Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (2024)

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The AIM-9 Sidewinder is the world's most successful short-range air-to-air missile, and will remain the U.S.military's main "dogfight" AAM for the foreseeable future.

Development of Sidewinder began in 1950 at the NOTS (Naval Ordnance Test Station) - later renamed as NWC (NavalWeapons Center) - at China Lake. The idea was to create a very simple heat-seeking air-to-air missile by equippinga 12.7 cm (5 in) air-to-air rocket with a lead sulphide (PbS) photo cell in a hemispherical glass nose to detect IR radiation.Another simple, yet effective, idea was the use of "Rollerons" (sliptream-driven wheels at the fin trailing edges acting asstabilizing gyros) as roll-stabilizing devices. The first test missiles were fired in 1951, and on 11 September 1953, thefirst air-to-air hit on a drone was scored. In the same year, the prototype missile received the offical designation XAAM-N-7.

General Electric began low-rate production in 1955, and in May 1956, the AAM-N-7 Sidewinder I entered U.S. Navyservice. Only 240 Sidewinder I missiles were built, and full-rate production missiles (built by Ford Aerospace (Philco) andGeneral Electric) were known as AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IA. I have found no evidence that the AAM-N-7 designations ever used suffixletters (like AAM-N-7a, etc.). For ease of reference, I will use the post-1963 designations of AIM-9A (Sidewinder I)and AIM-9B (Sidewinder IA) throughout this text, even when referring to pre-1963 events.

The AIM-9A/B used a 4.5 kg (10 lb) blast-fragmentation warhead. This was triggered by an IR proximity orcontact fuze, and had an effective kill radius of about 9 m (30 ft). The uncooled PbS seeker of these early missiles had a 4°angle of view and a tracking rate of 11°/s, and the missile itself could turn at 12G. Propulsion was provided by a ThiokolMK 17 solid-fuel rocket motor (17.8 kN (4000 lb) thrust for 2.2 s), which could propel the missile to a speed of Mach 1.7 above launchspeed. Because of the limitations of the seeker, the AIM-9A/B could only be used for tail-on engagements ofnon-manoeuvering(!) targets at ranges between 900 m (3000 ft) and 4.8 km (2.6 nm). The missile was also very susceptible to otherheat sources (sun, ground reflections).

Because of the usual inter-service rivalry, the USAF did not adopt the Sidewinder, until a "fly-off" against theUSAF's GAR-2/AIM-4B Falcon in June 1955 showed the superiority of the Sidewinder.The USAF subsequently procured the AIM-9B under the designation GAR-8. More than 80000 AIM-9B missiles were produced until 1962.

On 24 September 1958, the Sidewinder achieved the world's first successful use of air-to-air guided missiles, whenTaiwanese F-86Fs shot down Communist Chinese MiG-15s using AIM-9Bs supplied by the U.S. Navy.

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (1)
Photo: via Jane's
From top: AIM-9B, AIM-9D, AIM-9C

The limited performance of the AIM-9B prompted the Navy to look for improvements. The AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IC was developedin two version: a semi-active radar homing version (called Sidewinder IB in source [1]), designated AIM-9C in 1963,and an IR guided version, later designated as AIM-9D. Improvements common to both IC versions include a new Hercules MK 36solid-fuel rocket motor for significantly increased speed and 18 km (9.7 nm) range, a larger MK 48 continuous-rod warhead, and slightlylarger fins.

The SARH AIM-9C was only used with the Navy'S F8U Crusader fighters to provide these with an all-weather capability withouthaving to fit a Sparrow-compatible radar. However, the AIM-9C was not very successful, and only 1000 were built by Motorolabetween 1965 and 1967. Many were later converted into AGM-122A Sidearm anti-radiation missiles.

The IR seeker of the AIM-9D (in a more pointed nose) featured a new nitrogen-cooled PbS seeker, which had field of view ofonly 2.5° (reduced background noise) and a higher traking rate of 12°/s. However, only about 1000 AIM-9D missiles werebuilt (by Philco-Ford and Raytheon) between 1965 and 1969.

The following table summarizes the redesignations of the Sidewinder variants in June 1963:

Old DesignationNew Designation
AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IAIM-9A
AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IA
GAR-8
AIM-9B
AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IC (SARH)AIM-9C
AAM-N-7 Sidewinder IC (IR)AIM-9D

A training version of the AIM-9D for captive flight target acquisition, which had the warhead replaced by a WDU-9/B dummywarhead, was later designated as ATM-9D. The WDU-9/B is also used in all subsequent inert ATM/CATM/NATM-9 versions.Early training Sidewinders for firing practice were designated GDU-1/B.

