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Old 04-14-2016, 04:32 PM
Silent Hunter UK Silent Hunter UK is offline
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Default Missile flight times and warnings

Spinning off from another thread.

Here's the ones I know.

ICBM, US to USSR or vice versa: 25-30 mins
Pershing II, West Germany to Western USSR: c.10 mins
Scud missile: 3-5 minutes
UK BMEWS early warning time: 4.5 minutes (the 'four minute warning').
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Old 04-17-2016, 02:05 AM
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Legbreaker Legbreaker is offline
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Not exactly a lot of time is it.
I wonder if the shorter ranged missiles with shorter flight times would have been launched at the same time as the ICBMs (thereby potentially giving an earlier warning of attack), or held off until a little later?
There's pros and cons for both approaches I think.
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Old 04-23-2016, 04:37 PM
Silent Hunter UK Silent Hunter UK is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Legbreaker View Post
Not exactly a lot of time is it.
I wonder if the shorter ranged missiles with shorter flight times would have been launched at the same time as the ICBMs (thereby potentially giving an earlier warning of attack), or held off until a little later?
There's pros and cons for both approaches I think.
That's why the Vulcans were designed to be able to take off within two minutes if the crew were on board, Blue Streak got axed and we ultimately bought Polaris then Trident; an undersea deterrent was and is by far the most survivable.

As for the missile launches, I'd imagine SIOP, the Soviet equivalent and their modern successors probably have options for both same time and held off.
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Old 04-23-2016, 08:57 PM
Matt Wiser Matt Wiser is offline
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For SLBMs off the East or West Coasts of the U.S., it was estimated six to 12 minutes' depending on where the missile subs were patrolling.
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Old 04-24-2016, 04:20 PM
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Or less than 5 minutes with a depressed trajectory shot.
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Old 04-25-2016, 12:25 AM
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It's the waiting that'd make it awful. If I was at a primary site (I probably am anyway living in the Orlando area), assuming it was just an ICBM strike and not SLBMs, that 24-30 minute wait would just be ... horrible.
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