Phoenix (aim-54) Air-to-air Missile Parts

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1201 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
12046 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
16100705-001 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
17408 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
17408-B Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
17408B Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
17408S Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
17461 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
17461-SJ Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
174615 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
1C3948P15C Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
3062914C11S Electrical Power Cable Assembly
006298998
346 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
633 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
6405941-1 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
642 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
778 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
800502 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
812-1313 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008121313
914122048 Electrical Power Cable Assembly
008346804
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Missile, Air-to-air, Phoenix (aim-54)

Picture of Phoenix (aim-54)  Air-to-air Missile

The AIM-54 Phoenix is a radar-guided, long-range air-to-air missile (AAM), carried in clusters of up to six missiles on the Grumman F-14 Tomcat, its only operational launch platform. The Phoenix was the United States' only long-range air-to-air missile. The combination of Phoenix missile and the AN/AWG-9 guidance radar was the first aerial weapons system that could simultaneously engage multiple targets. Both the missile and the aircraft were used by the United States Navy and are now retired, the AIM-54 Phoenix in 2004 and the F-14 in 2006. They were replaced by the shorter-range AIM-120 AMRAAM, employed on the F/A-18 Hornet and F/A-18E/F Super Hornet. Following the retirement of the F-14 by the U.S. Navy, the weapon's only current operator is the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force. Brevity code "Fox Three" was used when firing the AIM-54.

Since 1951, the Navy faced the initial threat from the Tupolev Tu-4K 'Bull' carryinganti-ship missiles. Eventually, during the height of the Cold War, the threat would have expanded into regimental-size raids of Tu-16 Badger and Tu-22M Backfire bombers equipped with low-flying, long-range, high-speed, nuclear-armed cruise missiles and considerable electronic countermeasures (ECM) of various types.

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