Sea Skimmer wrote:And once again I respectfully submit that a mile long airship (rigid or not) is still a "bullet magnet". Belay that. it is a missile magnet. And most of the cruise missiles nowadays (which can hit and destroy a 200 metre long warship from 400 miles away) should be able to take it out.
Actualy, no missile has 400 mile range, more like 250 for a couple.
But that doesn’t matter, none of them have any air to air capability. The seekers would suffered from the same target size problumes even if they did.
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Correct. Furthermore cruise missiles are optimized for long range LEVEL flights, not the rapidly climbing trajectories needed to hit high-flying targets, even those a mile wide.
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What you need is a combination of an SA-5 or SA-4 missile airframe, and an EO guidance system. But nothing like that exists or is even projected. Such a system would also be easy to jam.
More then jam actualy, the jammers you could mount on a mile long blimp would easily put out enough power to fry the electronics of just aobut anything. It could be found through its command guidance signles, and a jammer then directed at the source.Stuff like this has happened, one EF-111 in the gulf was credited with a kill via manuver, however they claim to have directed there jammers at the attacking fighter, after which it promptly crashed.
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Jamming is one thing. But if the pilot uses dumbfire missiles (Javelin HVMs for example... though these are laser-guided and would be harder to jam) Jamming doesn't help that much. Plus, the blimp would be so huge the pilot could dumbfire his missiles and hit.
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Then we have the birds killed in Alaska by the Cobra Dane sets..
Please remember that AAA isn't the ONLY thing in the air now. Sure, WW2 zeppelins could take explosive shells. Big deal. Can they take a missile designed to shoot down fighter jets travelling at Mach 2? Or multiple missiles of that kind, for that matter?
A 25-90 pound expanding rod HE warhead wont even be noticed by somthing this sized. Several dozen would not faze it. And it ability to mount its own defences would make such massed attacks quite unlikely, plsu it should have escorting fighters.
And there are some guns which can reach sub-orbital blimps, the HARP (High Altitude Research Project) cannons which seem to have a ceiling of around 130'000 ft.
They also have the mobility of a light house on a sled. The mobility of even Italys 3 inch air defence tank was poor. Heavy AAA peices by nature are hard to conceal and hard to move.
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Correct: I mentioned this not as a solution, but as a reminder that it is POSSIBLE to reach such heights with launched projectiles. I never mentioned anything about PRACTICALLY possible, and your statement has high-lighted an important point - experimental technology is not necessarily battlefield ready technology.
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My point is, blimps are a good idea, just not anywhere near the field of battle! And the thing is, with today's technology, the field of battle is very damn big. So for shipping of commercial stuff yes. But NOT as a combat transport.
I agree though, it would be stupid to risk something this sized on the battlefield. But the ability to unload 80,000 tons of equipment even 75 miles from the front line would be useful.