AGM-45 Shrike

AGM-45 Shrike is an American anti-radiation missile designed to home in on hostile anti-aircraft radar. The Shrike was developed by the Naval Weapons Center at China Lake in 1963 by mating a seeker head to the rocket body of an AIM-7 Sparrow. It was phased out by U.S. in 1992 and at an unknown time by the Israeli Air Force (the only other major user), and has been superseded by the AGM-88 HARM missile. The Israel Defense Forces developed a version of the Shrike that could be ground-launched with a booster rocket, and mounted it on an M4 Sherman chassis as the Kilshon (Hebrew for Trident).

AGM-45 Shrike
AGM-45 Shrike
TypeAir-to-surface anti-radiation missile
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1965–1992
WarsVietnam War,
Yom Kippur War,
Iran–Iraq War
Falklands War
Operation El Dorado Canyon
Gulf War
Production history
Designed1963
ManufacturerTexas Instruments and Sperry Rand/Univac
Produced1963-1982
No. built18,500
Specifications
Mass390 pounds (177.06 kg)
Length10 feet (3.05 m)
Diameter8 inches (203 mm)
Wingspan3 feet (914 mm)
Warhead67.5 kg (149 lb) MK 5 MOD 1 (or MK 86 MOD 1) blast-fragmentation, or 66.6 kg (147 lb) WAU-9/B blast-fragmentation

Operational
range
16 km AGM-45A, 40 km AGM-45B
Maximum speed Mach 1.5
Guidance
system
Passive radar homing
Accuracy20ft
Launch
platform
A-4 Skyhawk, A-6 Intruder, LTV A-7 Corsair II, F-100 Super Sabre, F-105 Thunderchief, F-4 Phantom II, Avro Vulcan (not regular service), F-16 Fighting Falcon, Kfir, Kilshon system
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