Talk:Trident (missile)

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The the fact that Trident is contraversial and details of the contraversy definately deserves a mention as it does in 1000s of other wikipedia pages. Wikipidea is not a sopbox - but it is not stalins russia either.

Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia, not a soapbox. Content should be encyclopaedic, verifiable, and cited to its source. Opinions always influence a contributors efforts, but contributors should always strive to be NPOV. Sadly, some try harder than others, and a small minority use these pages as a political pamphlet. The Trident missile page is limited to a brief description of the missile system, its origins and history. More general articles about military stragegy, nuclear weapons, the morality of nuclear weapons etc can be found elsewhere, including in Wikipedia.Brian.Burnell 13:39, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

Despite the risk of an article on Weapons of Mass Distruction being overloaded by the history of mass bombing, might not a little background on the results of nuclear weapons be useful? 95.147.153.125 (talk) 15:13, 21 February 2024 (UTC)


The yield of missile is to be put in kg or tons, NOT megatons.

The range was stated as 12000 km, which is huge overestimation, the range is less than 8000 km, plese post real facts and not overestimations about the missile.

Ok, guys, here is the source: http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/slbm/d-5.htm

here is the quote: Greater than 4,000 nautical miles (4,600 statute miles, or 7,360 km)

So, I am adding this instead of the moronic 12000 km, which is overestimation. 99.231.46.37 (talk) 06:24, 11 June 2008 (UTC)Pavel Golikov.

CEP

Anyone have a CEP? Stargoat 20:37, 27 May 2004 (UTC)


According to http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/m-133.html the UGM-133 has a "90 m (300 ft) CEP (compared to 380 m (1250 ft) for the C-4)." I will update the page with this information. 24.19.98.210 1 July 2005 06:02 (UTC)


that is interesting quoting, the CEP of 90 meters is reached by using GPS. Here is full quote:

"The MK 6 stellar/inertial navigation system is able to receive GPS (Global Positioning System) updates, thereby increasing accuracy to that of a land-based ICBM, about 90 m (300 ft) CEP (compared to 380 m (1250 ft) for the C-4)."

In terms of nuclear war GPS guidance will NOT be avaliable, since satellites will be destroyed, so, either put it as 380 meters, which is REAL inertial guidance, or mention in teh chart that CEP is GPS guidance. I will correct teh article, since it is confusing for people.

Consistency Problems

The Trident missile is the only remaining US SLBM not listed by it's proper identification. The problem arises because there are two different 'Trident' missles, the Trident-I (C4) UGM-93A and the Trident-II (D5) UGM-133A. I've edited the page for a first cut at a cleaner presentation that better differentiates the two. (Note: I like the picture where it is, we should seek out a picture of the -II and put it in the same relative location.)Elde 22:58, 30 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Correction to myself - the picture is actually a -II, the longer first stage and larger nose fairing, plainly visible in the enlarged view, is a dead giveaway. Elde 23:02, 30 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Aerospike

The link to the drag resistant aerospike at the front of the missile is a link to the aerospike engine so i'm taking it out. If someone could write a small piece about it would be great Cokehabit 16:38, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Such an article would get labeled a stub - even though it isn't. Elde 17:25, 6 May 2005 (UTC)

Launching/missile water contact

Contrary to popular belief, the missile does get wet. What prevents the electronics inside the missile from water is pressurization of the missile (prelaunch) somewhat above sea pressure at the level of the tube muzzle. The bubbles you see around the missile in unerwater photographs of the launch is that excess pressure venting from inside the missile. In some high resolution photographs of the the missiles once the reach the surface, you can see plumes of spray at the base of the nose fairing - those plumes are water sheeting across the nose, and then being forced outward from the vents at the base of the nose. Elde 17:25, 6 May 2005 (UTC)

This missile does not contact the water at any time while submerged to my knowledge, but it may well get the odd splash as it breaks the surgace tension. Although I doubt the odd splash of seawater is that much of a problem because the missile will likely get wet while it travels through the clouds and so will be a sealed, corrosion resistant unit. It was a major problem that the designers had to get around. The bubbles are nitrogen gas. The silo's on the submarine are filled with nitrogen gas, a very simple and inert substance (meaning it won't react with anything or damage the missile over time). When fired the nitrogen moves with the missile up and out of the water and just disperses into the atmosphere as the missiles first stage rocket motor fires. I believe it is the strong positive buoyancy which brings the nitrogen and missile up the surface. Rather like when you open a cola sized bottle of air underwater in the bath for example. Hope this helps. WikipedianProlific(Talk) 15:21, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
Elde is right, it can clearly be seen in the image montage that the bubbles are issuing from the rocket itself, and that the nose is in direct contact with the water at launch. Even super-cavitating torpedoes touch the water at some points, and those are designed to have minimum possible contact with water as their only goal —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.70.136.240 (talk) 08:36, 7 November 2007 (UTC)

