Dilandu
I'm dissatisfied, which means, I exist.
No, not at all, honestly (besides, I like to explain, must confess).I'm sorry if this is frustrating for you to explain why constantly.
The problem is, that 1950s missile seekes aren't fast or reliable. They need time to acquire a target. Basically the seeker need to catch the target singal by rotating antenna, choose this particular signal amongst others by some mean, adjust the antenna angle so the target would be in the equisignal zone (i.e. directly on the axis), reduce the angle of antenna rotation so only the chosen target would be within the seeker field of view, set the range gate or Doppler shift parameter to filter all other signals. After that the seeker is "locked on" target.I don't know if it's the insomnia or just a failure to understand why that is, but I'm just not getting it.
If the missile seeker is locked on target before launch, it's usually not a problem; missile have time, while its seeker is pointed in right direction by either pilot (holding target in the sight) or fire control system (aligning seeker boresight line with the one of plane's radar). So when missile finally took off, the seeker is already tracking the target.
If the missile seeker must catch the target AFTER launch, it's much bigger problem. The seeker need to perform search, acquisition, filtering, gating, ect. by itself - and in a very short time available before the missile just fly past the target. And there is no one to tell seeker where exactly to search for the target or how far the target is. The seeker must figure it out all by itself, in a very short time window available.
To make this goal less unsurmountable, it would helps greatly if the missile more or less oriented toward target (and got a range/Doppler data from the plane) before seeker got activated. The "simple" gyro autopilot (it would likely not be exactly simple) can't do that, because target is moving, and missile flight is not perfectly stable. Any windage deviation that missile might need to correct could cause the situation that at the moment of seeker activation, the missile is not looking into the direction of the target. Or at least not looking precisely enough for seeker to lock on in limited time available.