Another B-36 Peacemaker pic...this really puts its size into perspective. 

Didn't give aHe makes it sound like it was chiselled from a block of raw steel.
"No calculators", my arse. There were desktop calculators for the repetitive mundane stuff, and thousands of guys doing calcs by hand, too.
Ball turret trainer/simulator at Harlingen Air Force Base, Texas. January 11, 1945. It looks as though the rails on the floor may have carried "targets" for the gunners to track, mimicking the movements of enemy fighters.
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I may be off here but is it not surprising that so large engines are running and no Smoke exhaust fumes at all.
Thanks to expert mechanics.I may be off here but is it not surprising that so large engines are running and no Smoke exhaust fumes at all.
Would not have any sophisticated ignition or fueling control still appears to run cleanly
vague memory arthur godfrey saying they used similar flyers with 100 pound (?) bombs - one at each strut to wing.. Atlantic antisubmarine patrol iirc...and it's very vague... I heard it somewheres...longtimeago, and maybe it's a legend. Sounds fun though!Don't believe the article says.... but this is probably the only air to air victory the venerable Piper Cub can claim. Yeah, you read that right... two guys in a Piper Cub shot down a German aircraft during WWII.
"11 April 1945: 1st Lieutenant Merritt Duane Francies, Field Artillery, USA, and forward observer Lieutenant William S. Martin, 71st Armored Field Artillery Battalion, 5th Armored Division, were flying a Piper L-4H Grasshopper on a reconnaissance mission near Dannenberg, Germany. This was Francies’ 142nd combat mission.
The Grasshopper (Piper Model J3C-65D) was named Miss Me!? Its U.S. Army serial number was 43-29905, and it was marked 54 ☆ J.
The two airmen saw an enemy Fieseler Fi 156 Storch flying beneath them. The Storch was similar to the Grasshopper. Both were single engine, high-wing monoplanes with fixed landing gear. The Storch was larger and faster, but both airplanes had similar missions during the War.
Francies put his L-4H into a dive and overtook the Luftwaffe airplane.
Both American officers carried M1911 .45-caliber semi-automatic pistols, with which they fired on the Fieseler. Both officers emptied the 7-round magazines, then reloaded. The enemy airplane began to circle.
Lieutenant Francies approached again, coming to within an estimated 30 feet (9 meters) of the German airplane. Both opened fire again, striking the Storch in the windshield and in a fuel tank. It went into a spin, then crashed. Francies landed his airplane nearby.
The two German crewmen got out of the wrecked Fi 156 and tried to run, but the observer had been wounded in the foot. Lieutenant Martin fired a warning shot and the German pilot stopped, then surrendered.
The captured airmen were turned over to an American tank crew. Francies later said, “I never found out their names. They could have been important, for all I know. We turned them over to our tankers about 15 minutes later after the injured man thanked me many times for bandaging his foot. I think they thought we would shoot them.”
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Nothing, I mean nothing on media, local or world news here, before or after.Largest airplane ever built. Very helpful when shooting large hypersonic vehicles into the heavens
One of my closest engineering buddies, Dr. HIH (Herb) Saravanamuttoo wrote the computer program that set the scheduling of the air intake and exhaust nozzles (those two things are absolutely crucial to supersonic flight). Without correct intake and exhaust nozzle schedules, the Concorde could never have flown commercially and would have had a fuel range of less than an hour at supersonic speeds - versus more than four hours the aircraft achieved on a daily basis.Didn't give aabout the commentary; I just marvelled at the engineering
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