Lance Missile Parts

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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
143481 Electrical Wire
004709728
16344 12208 Electrical Wire
004709728
16344 12800 Electrical Wire
000034174
421-1010-000 Electrical Wire
002435828
44A0111-22-8 Electrical Wire
004709728
44A0111-22-8-US Electrical Wire
004709728
44A0111-28-0 Electrical Wire
000034174
44A0111-28-0-US Electrical Wire
000034174
513 593-0 Electrical Wire
000034174
513 607-8 Electrical Wire
004709728
57320-10 Electrical Wire
002435828
84412-22-8 Electrical Wire
004709728
84412-28-0 Electrical Wire
000034174
A-A-59551 Electrical Wire
002435828
AA59551-S10S1B Electrical Wire
002435828
AS81044/12 Electrical Wire
000034174
AS81044/12 Electrical Wire
004709728
BARE10AWG Electrical Wire
002435828
BR81044/12-22-8 Electrical Wire
004709728
BR81044/12-28-0 Electrical Wire
000034174
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Missile, Lance

Picture of Lance Missile

The MGM-52 Lance was a mobile field artillery tactical surface-to-surface missile (tactical ballistic missile) system used to provide both nuclear and conventional fire support to the United States Army. The missile's warhead was developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It was replaced by MGM-140 ATACMS, which was initially intended to likewise have a nuclear capability during the cold war.

The first Lance missiles were deployed in 1972, replacing (together with the US-Navy's nuclear-tipped RIM-2D & RIM-8E/B/D) the earlier Honest John rocket and Sergeant SRBM ballistic missile, greatly reducing the weight and bulk of the system, while improving both accuracy and mobility.

A Lance battery (two fire units) consisted of two M752 launchers (one missile each) and two M688 auxiliary vehicle (two missiles each), for a total six missiles. The firing rate per unit was approximately three missiles per hour.

The payload consisted either of a W70 nuclear warhead with a yield of 1–100 kt or a variety of conventional munitions. The W70-3 nuclear warhead version was one of the first warheads to be battlefield-ready with an "enhanced radiation" (neutron bomb) capability. Conventional munitions included cluster bombs for use against SAM-Sites, heat seeking Anti-Tank Cluster munitions or a single unitary conventional shape-charged warhead for penetrating hard targets and for bunker busting. The original design considered a chemical weapon warhead option, but this development was cancelled in 1970.

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