Author Topic: The Saab 36 Nidhögg  (Read 7270 times)

Offline Rickshaw

  • "Of course, I could be talking out of my hat"
The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« on: May 08, 2013, 08:29:28 AM »
The Saab 36 Nidhögg

Sweden's nuclear weapon programme was started after World War II and the American atomic bombing of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

In the early years after the war Sweden made a decision to become a neutral power that could defend itself militarily against any invading power. The biggest threats to Sweden were identified as being Soviet nuclear capabilities and in the late 1940s and 1950s much research was made into nuclear weapons to act as a deterrence to them.

In 1948 the first solid plans on how to create an atomic weapon was presented to the FOA ("Försvarets forskningsanstalt", Swedish Defence Research Agency). Plans were established to run a civilian nuclear power programme in parallel, using domestic uranium resources as nuclear fuel. The Ågesta and Marviken reactors were to be used to produce plutonium for the weapons, while also producing energy. Plans were created to develop initially aircraft to deliver these nuclear weapons, and later on, submarine launched missiles as a means of delivery as well.

All of the nuclear development activities took place at the FOA. The plan was to produce 100 warheads in a timespan of ten years.

During the 1960s the programme rapidly progressed.  The turning point was on 18 August 1968 when a 10 Kiloton device was detonated deep underground in Northern Sweden.   The explosion registered on seismographs around the world but was dismissed as a "minor earth tremor" by the Swedes.  The Soviets and the United States were uncertain whether it had been an earth tremor or not.  Scandanavia and in particular, Northern Sweden, is a seismically active region.   For the Swedes, the event proved to them that they now had a successful design which could be weaponised.  This test was followed by several more, all in the tens of kilotons and finally in a much larger warhead in the 50-60 Kiloton range, 18 months later.  By this time, suspicions were aroused amongst observers.  The Swedes though, again announced that more earthquakes had occurred.  Both superpowers though, started to watch seismic events much more closely in Scandanavia.  The Swedes never conducted another test, having proved the design and it's scaleability.

Officially, all plans for nuclear weapons were scrapped in 1969.  Unofficially, the Nuclear Programme continued in deepest secrecy.  The first weapon produced was a free-fall bomb, with an estimated yeild in the 100 Kilotonne class.  While the Nuclear Programme had come to fruitition, Saab, the Swedish aircraft manufacture had been designing and building the means to carry it.  Several designs were proposed, some more exotic than others.   In the end, taking a leaf from the book of French designer, Marcel Dassault, the decision was taken to simply scale up the Saab 35 Draken fighter.  Utilising the aerodynamic data accumulated from the design and testing of this fighter meant that the design and testing process for the new strike version would be decreased.   The result was the Saab 36 Nidhögg.

Powered by twin license produced Rolls Royce Spey engines, the Nidhögg was capable of Mach 2.5 at altitude.  It could carry a payload of 4,000 lbs, 2,000 nautical miles in it's internal weapons bay.  It had a crew of two. Initially armed with nuclear free-fall bombs, later in it's career it was able to carry the RB-09 "Mjölnir" Nuclear Attack missile which allowed it to attack targets over 400 miles distant.  It was able from bases in Sweden to reach all major targets in the Baltic and even as far afield as Moscow and Murmansk.   The Saab Nidhögg were stationed on remote airfields with hangars built inside tunnels under many meters of granite.  Through out it's service life, the aircraft received several upgrades.  Perhaps the most important were the addition of canards during it's development and the addition of an attack missile late in it's life.  Intended to improve controlability at lower speeds and high angles of attack duing the approach, particularly onto the roadway emergency airfields that the Swedish Air Force expected to be the only ones which were likely to survive a Soviet Nuclear attack, the canards earnt the aircraft it's nickname amongst some of its crew who resisted the Swedish Air Force's official discouragement of such frippery - "Puckelrygg" - "Hunchback" in Swedish. 

The RB-09 "Mjölnir" nuclear attack missile enabled the Nidhögg to be able to attack from outside the Soviet SAM defences.  Named after the hammer used by the Thundergod, Thor, it had a range of over 400 miles.  Powered by a ramjet, the missile flew at Mach 3 and could be pre-programmed to fly a dog-leg course and attack from either low or high altitude.  It carried a 100 Kilotonne warhead.  The Nidhögg carried one missile semi-recessed into its weapons bay under the fuselage.

Nidhögg was deliberately chosen as the name of this remarkable aircraft.  It reflected it's role, as the weapon of last resort.  Nidhögg was of course the "dragon who gnaws at a root of the World Tree, Yggdrasill," in Norse mythology. Nidhögg is said to have been controlled by only one person, the Norse goddess named Hel (Goddess of the underworld for which the Christian realm of Hell is named after).  When Nidhögg was released, Ragnarök - the end of the world - would occur.  The Swedish high command recognised that if there was a need for Nidhögg and it's weapons, then the end of the world had arrived.

The existence of both the Swedish Nuclear weapons and the Saab Nidhögg strike aircraft was not publically revealed until 1993, when the Swedish Government officially announced that as the Cold War was over and the Soviet Union had collapsed, their need was ended.  Throughout the career of the Saab Nidhögg, neither superpower had been able to detect it's existence.  The Swedes had taken special care to only fly the aircraft at night and made sure that it was never left stationed next to a standard Saab 35 Draken fighter, so it's considerably larger size could not be easily ascertained from satellite photos.   Keeping them inside the hangar caves kept them out of view as well.  The revelation came as a surprise to the world.  While the Soviets and the United States had both had their suspiciouns, they had never been able to confirm them. Sweden, with South Africa were the only two nuclear powers to unilaterally relinquish Nuclear weapons of massed destruction.  Today, one Saab 36 Nidhögg resides in the Swedish Air Force Museum at Malmen Airbase in Malmslätt, just outside of Linköping, Sweden. Where it is displayed next to an RB-09 "Mjölnir" missile. A remarkable aircraft that thankfully, never flew an operational mission.











