Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: RAIDER14 on November 07, 2005, 10:46:20 PM
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was reading about the B-36,cool stuff:aok
http://www.airbornegrafix.com/HistoricAircraft/ClassicAC/B36.htm
http://www.air-and-space.com/peacemkr.htm
they started design and production on the B-36 in the 40's to bad it never saw action in ww2 or the cold war or any other wars:aok
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"to bad it never saw action in ww2 or the cold war or any other wars"
Be very happy that it never saw action.
J_A_B
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B-36H serial number 51-5712 was modified as a nuclear-reactor testbed. The object of this particular conversion was to test the effects of
nuclear reactor radiation on instruments, equipment, and airframe and to study shielding methods.
A nuclear reactor (which did not actually power the aircraft) was mounted in the aft bomb bay. The crew was housed entirely in a modified
compartment in the fuselage nose section. The compartment was composed of lead and rubber, and entirely surrounded the crew.
The aircraft was redesignated NB-36H. It bore the name Crusader on the fuselage side. Its first flight was made on September 17, 1955.
Flying alongside the NB-36H on every one of its flights was a C-97 transport carrying a platoon of armed Marines
ready to parachute down and surround the test aircraft in case it crashed. A total of 47 flights were made up to March of 1957.
:eek:
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Be very happy that it never saw action.
yeah good thing it didn't see action in the cold war becuase if it did there would be no aces high for any 1 to play today becuase if it was used that would have been only in all out nuclear warfare which would result in billions of lives lost
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Carswell and The Last B-36 (http://www.cowtown.net/proweb/last_one.htm) Carswell was designed for the B-36. It had the longest, heaviest, concrete runway at the time to handle the take-off load of the B-36.
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The transport version XC-99 was just as impressive.
747 capabilities of 400 passengers & 7000nm range in the 1940s, but at half the speed.
early experimental B-36 landing gear....
(http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/research/bombers/xb36-13.jpg)
Simlar gear on a P-40
(http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/research/p40-3.jpg)
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Originally posted by Vulcan
:eek:
If I remember correctly - the reactor was fired up at altitude - and the pod'd turbines designed by GE were dual fuel. They could burn fuel and when the reactor spooled up, switched over to a closed cycle loop and could run the turbines off the reactor via heat exchangers.
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Saw 'Strategic Air Command' again recently. The B36 features heavily. The film is worth buying for those sequences alone.
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...and when compared to a B29! ;)
(http://www.btinternet.com/~nexx/Convair.jpg)
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Just be glad you don't have to try to shoot it down with .50 cal ammo in Aces High.
:aok
Now that would be the Uber Perk.
- SEAGOON