The AIM-9E was the first version specifically developed by the USAF. It was an improved AIM-9B with a new seekerwith thermoelectric (Peltier) cooling, and a higher tracking rate of 16.5°/s. The Peltier cooling method allowed unlimitedcooling time while the missile was on the launch rail. Externally, the AIM-9E differed from the AIM-9B by its longer conical nosesection. About 5000 AIM-9Bs were converted to AIM-9E. The AIM-9E-2 is a variant with a reduced-smoke motor.

The AIM-9F (also known as AIM-9B FGW.2) was a European development of the AIM-9B, of which 15000 were built byBodensee Gerätetechnik (BGT) in Germany. It featured a now CO2-cooled seeker, some solid-state electronics, and anew nose dome. This version entered service in 1969, and most European AIM-9Bs were converted to AIM-9F standard.

Another Navy variant was the AIM-9G, an improved AIM-9D. It featured SEAM (Sidewinder Expanded Acquisition Mode), whichallowed the optics either to be slewed through a search pattern, or to be slaved to the aircraft's radar to acquire a target.2120 AIM-9G were built by Raytheon from 1970 to 1972. Equivalent to ATM-9D, there was also an ATM-9G training version ofthe AIM-9G.

The Sidewinder was of course used extensively over Vietnam by both the USAF and the Navy. The Air Force scored 28AIM-9 air-to-air kills using the AIM-9B/E versions, achieving a kill probability for this missile of about 16%. The USN's mostsuccessful Sidewinder variants in Vietnam were the AIM-9D and -9G, which were resposible for the majority ofUSN air-to-air kills in this conflict. A total of 82 air-to-air kills over Vietnam are attributed to the AIM-9.

To increase the reliability of the AIM-9G, the Navy developed the AIM-9H. The main difference to the AIM-9G were solid-stateelectronics in the guidance and control system. The seeker tracking rate was also increased to 20°/s to complement the morepowerful actuators. Only a few AIM-9Hs were fired over Vietnam, but they were credited with a higher kill rate than any other AIM-9 versionin Vietnam. About 7700 AIM-9Hs were produced by Philco-Ford and Raytheon between 1972 and 1974. The ATM-9H was a trainingversion for captive flight target acquisition.

The USAF's AIM-9J was an improved AIM-9E. It had partial solid-state electronics, a longer-burning gas generator(increasing flight time), and more powerful actuators which drove new square-tipped double-delta canards. The latter featuredoubled the single-plane "G"-capability of the missile. About 10000 AIM-9Js were eventually built from 1972 on, mostly by convertingexisting AIM-9B/E missiles.

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (2)
Photo: via FAS
AIM-9J/N/P (exact model unknown)

The designation ZAIM-9K was allocated by the U.S. Navy to a planned upgraded AIM-9H, but development was cancelledin favor of the joint USAF/USN AIM-9L.

In 1971, the USAF and U.S. Navy agreed to jointly develop the AIM-9L, a vastly improved Sidewinder based on theAIM-9H. Major development goals were ALASCA (All-Aspect Capability) and effective use against violently manoeuvering and high-speedtargets at all ranges. The AIM-9L had new long-span pointed double-delta canards, a modified MK 36 solid-fuel rocket motor (MODs 8 through11), and a new AN/DSQ-29 solid-state guidance and control section. Additional improvements include a completely new Argon-cooledIndium Antimonide (InSb) seeker, a DSU-15/B AOTD (Active Optical Target Detector) laser proximity fuze, and an improved9.4 kg (20.8 lb) WDU-17/B annular blast-fragmentation warhead.All AIM-9L features resulted in a vastly improved missile which could acquire targets at all aspects, and had a much improved tracking,manoeuvering, terminal homing, and killing performance. Production started in 1978, and more than 16000 AIM-9Ls have been built byPhilco-Ford, Raytheon, BGT (Germany), and Mitsubishi (Japan). The AIM-9L was used very successfully by the Royal Navy in the Falklands Warduring 1982.