The Model

The model is a combination of a venerable Lindberg Saab Draken and a Heller TF-104 forward fuselage.   Despite it's age and its several toylike features, the Lindberg kit had little flash and fitted remarkably well.  The TF-104 nose went on extremely well as well, almost as if it was designed to.  The undercarriage comes from a spare Mirage IV set I had in the spares box as do the drop tanks.  The tail cones are Maestro Draken ones.  Along with quite a bit of Milliput, PSR and effort, the aircraft has been painted in a combination of Vallejo and Tamiya acrylics by hand.  The bang seats are Pavla ones.  The missile is scratch built from spares in the spares box (couple of pods/fuel tanks and some plasticard for fins).  The cart it's posed on is a modified Bloodhound one.  The markings were supplied by Pellson (thanks very much!) after I discovered my stock of Swedish roundels had all perished.  I originally wanted to paint it in splinter but then found out only two Drakens ever wore splinter so decided to go with the green/dark blue scheme.  This fitted well with the subterfuge contained in the story.

Offline Volkodav

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #1 on: May 08, 2013, 09:08:42 AM »
Top stuff, luv it

Offline apophenia

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #2 on: May 08, 2013, 09:42:39 AM »
Love your Nidhögg concept and the model is totally believable!  :)
"It happens sometimes. People just explode. Natural causes." - Agent Rogersz

Offline Frank3k

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #3 on: May 08, 2013, 11:56:13 AM »
This looks great! It reminds me of a TSR-2 or a Tu-26 in some aspects. The RB-09 looks good; I love the wings!

Offline father ennis

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #4 on: May 08, 2013, 01:53:54 PM »
Has anyone besides me noticed there are two of this post ??????   Excellent build,too !!!!
I may be old but I'm not dead ... yet anyway ... !!!    And NO I did not know Richard III !!!!!!

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #5 on: May 08, 2013, 02:29:35 PM »
 :)
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

You can't outrun Death forever.
But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline Rickshaw

  • "Of course, I could be talking out of my hat"
Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #6 on: May 08, 2013, 07:03:16 PM »
Yeah, I just noticed there were two.  There was a problem when I posted it.   Must have double-tapped.   Is there anyway for Greg to merge the two topics?

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #7 on: May 08, 2013, 07:08:51 PM »
Fixed
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

You can't outrun Death forever.
But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline father ennis

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #8 on: May 09, 2013, 05:07:12 AM »
I don't care what you guys say,Greg is a good man ... !!!   
I may be old but I'm not dead ... yet anyway ... !!!    And NO I did not know Richard III !!!!!!

Offline ChernayaAkula

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #9 on: May 09, 2013, 09:54:18 AM »
Brilliant model and backstory!  :) The TF-104 cockpit certainly looks like it was never meant to be on anything but this very aircraft!

<...>
Nidhögg was deliberately chosen as the name of this remarkable aircraft.  It reflected it's role, as the weapon of last resort.  Nidhögg was of course the "dragon who gnaws at a root of the World Tree, Yggdrasill," in Norse mythology. Nidhögg is said to have been controlled by only one person, the Norse goddess named Hel (Goddess of the underworld for which the Christian realm of Hell is named after).  When Nidhögg was released, Ragnarök - the end of the world - would occur.  The Swedish high command recognised that if there was a need for Nidhögg and it's weapons, then the end of the world had arrived. <...>


This background reminds me of Tarkovsky's "The Sacrifice". At some points in the film, you can hear some jet aircraft, but you never see them. They may just have been the Saab Nidhöggs.  :)
Cheers,
Moritz

"The appropriate response to reality is to go insane!"

Offline Buzzbomb

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #10 on: May 09, 2013, 10:39:50 AM »
like it.. great work on the fuselage mating and the scheme works as well.

Plus I really love the back story.. sadly one of the things in whiffer world I cannot really get my head around when I try to do it myself.

Offline elmayerle

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #11 on: May 09, 2013, 10:51:27 AM »
Beautiful job of blending a variety of elements together and an excellent back story.  I'm working on my own approach to the A36 by mating the same Draken kit you used with a 1/72 F-105F.  I only hope I can do half as well as you did.

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #12 on: May 09, 2013, 02:24:49 PM »
I don't care what you guys say,Greg is a good man ... !!!

Rubbish!!!  You don't know him like I do...
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

You can't outrun Death forever.
But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline Dr. YoKai

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #13 on: May 10, 2013, 12:41:17 AM »
 Very nice looking build, and a crackin' concept too...sort of a Swedish Mirage 4000.

Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #14 on: May 14, 2013, 07:25:50 AM »
That is all kinds of great!

Offline M.A.D

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Re: The Saab 36 Nidhögg
« Reply #15 on: May 19, 2013, 09:03:34 PM »
Saab 36
Why not! In essence, its not to much different to what Dassault did with their Mirage IV - a scaled-up and twin engine development off the Mirage III
Well done!!

M.A.D