Advanced Medium Range Air-to-air (amraam)/aim120a Missile Parts

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010-005208-002 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
01G009701-73 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
07.342.4655 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
0740761 Electrical Receptacle Connector
010979977
10131507 Electrical Receptacle Connector
010326516
10138141 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
10138880 Electrical Receptacle Connector
010559236
10204893 Electrical Receptacle Connector
011718728
1025924D Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
1025924D4 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
17-60150-1 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
205557-2 Electrical Receptacle Connector
012960114
21-479215-213 Electrical Receptacle Connector
010559236
230-01-02-102 Electrical Receptacle Connector
012822054
230-01-15-102 Electrical Receptacle Connector
012960114
230-990054-752 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
25451-45003 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
2635-088-22 ITEM 1-381 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
2635-088-38 ITEM 1-94 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
340586 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004905220
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Missile, Advanced Medium Range Air-to-air (amraam)/aim120a

Picture of Advanced Medium Range Air-to-air (amraam)/aim120a Missile

• Hughes: 1991–97

• $300,000–$400,000 for 120C variants

High explosive blast-fragmentation • AIM-120A/B: WDU-33/B, 50 pounds (22.7 kg)

Active RADAR Target Detection Device (TDD)

• AIM-120A/B: 55–75 km (30–40 nmi) • AIM-120C-5: >105 km (>57 nmi)

Aircraft:

Surface-launched:

The AIM-120 Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile, or AMRAAM (pronounced "am-ram"), is a modern beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile (BVRAAM) capable of all-weather day-and-night operations. Designed with 7-inch diameter instead of 8-inch diameter form-and-fit factors, and employing active transmit-receive radar guidance instead of semi-active receive-only radar guidance, it is a fire-and-forget upgrade to the previous generation Sparrow missiles. When an AMRAAM missile is being launched, NATO pilots use the brevity code Fox Three.

The AIM-7 Sparrow medium range missile (MRM) was purchased by the US Navy from original developer Howard Hughes in the 1950s as its first operational air-to-air missile with "beyond visual range" (BVR) capability. With an effective range of about 12 miles (19 km), it was introduced as a radar beam-riding missile and then it was improved to a semiactive radar guided missile which would home in on reflections from a target illuminated by the radar of the launching aircraft. It was effective at visual to beyond visual range. The early beam riding versions of the Sparrow missiles were integrated onto the F3H Demon and F7U Cutlass, but the definitive AIM-7 Sparrow was the primary weapon for the all-weather F-4 Phantom II fighter/interceptor, which lacked an internal gun in its U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, and early U.S. Air Force versions. The F-4 carried up to four AIM-7s in built-in recesses under its belly.

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