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (3)
Photo: U.S. Navy
AIM-9L/M (exact model unknown)

Training versions of the AIM-9L are the ATM-9L for firing practice, the captive (non-launching) CATM-9L,and the non-flying DATM-9L for handling and loading practice. There is also a version designated NATM-9L,which is equipped with special test and evaluation equipment. There is also a loading practice version of the AIM-9L knownas GDU-6/C. This may be just another (earlier) designation for the DATM-9L.

The AIM-9M is a development of the AIM-9L and replaced the latter on the production line. It features areduced-smoke rocket motor, an improved guidance section designated WGU-4/B, better countermeasures resistance (IRCCM -Infrared Counter-Countermeasures), and improved overall reliability. Production began in 1982, and so far more than 7000 missileshave been built by Raytheon in subtypes numbered AIM-9M-1 through AIM-9M-10. The principal current production versions arethe AIM-9M-8 (USN) and AIM-9M-9 (USAF). They have further improved IRCM detection circuitry, and the latest versions of therocket motor (MK 36 MOD 11), guidance section (WGU-4E/B), and AOTD (DSU-15B/B). The AIM-9M-10 is a slightly modified -9M-8 foruse by the F/A-18E/F Hornet. Most existing AIM-9Ms will be upgraded to -9M-8/9 standard. In Operation Desert Storm in 1991,13 air-to-air kills were attributed to the Sidewinder, all of which were probably AIM-9M missiles.

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (4)
Photo: via NAMSA
AIM-9M

There seem to be no special ATM-9M launch training and DATM-9M ground handling training versions for the AIM-9M. Probablythe equivalent -9L versions are used for these purposes. However, there is the CATM-9M captive-carryversion, which exists in many subvariants. Variants known to me are the CATM-9M-1/2/4/6/8 (for AIM-9M-1/3 training),CATM-9M-12/14 (for AIM-9M-8/9 training), and CATM-9M-27 (for AIM-9M-10 training). The NATM-9M is a version equipped with specialtest and evaluation equipment (variants include NATM-9M-1 through -4).

The AIM-9N (originally designated AIM-9J-1) is an improved AIM-9J with all three major circuit boards redesigned forimproved seeker performance. Around 7000 were built by Philco-Ford, mainly for export.

The AIM-9P is a USAF-sponsored development of AIM-9J/N, mainly intended for export to countries which can't afford, don'tneed, or are not allowed to receive the AIM-9L/M. The AIM-9P-1 introduced the DSU-15/B AOTD laser proximity fuze, and the AIM-9P-2adds a reduced-smoke rocket motor. The AIM-9P-3 has the reduced-smoke motor, a new insensitive munitions warhead, and an improvedguidance and control section. Some sources say the -9P-3 retains the original IR fuze of the AIM-9J, while others say that it alsouses the new DSU-15/B like the -9P-1. The designation AIM-9P-4 applies to variants withan ALASCA seeker using some of the technology of the AIM-9L/M, and the AIM-9P-5 adds improved IRCCM. Externally, the AIM-9P remainsalmost identical to the AIM-9J/N. More than 21000 AIM-9Ps have been built so far, many being rebuilt AIM-9B/E/J missiles. Althoughoriginally intended for export only, many AIM-9Ps are in the USAF inventory.

The designation AIM-9Q was applied by the U.S. Navy to an AIM-9M development with an upgraded guidance and control section.I have no further information about this version, and it was probably either cancelled or redesignated as an AIM-9M subvariant.

In 1986, development of the AIM-9R began. It was derived from the AIM-9M and equipped with a completely newWGU-19/B IIR (Imaging Infrared) seeker, offering much improved detection and tracking performance in daylight.The first live firing occurred in 1990, but in 1992, the planned production was cancelled due to lack of funding.

The AIM-9S is a stripped-down version of the AIM-9M without the IRCCM system. It is intended for export, and the firstcustomer will be Turkey.