Use

Have Trident missiles (of any model) been used in active conflict, and if so, which ones? I feel this could be useful information to include in the article. --Black Butterfly 14:17, 14 July 2006 (UTC)

You might have heard if the US or UK had nuked another country lately! No, they haven't. And there are as yet no conventional Trident missiles. The UK has a declared policy of sub-strategic use, where they might retaliate against a country which used chemical weapons on its troops for example using a single missile with only one warhead. Mark83 14:31, 14 July 2006 (UTC)

TridentSubLaunch.gif

This image is over six megabytes in size. That's an awful lot of bandwidth for something that may look interesting but doesn't nessecarily add much to the article. Sargant talk 17:30, 22 October 2006 (UTC)

I agree. The image, TridentSubLaunch.gif was jerky and did not look good. I've removed it. - Crosbiesmith 19:30, 22 October 2006 (UTC)

Blair's preference

The BBC source quoted did not say what the article purported it said. Words are important, and it is important that they are quoted accurately. Otherwise the words can be twisted to mean something different to what the speaker intended. The actual quote was as follows:

  • "TB is thought to favour replacing Trident but has promised a full debate before a decision is made."

Note that Blair himself did not utter these words. They are the words of an un-named journalist, who is merely offering his opinion as to what Blair's thoughts were. It is important to get these things right, otherwise contributors are merely promoting a POV, and on hotly contested current affairs such as this one is, expressing a POV is tantamount to promoting a partisan political viewpoint. Wikipedia is not a soapbox. It is an encyclopaedia. Brian.Burnell 20:29, 27 November 2006 (UTC)

I'm not aware of the context of the above comment, however did Gordon Brown not cause a stir about 6 months ago by saying Trident would be replaced? And he could be the PM making the decision. Mark83 20:44, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
That's what the source is quoted as saying at . The same source as quoted in the article. True, Gordon Brown was reported to have said something along those lines, and he might well be the next PM faced with the decision. I believe though, that such thoughts and utterances by a politician on the hustings for a new job, need to be taken with a large pinch of salt. We shall see if he becomes PM. Until then, perhaps the best place for his musings is the Gordon Brown biog page. Otherwise an article such as this one can be overwhelmed by the musings of all other contenders for the job. But that's very POV. My belief - without any hard evidence to support it yet, is that the MoD will want to remain in step with the US, for the same reasons as advanced in favour of adopting Trident D5 originally. Then, in a Cold War context, it could be summarised as this. "If the Soviets see a Trident missile rising from the Norwegian Sea they will have no way of knowing whether it is a British or American missile. And that uncertainty is also well understood in the US, who are thus bound into an alliance more securely, in the knowledge that a British strike could bring retaliation down on Washington and a hundred American cities." That was the argument made and lost by the Navy against Chevaline, but advanced again and won when Trident D5 was adopted. In today's changed world I fully expect the MoD to adopt a similar position, and opt for a Service Life Extension Program similar to the US D5LE program, because its possibly the cheapest option, but also because issues about binding the US into the NATO alliance are as fragile as ever they were during the Cold War, and US isolationism a growing force in the face of Old Europe's intransigence (as the Americans see it). And the growing wealth, self-confidence and self-assertion of the New Russia won't have escaped the notice of the MoD. Especially after the events of last week in London. But this is wandering a long way from an article on a missile system. Brian.Burnell 16:59, 28 November 2006 (UTC)

Legality of Trident

Legality 2

Legality section removed.

Controversy section added

move

Senate Gives Conventional Trident the Ax...

New Article: How the US forgot how to make Trident missiles

Article name

UK R&D contribution

Nuclear warheads - US and British

Lacking Infobox Weapon

June 2016 test 'failure'

Why no mention of cost?

Is Draper notable?

"Super-fuze"

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