Saturday, November 29, 2025

Peace was their profession. Boeing RB-47s

 


12 comments:

  1. I see Jimmy Stewart waving from the cockpit.

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    1. That was a B29.
      Strategic Air Command

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    2. It's been a long time since I watched it but I'm sure in the movie Strategic Air Command a former B29 pilot is recalled into SAC to fly B36s and then B47s. Jimmy Stewart was qualified to fly the B47 and B52.
      I wonder how many B47s are left. Were they all destroyed as part of SALT?
      Al_in_Ottawa

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    3. You're right Al, I erred. 6 turnin' 4 burnin'.

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    4. SALT I (1972) did not affect bomber numbers at all; besides that theB-47 bomber had been retired for six years by that point. A few reconnaissance and EW versions, RB-47s and EB-47s, continued until 1977.

      SALT II (1979) had limits on number of delivery vehicles, again B-47 was long gone by then.

      START (1991) and and New START (2010) were the treaties that resulted in retirement and actual destruction of some bombers, but this affected only FB-111A and some B-52s.

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  2. A most beautiful example of design.

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  3. There's probably half of the American nation out there that would say war was their profession yet they still roam free.

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  4. My Dad wrenched on those planes in mid/late 50s. - Snakepit

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  5. Some flew from Eielson AFB outside of Fairbanks when I was there as a child in the early Sixties. Brave men headed west to tweak the nose of the Russian bear. Some didn't return.

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  6. And War was just a hobby...

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  7. And they started designing it during WWII, like someone slipped them some tasty aerospace engineering. Just saying, got no proof, just that it appears way forward in a lot of technological aspects the rest of the industry. Took about a decade for this bomber to begin to be out dated. Long time at that stage.

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