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The inside of a can of whoop Ass
View on a full size PC screen...
NMUSAF - B-36J Engineer
Click to make full screen and then use the arrows to rotate around 360 degrees
B36J Covair Peacemaker cockpit
Very cool - my uncle flew those things. I think the ingress/egress is on the port side of the engineers console.
I hardly see any room on the floor for a trap door, but certainly the "remove plug for emergency exit only" isn't the way in! How'd they make this? I don't even need to go since they have the whole museum online. National Museum of the U.S. Air Force - Virtual Tour
What happens when the USAF doesn't want to leave their comfy bunker, but still get you from 8100+ miles away? A little gift from orbit traveling at mach 23...
First one is a Minute Man III ICBM test.
The second is the one that scared the crap out of the Soviets, and it's the Peacekeeper, with 10 warheads (though this picture is either not all of them, or was loaded with two decoys). Had they been using live munitions for the test, each one would have been up to 450KT.
Epic when you consider how ominous it is really is...
Very good ! I worked on the MMII , MMIII and GLCM from 73-94
I had to make these larger... they are great pics-
I had to make these larger... they are great pics-
So, I guess if the MX was launched 2000 miles away, those warheads are in a 1 MOA group........cool!
Marine Brian Dennis brought back a mutt from Iraq. Cool story at SignOnSanDiego.com > News > North County -- Nubs is reunited with Marine owner
He was my Bn CO in boot camp 2002 as a Captain; "Welcome to the eye of the storm, recruit! Hornets baby!" As we crested Mount Motherfucker on the last day of the crucible I could see his antenna wagging in the breeze at the head of the column; two F-18s buzzed us at perhaps 100ft ASL, one inverted. We let out a warcry and charged the remaining quarter mile right behind him. Very motivating. Yes, I cried up there. One day as I was going through my kids bookshelf, I found the kids book and have no clue where it came from but instantly recognized that ugly Devil.
The MX missile was the last mechanical gyroscopically targeted system we made. I've heard / read that the gyroscopes took an INSANE number of man hours (like 500,000) to make. I think each missile had three of them...
The result was a MIRV launch platform that was accurate to within a few meters of the target from over 8000 miles away.
This is one of the reasons is was so feared, in general. We could have replaced the entire arsenal with MX missles, which are better in every aspect than the Minuteman systems... and increased the warheads deploy in field by at least 70%.
Imagine a warhead with 475KT that can hit the building your primary target is in from over 8000 miles away, and you can target it 3-5 times MORE than you already had?
Makes the possibility of a pre-emptive strike feasible.
...and that's what scared the shit out of the Soviet Union. (...and everyone else.)
Seriously, the technology in those missiles was the pinnacle of advanced mechanical designs, as opposed to GPS guided munitions.
I read that the last one was decommissioned in 2005. They are now using the warheads on the Minuteman missiles.
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