Weapon System was a United States Armed Forces military designation scheme for experimental weapons (e.g., WS-220) before they received an official name — e.g., under a military aircraft designation system. The new designator reflected the increasing complexity of weapons that required separate development of auxiliary systems or components.

In November 1949, the Air Force decided to build the Convair F-102 Delta Dagger around a fire-control system. This was "the real beginning of the weapon system approach [and the] aircraft would be integrated into the weapon system "as a whole from the beginning, so the characteristics of each component were compatible with the others".

Around February 1950, an Air Research and Development Command "study prepared by Maj Gen Gordon P. Saville...recommended that a 'systems approach' to new weapons be adopted [whereby] development of a weapon "system" required development of support equipment as well as the actual hardware itself."

The first WS designation was WS-100A.

US weapon programs were often begun as numbered government specifications such as an Advanced Development Objective (e.g., ADO-40) or a General Operational Requirement (e.g., GOR.80), although some programs were initially identified by contractor numbers (e.g., CL-282).

List of Weapon Systems

Key for numeric designations
AbbreviationMeaning
CLLockheed Corporation
DDouglas Aircraft Company
NANorth American Aviation
WSWeapon System
List of weapon system programs for US military systems
NumberProject
WS-104ASM-64 Navaho
WS-107ASM-65 Atlas
WS-110North American XB-70 Valkyrie
WS-117L (GOR.80)Advanced Reconnaissance System (originally Project 1115); recoverable capsule - Pied Piper/Sentry/SAMOS; television transmission - unfeasible; Subsystem G: MiDAS
WS-119B (USAF 7795)Bold Orion ASAT
WS-119LProject Moby Dick (originally Project Genetrix)
WS-120ABGM-75 AICBM
WS-124AWS-124A Flying Cloud Project
WS-125(B-72)
WS-133AAN/DRC-8 Emergency Rocket Communications System (Program 494L) LGM-30 Minuteman
WS-199Anti-satellite weapon
WS-199BBold Orion
WS-199CHigh Virgo
WS-199DAlpha Draco
WS-201A1954 interceptor
WS-224APhase I: BMEWS, Phase II: Wizard missile system
WS-306ARepublic F-105 Thunderchief (misidentified as WS-3061)
WS315APGM-17 Thor missile
WS-324AGeneral Dynamics F-111

Notes

  • Burroughs, William E. (1988) [1986]. Deep Black (paperback ed.). New York: Berkley Publishing Group. ISBN 0-425-10879-1.
  • Daso, Dik (September 1997). Architects of American Air Supremacy: General Hap Arnold and Dr Theodore von Kármán. Air University Press. pp. 76, 166.
  • Stares, Paul B. (1985), The Militarization of Space, Ithaca: Cornell University Press