Puneet Varma (Editor)

VB 6 Felix

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Place of origin
  
United States

Produced
  
1945

Wars
  
World War II

VB-6 Felix

Type
  
anti-ship missile / guided bomb

In service
  
never used operationally

Designer
  
National Defense Research Committee

The VB-6 Felix was a precision-guided munition developed by the United States during World War II. It was one of the precursors of modern anti-ship missiles.

Created by the National Defense Research Committee, Felix relied on infrared to detect and home on targets, in clear weather, especially ships at sea at night. It was this property which earned the weapon its name, after the ability of cats to see in the dark ("Felix the Cat" was an extremely popular early-20th century cartoon character).

Felix was a 1000-pound (454 kg) general purpose (GP) bomb with an infrared seeker in the nose and octagonal guidance fins in the tail. Unlike other weapons, such as the German Fritz X, Felix was autonomous (what a later generation would call fire-and-forget), though there was a flare in the tail for tracking.

Successful trials led to Felix being put in production in 1945, but the Pacific War ended before it entered combat.

References

VB-6 Felix Wikipedia