The responsiveness of homing missiles can be limited by the requirement to maintain adequate stability characteristics of the homing guidance loop in the presence of guidance errors introducted by radome boresight errors. The single-plane analysis of phase I has demonstrated that boresight error slopes large enough in magnitude to cause missile instability, do not necessarily result in degraded missile performance if the large slopes occur only for short durations in loop angle. The phase ii study will extend the phase I results by developing the boresight error tolerances for the improved hawk missile, including the effects of radome error cross coupling and missile slowdown. The resulting tolerances and the actual typical boresight characteristics of the current radome will then be used to redesign the guidance computer boresight error compensation to improve the responsiveness of the improved hawk missile during engagements.