Since the 1980s, the DOD has been searching for a new missile to replace the AIM-9 as its standard short-range "dogfight"air-to-air missile. Original plans to procure the European AIM-132 ASRAAM (Advanced Short-Range Air-to-AirMissile) were dropped, and various test programs were conducted during the late 1980s/early 1990s, including Have Thrust (USAF, classified),Top Hat (USAF/Hughes), Box Office (Loral/Raytheon) and Boa (NWC China Lake). From 1991 on, efforts to develop a Sidewinder follow-onwere generally known as "AIM-9X".Following cancellation of the AIM-9R, development of a future dogfight missile based on the AIM-9M began in earnest.In 1994, a Dem/Val (Demonstration/Validation) program for the AIM-9X started, with Hughes and Raytheon ascompetitors, and in December 1996, Hughes was announced as winner. However, because Raytheon has since acquired the Hughesmissile division, Raytheon is now prime contractor for the AIM-9X. The new missile is also officially designated as AIM-9X,so that suffixes -9T/U/V/W are all skipped. Test firings of the AIM-9X began in 1998, and in June 1999, thefirst guided live firing succeeded to hit a QF-4 target drone. Low-rate initial production was authorized in September 2000,and the first production AIM-9X reached the USAF and USN evaluation units in summer 2002. Initial operationalcapability with the U.S. Air Force was officially achieved in November 2003, and in May 2004 full-rate productionof the missile was approved. By mid-2008, about 3000 AIM-9X missiles had been delivered.

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (5)
Image: Raytheon
AIM-9X

The AIM-9X retains the MK 36 motor and the WDU-17/B warhead of the AIM-9M. The airframe is new, however, and has muchsmaller fins and canards for lower drag and higher flight performance. The guidance section is completely new, and featuresan IIR (Imaging Infrared) seeker. The new WPU-17/B propulsion section has a jet-vane steering system for significantly enhancedagility. The missile is compact enough to fit into the internal weapons bays of stealthy fighters like the F/A-22 Raptor andthe F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, but can also be used on existing AIM-9 launchers (like the LAU-7/A series, and the LAU-127/A, -128/A and-129/A series of Common Rail Launchers). The AIM-9X is also fully compatible with the new JHMCS (Joint Helmet-Mounted Cueing System) fortarget acquisition. Non-tactical versions of the AIM-9X include the captive (non-launching) CATM-9X,the non-flying DATM-9X for handling and loading practice, and the NATM-9X, which is equipped with special test andevaluation telemetry equipment.

Until 2001, more than 150000 AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles of all variants have been built in the USA by Raytheon(current prime contractor), Ford Aerospace (Philco), General Electric, and Motorola. Foreign built missiles raise thisnumber to more than 200000, and production will almost certainly continue for many years.About 270 air-to-air kills worldwide are attributed to the AIM-9.

The graph below summarizes the development line of the AIM-9 missile family. The view of the various AIM-9 variants seemsto contain a few minor inaccuracies, but does nevertheless show the major external differences.

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (6)Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (7)
Drawing: Pete West/Key Publishing
AIM-9 developmentAIM-9 variants

Derivatives of the AIM-9 missile are the MIM-72 Chaparral, theAGM-87 Focus, and the AGM-122 Sidearm.

Specifications

Note: Data given by several sources show slight variations. Figures given below may therefore be inaccurate!

Data for AIM-9B/D/E/G/H/J/L/M/N/X:

AIM-9BAIM-9D/G/HAIM-9EAIM-9J/NAIM-9L/MAIM-9X
Length2.83 m (111.5 in)2.87 m (113 in)3.00 m (118 in)3.05 m (120 in)2.85 m (112.2 in)3.02 m (118.8 in)
Finspan0.56 m (22 in)0.63 m (24.8 in)0.56 m (22 in)0.58 m (22.8 in)0.63 m (24.8 in)0.28 m (11 in)
Diameter12.7 cm (5 in)
Weight70 kg (155 lb)AIM-9D: 88 kg (195 lb)
AIM-9G: 87 kg (192 lb)
AIM-9H: 84 kg (186 lb)
74 kg (164 lb)77 kg (170 lb)86 kg (191 lb)85 kg (188 lb)
SpeedMach 1.7Mach 2.5+?
Range4.8 km (2.6 nm)18 km (9.7 nm)4.2 km (2.3 nm)18 km (9.7 nm)40+ km (22+ nm) ?
PropulsionThiokol MK 17
solid-fuel rocket
Hercules MK 36
solid-fuel rocket
Thiokol/Aerojet MK 17Hercules/Bermite MK 36
Warhead4.5 kg (10 lb)
blast-fragmentation
11 kg (25 lb) MK 48 continuous rod4.5 kg (10 lb) blast-fragmentation9.4 kg (20.8 lb) WDU-17/B
annular blast-fragmentation

