these figures, the full version of outsiders view of AWG-9 system has true motor characteristics and I believe war thunder goes by those figures now aswell
Just to check, the missile messages in SD/A mode are transferred to the missile how?

for context
Still really would love to see the 54C get its dogfight mode, pull better and better seeker… ATM, if you don’t get ur 54’s off the rail before you make it to like 10-15km, u might as well dump them cuz they’re worthless and heavy
It does seem that this new forum doesn’t allow me to edit posts which makes it a big hassle for this type of information aggregation thread.
Regarding the usage of the Outsiders document, some things are intentionally left in the air and are ambiguous since the document is intentionally structured in that manner by citing both official USN/Hughes/Grumman documents and 3rd party OSINT providers. The Outsiders document is the best document however in the case of WT. I’m trying to get my hands on some new documents but I’ll see how those go.
Not all of them is accurate.
Total impulse of the Mk60 and Mk47 Mod 1 might have some issue.
Additionally, it is known that Reduced smoke motor with HTPB have a lower specific impulse than contemporary CTPB with AI, so the specific impulse might be wrong as well.
The missile weight might be wrong as well,
it is not immediately clear why C is so much heavier, even with newer electronics.
The C might also have wrong warhead weight.
All in all, while contain useful information, not all of them is accurate
The AIM-54A uses Ammonium Perchlorate (Flexadyne), which can have an ISP ranging from 180-260s.
The HTPB in the AIM-120 has an ISP around ~245-255, (based on this report about reduced smoke propellants).
It is possible that the HTPB matches or improves on the ISP of the original motors, and is the only reduced smoke propellant type the US used prior to the late 1990s to my knowledge. 245 / 260 = 0.942
So we are looking at the absolute most difference, 5.8% worse specific impulse. This is assuming the Flexadyne has the highest ISP (260) and HTPB has the lowest possible (~245).
TL;DR AIM-54C may have worse performance than the earlier models due to a reduced smoke motor but should only (at most) be 5.8% less ISP.
Anyone have that image of the AIM-54 flight trajectory vs long/short range targets that was posted on the old forums? its not there anymore
Can you describe the scenario better? I probably have it somewhere but I don’t know which one you want.
I more specifically want the image that showed the AIM-54 had a post launch climb period before it began SARH guidance. The image has all the guidance steps an AIM-54 took from launch until hitting a distant target, and also described the 2 target scenarios (long or short range) at the bottom?
This bit here:
Interavia World Review of Aviation, Astronautics, Avionics Vol.37
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/955829235493273680/1121576087026143283/image_1.png
Thanks!
According to Solid Propulsion Enabling Technologies and Milestones
for Navy Air-launched Tactical Missiles
The AIM-54A has 364 pounds of Flexadyne propellant, yet in-game the empty mass is 375 pounds less than when the burn starts. Also, it states the Mk60 is “functionally” a CTPB equivalent of the Flexadyne Mk47 based motors for the AIM-54A.
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1078877088087552102/1121631438073245747/image.png
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1078877088087552102/1121628905518931988/image.png
F-14 WSC can change radar target size, which will also send a message to the Phoenix when to go active. In DCS the ranges are documented as: SMALL - 6 NM, NORM - 10 NM and LARGE - 13 NM.
The LARGE is 24 km, which is close to the max 25 km range of Phoenix radar in WT.
DCS is wrong about the performances of the rocket motors so I’m not certain I can trust them on everything else. I’d need more sources.
Regarding the rocket motors propellant weight being incorrect; I have put in a report on this issue.
https://community.gaijin.net/issues/p/warthunder/i/r8SdwCrLivnX
Regarding the AIM-54A in DCS vs the AIM-54A in War Thunder and IRL, I will do a comparison;
Weight (mass)
IRL- 978 pounds (443.613kg)
DCS- 444kg (rounded I guess?)
WT- 443.613kg
Fuel mass
IRL- 165.108kg (364) pounds of Flexadyne (CTPB), RDS-500 series
DCS- 163.3kg (360) pounds
WT- 170.55kg (376) pounds
So it seems while war thunder has the correct missile mass, and DCS didn’t bother to put in an exact number (rounded to nearest non-decimal)… War Thunder has the incorrect fuel quantity.
DCS marks the Mark 47 Mod 0 with “Flexadyne” as high smoke and the CTPB Mark 60 motor as “Medium” despite them both being a type of CTPB propellant with no serious distinction besides the choice of oxidizer, which does not change the quantity of aluminum in the propellant… So it should both be “high smoke”.
DCS also marks the Mark 47 Mod 1 motor as smokeless, when this should only be reduced smoke.
The idea that the HTPB in the Mark 47 Mod 1 has higher ISP than the CTPB is wrong, DCS’ has this backwards. The CTPB propellant has a higher ISP due to the added aluminum and the reduced smoke motor would be slightly lower overall performance due to the differences in specific impulse in HTPB and CTPB type propellants. The Mark 47 Mod 1 in the AIM-54C also has less propellant, at only 360 pounds vs 364 in the Mark 47 Mod 0.
I’ve gone over the AIM-120B and AIM-54 and it seems there is no consistency with DCS regarding missiles. Some stuff is dead-on to the hundredth in terms of accuracy regarding the numbers, other stuff is rounded to the nearest whole number. Some information they used for their missiles is just wrong (AIM-120B mass, AIM-54 motor information). The common trend it seems to me is that despite using “subject matter expert” opinions on many aspects of the sim DCS has incorrect information to model their systems off of. The AIM-54 and AIM-120B are great examples, as is the Mirage 2000. Using DCS as a source is generally going to result in no more accuracy than quoting from random websites, as it seems they have derived a great deal of data from outside analysis (guessing) and corrected it over time as real data is presented.
Regarding war thunder, I think sufficient public information exists to model the AIM-120 and AIM-54 more accurately than DCS has thus far… if Gaijin pays attention to these threads… or actions on reports sooner than they have in the past.
Also,
if you wanted, here is a photo of the various parts of the radar and guidance system for the YAIM-54A
The radar is known as the “AN/DSQ-26”. You can see the antenna, electronics, batteries, etc. On the tail end is the control fin, and the cable links that go around the propulsion system.