Saturday, February 15, 2025

What a machine!

 


23 comments:

  1. SITREP: no airworthy Peacemakers exist, the four surviving airframes are all on static display. Therefore, this is an old photo. I was a bit saddened.

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    1. Looks like an early prototype—no jets.

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    2. A and B series were built without jet engines. B-36C were planned but built as B-36B. Many B-36B were later upgraded to D configuration, with jets. There were also new-built B-36D. All the B-36A were modified to reconnaissance RB-36E which also had the four jets. Everything after B-36D had jets.

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  2. https://youtu.be/9FJVxtTNjJk?feature=shared

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  3. They had one on display at Chanute AFB, it's big!

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    1. Spent a winter there and they had the flight line filled with great planes. Cold as hell too.

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  4. One of the early samples, got the six turnin (props), but not the four burnin (Jets).

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  5. There's a photo of a B-29 and a B-36 parked together on the Wikipedia B-36 page. Shows just how HUGE the B-36 actually is.

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    1. Yep, seen it !
      the 29 span will nearly fit under ONE of its wings

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  6. In the late 50s in Dallas, I saw, heard and felt one fly over my neighborhood at an extremely low altitude.

    It blotted out the sun and the rumble rattled the windows as I stood in my backyard feeling the engine’s vibrations in my chest. Our poor dog went scampering into the garage with her tail between her legs….

    It was a close encounter of the Convair kind……they were stationed or flew out of Carswell AFB, Ft Worth at the time.

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    1. They were actually built there.

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    2. I saw one in flight about that time frame also, down in the RGV and the experience was much the same, without the dog. The next time I saw or heard anything that big and loud was a C5A in the landing pattern at Tan Son Nhut passing overhead at very low altitude.

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    3. You saw a C5 in Vietnam?

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  7. Can't recall where I heard it, but, because of the B-36's immensity, at some point someone dubbed it The Aluminum Overcast.

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    1. Aluminum overcast was the nickname they gave to the bomber missions in the ETO in WWII.

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    2. I knew I'd heard "aluminum overcast" for the B-36, here it is in this Wikipedia quote: "Convair touted the B-36 as the 'aluminum overcast', a so-called 'long rifle, giving SAC truly global reach." Source . . . : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convair_B-36_Peacemaker

      Convair seems to have appropriated the term from that given to WWII ETO bomber formations for its huge, single B-36.

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    3. My book on the B36 is titled "Magnesium Overcast" as much of the airframe was built from a magnesium alloy. That included the flaps initially but aluminium replaced magnesium because magnesium couldn't cope with the stress. The recon versions had a larger section of the fuselage made from aluminium as well as magnesium couldn't cope with the pressurisation cycles.

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  8. Yah gotta give 'em props.

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  9. Amazing just how large that plane was. Wow.

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  10. Giant flying pepperoni!

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  11. Seen the duct work for the engines under the nacelles, amazing sheetmetal work.

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  12. They were built with an alloy containing strontium. That had to be machined and dismantled carefully because of low levels of radiation from the strontium. The dust of magnesium alloys also could ignite.

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