[ARC5] Surplus Missile Disposal

MARK DORNEY mkdorney at aol.com
Sun Mar 10 18:50:45 EDT 2024


If jet engines and rocket motors are being found by civilian buyers of these containers  intact inside the surplus storage containers that were sold as empty, obviously a lot is being missed, and whole units are coming on the open, unregulated market intact.  HUGE PROBLEM!!!

Mark D. 
WW2RDO


“In matters of style, float with the current. In matters of Principle, stand like a rock. “.   -   Thomas Jefferson 

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 10, 2024, at 5:34 PM, scottjohnson1 <scottjohnson1 at cox.net> wrote:


Missiles are dimantled at Camp Navajo in Arizona, propellansts are stored and destroyed, along with conventional warheads. There may be other disposal centers as well.  Nuclear warheads go elsewhere for disposal.  I don't  think any missiles are ever sold intact. 
If you ate lucky, you might get a nearly intact gyro, or maybe a fuselage section.

Scott W7SVJ 




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-------- Original message --------
From: MARK DORNEY via ARC5 <arc5 at mailman.qth.net>
Date: 3/10/24 07:56 (GMT-07:00)
To: releazer at earthlink.net
Cc: arc5 at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [ARC5] Surplus Missile Disposal

Nike Zeus, Nike Hercules and Nike Ajax are systems that came onboard in the 1950s-1960s.  They are obsolete. But those surplus Missile sales need to be VERY closely monitored. What happens if folks sympathetic to Iran get a hold this stuff?  It’s old, but with a little TLC, this stuff would still work.  I don’t like the idea of long range missile parts being sold to civilian industry.  Too much can go very wrong, very fast. 

Mark D. 

“In matters of style, float with the current. In matters of Principle, stand like a rock. “.   -   Thomas Jefferson 

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 10, 2024, at 10:27 AM, releazer at earthlink.net wrote:

Relative to missile disposal I was told that they were shutting down the Nike sites and farmer in Mass. bought one of the circular drum type missile storage containers as surplus.  The containers are similar to those used for jet engines storage and transportation and are popular with farmers as feed bins.  He got the thing home and then called the Air Force to say, "There is a gol danged missile in this thing!"

Much the same thing occurred at Tinker AFB when a rancher bought a jet engine cannister at a surplus auction, got it home, and found there was jet engine in it.

As a result of the Commercial Space Launch Act of 1984 the DoD was required to offer surplus missiles to commercial industry.  Numerous Nike and Talos missile motors were converted for experimental sounding rocket use and the CSLA eventually meant that NASA could no longer do that work themselves but had to hire private contractors to do so.  

Wayne
WB5WSV 
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