aairfccha wrote:In fact, aren't atmospheric wedge missiles described as "looking like a ray gun?"
That could also be a result of simple speed (which creates heat, which can also lead to the formation of NO and NO2 if the air gets hot enough). The Sprint missiles were glowing white within seconds after launch at an acceleration which was pedestrian by the standards of proper Honorverse ship-to-ship missiles.[/quote]
Though it seems like the crew launched impeller missiles are vastly lower accel than a true ship-to-ship missile.
The later seem to have settled in right around 46,000g in their normal half-power setting; with the cutting edge of CMs up at 130,000g.
But your post got me to go look back at the text-ev around the two impeller launched anti-air missiles we know of - and they seem to be a lot slower
Short Victorious War wrote:The launching charge lit the tower roof like lightning as it spat the Viper missile from the tube. Its tiny impeller drive kicked in almost instantly, accelerating it at over two thousand gravities even as its sensors picked up the glare of reflected laser light from the air car below and in front of it, and its nose dipped.
Flag in Exile wrote:The small, high-tech kamikaze had lost its target when Troubridge dove for the deck, but its seekers had reacquired lock, and it came slashing in at over ten kilometers per second. Even so, the pilot had almost denied it a hit, and its impeller wedge's leading edge caught the pinnace's rearing nose one bare meter aft of the radome.
So the Peep Viper anti-air missile accelerates at around 2000g - and if we assume it has no more than about 20 km of range then from the moment its impeller snaps on it'd have about 1.44 seconds of endurance, and top out at ~28 km/s (about Mach 81) -- or less if it had to maneuver significantly.
For comparison the Sprint missile you mentioned topped out at 7610 mph (3.4 km/s) - or about 1/8th the velocity this Viper seems like it might have.
With the SAM used against Honor's pinnace we don't have acceleration numbers on, but we know the flight time was long enough for the pilot to almost evade it; and hit the ground before the missile's wedge struck the pinnace. And we know its terminal velocity (though it presumably had to arc over and counteract a fair bit of its original vector). But at 10 km/s terminal velocity and seemingly several seconds between launch and impact, it's likely no quicker than its Peep counterpart.
(And that also gives it a terminal velocity a bit over 3x the sprint missile)