Main Sources

[1] Norman Friedman: "US Naval Weapons", Conway Maritime Press, 1983
[2] Norman Friedman: "World Naval Weapons Systems, 1997/98", Naval Institute Press, 1997
[3] Bill Gunston: "The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rockets and Missiles", Salamander Books Ltd, 1979
[4] Christopher Chant: "World Encyclopaedia of Modern Air Weapons", Patrick Stephens Ltd., 1988
[5] Hajime Ozu: "Missile 2000 - Reference Guide to World Missile Systems", Shinkigensha, 2000
[6] Malcolm English: "First Look, First Kill", article in "Air International", August 2001
[7] Carlo Kopp: The Sidewinder Story, 1998(original article published in "Australian Aviation", April 1994)


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Last Updated: 9 July 2008

Raytheon AIM-9 Sidewinder (2024)

FAQs

How much is a AIM-9 Sidewinder worth? ›

With the balloon safely over the open ocean off the coast of South Carolina, the Raptor pilot engaged the slow-moving target with an AIM-9X Sidewinder missile – the latest iteration of the famed air-to-air weapon that comes with a hefty price tag of some $472,000 per unit.

What company makes the AIM-9 Sidewinder? ›

AIM-9X SIDEWINDER Missile | Raytheon.

How many Sidewinder missiles does the US have? ›

The Sidewinder is the most widely used air-to-air missile in the West, with more than 110,000 missiles produced for the U.S. and 27 other nations, of which perhaps one percent have been used in combat.

What was special about Sidewinder missile? ›

It has a high-explosive warhead and an infrared heat-seeking guidance system. The Sidewinder was developed by the U.S. Navy for fleet air defense and was adapted by the U.S. Air Force for fighter aircraft use. Early versions of the missile were extensively used in the Southeast Asia conflict.

What is the most accurate air-to-air missile? ›

AMRAAM® – Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missile – is the world's most sophisticated, combat-proven air dominance weapon.

What is the Russian equivalent of the Sidewinder? ›

The Vympel K-13 (NATO reporting name: AA-2 "Atoll") is a short-range, infrared homing air-to-air missile developed by the Soviet Union. It is similar in appearance and function to the American AIM-9B Sidewinder from which it was reverse-engineered.

How many G's can the AIM-9X pull? ›

You've a Mach 2.5+ missile capable of pulling around 60 g with >90° boresight capability i.e. the seeker having 180° FoV.

What is the top speed of a Sidewinder missile? ›

The Sidewinder is a U.S. air-to-air missile originally developed by the U.S. Navy in the early 1950s. One of many versions produced through the years, the Air Intercept Missile 9J1 (AIM-9J1) had a conventional warhead, a solid-fuel motor, infrared guidance, a maximum speed in excess of Mach 2.5, and a range of 9 miles.

Why is the AIM-9X so good? ›

The AIM-9X Block II is the most advanced short-range air-air missile in the U.S. inventory, capable of using its datalink, thrust vectoring maneuverability, and advanced imaging infrared seeker to hit targets behind the launching fighter.

How far can a Sidewinder missile fly? ›

The AIM-9 is a 200-pound supersonic air-to-air missile carried by A-10, F-4, F-15, F-16 and F-111 aircraft. It is a "heat seeking" missile with a range of 1-2 miles and is generally used during the day in clear weather conditions.

Is the AIM-9X smokeless? ›

Just like the AIM9M and AMRAAM, the term "smokeless" is a bit relative. The missile will still leave a faint plume behind, it's just dramatically less visible than that of other missiles (and functionally invisible to all but the closest of targets).

How much does an f22 Sidewinder missile cost? ›

Those Sidewinder missiles, produced by Raytheon Technologies, cost some $439,000 each, according to Bloomberg News. That figure is based on the Defense Department's desire to procure 255 missiles for about $112 million in fiscal year 2023.

What is the most expensive missile? ›

But what is the world's most costly missile? It seems that perhaps dubious accolade belongs to the Trident missile - at which estimates in the past have put at $70m (around £55m) each.

How much do US missiles cost? ›

Variants of the Standard Missile-3 run from $9.7 million to $27.9 million apiece. (The missile made its combat debut this weekend, when the Navy fired “four to seven” of them during the defense of Israel.) SM-2s run just over $2 million each and SM-6s go for about $3.9 million.

How much does an AMRAAM missile cost? ›

US$1,090,000

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