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Is jack Northrup finally vindicated?
Jake |
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Jake wrote:
Is jack Northrup finally vindicated? Jake Mr Northrop was vindicated many years ago. During the final build days of the very first HAVE BLUE platform, The Secretary of Defense made a decision. The SecDef authorized full access to HAVE BLUE and the many sub-compartments to one Jack Northrop, aviator, entrepreneur, designer, engineer and legend. Mr Northrop at the time was quite feeble, but as usual gentlemanly, alert, friendly and still with a sharp wit. He was escorted to the HAVE BLUE site and given the one and only "All Access - All Levels" badge to be issued. See, even the Secretary of Defense's clearance message transmitted by the SSO system, had a long string of initials, digraphs and code names after his name, indicating the Sec Def might have access to 90 percent, but not to all. The message ... from SSO DOD, spelled out that Mr Northrop was to be given "the grand tour". Later in the day, after briefings in SCIF and Special Access Required (SAR) rooms, he was escorted to the HAVE BLUE simulator. The simulator operator, a senior USAF command pilot who was one of the principal ground test and simulation engineers, took Mr Northrop for a ride, including refueling, and delivery of a weapon onto a target inside an enemy's capital city. Finally, the honored gentleman was escorted to the hanger floor where he was shown the B2 Spirit Bomber receiving it's final touches for air worthiness. As Mr. Northrop sat in the cockpit, he exclaimed "Now I know why I've lived this long .. to see this, and oh my, this is a wonder!" He passed on to the Great Beyond a few weeks later, secure in the knowledge that his Flying Wing was still alive. |
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Bob Harrington wrote:
CWO4 Dave Mann wrote in : Jake wrote: Is jack Northrup finally vindicated? Jake Mr Northrop was vindicated many years ago. During the final build days of the very first HAVE BLUE platform, The Secretary of Defense made a decision. The SecDef authorized full access to HAVE BLUE and the many sub-compartments to one Jack Northrop, aviator, entrepreneur, designer, engineer and legend. Mr Northrop at the time was quite feeble, but as usual gentlemanly, alert, friendly and still with a sharp wit. He was escorted to the HAVE BLUE site and given the one and only "All Access - All Levels" badge to be issued. See, even the Secretary of Defense's clearance message transmitted by the SSO system, had a long string of initials, digraphs and code names after his name, indicating the Sec Def might have access to 90 percent, but not to all. The message ... from SSO DOD, spelled out that Mr Northrop was to be given "the grand tour". Later in the day, after briefings in SCIF and Special Access Required (SAR) rooms, he was escorted to the HAVE BLUE simulator. The simulator operator, a senior USAF command pilot who was one of the principal ground test and simulation engineers, took Mr Northrop for a ride, including refueling, and delivery of a weapon onto a target inside an enemy's capital city. Finally, the honored gentleman was escorted to the hanger floor where he was shown the B2 Spirit Bomber receiving it's final touches for air worthiness. As Mr. Northrop sat in the cockpit, he exclaimed "Now I know why I've lived this long .. to see this, and oh my, this is a wonder!" He passed on to the Great Beyond a few weeks later, secure in the knowledge that his Flying Wing was still alive. While I have heard this story, I believe 'Have Blue' was the lead-in project that resulted in the F-117 Nighthawk, not the B-2 Spirit. Pedantically yours, Bob ^,,^ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Hi Bob, Yes you are correct; HAVE BLUE was the original overall compartment which housed the feasibility and R&D effort into "Stealthy Aircraft". The B2 was still in it's initial hanger floor construction and development phase when Mr Northrop viewed it. He saw the F117 and was given a complete briefing with videos of various F117 flights. I expect that DoD will declassify the rest of the story one of these days so that historians can view the entire fantastically successful project from start to finish. Cheers, Dave |
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![]() "CWO4 Dave Mann" wrote in message . .. Yes you are correct; HAVE BLUE was the original overall compartment which housed the feasibility and R&D effort into "Stealthy Aircraft". I seem to recall hearing that the Americans were always intrigued by the fact that, during NATO exercises, RAF Vulcans were always difficult to see on radar. |
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On Thu, 22 Nov 2007 08:26:25 -0000, Neil Hoskins wrote:
I seem to recall hearing that the Americans were always intrigued by the fact that, during NATO exercises, RAF Vulcans were always difficult to see on radar. I don't know it seems to me that one of the faults of the US is an attitude that says if it wasn't invented here it doesn't exist. That is one reason that for the most part Russian fighters have seemingly out performed the US fighters. That is they learned from us but we did not learn from them. Jake |
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Peavey_HP_Signature_Guy wrote:
"Neil Hoskins" wrote in message ... "CWO4 Dave Mann" wrote in message . .. Yes you are correct; HAVE BLUE was the original overall compartment which housed the feasibility and R&D effort into "Stealthy Aircraft". I seem to recall hearing that the Americans were always intrigued by the fact that, during NATO exercises, RAF Vulcans were always difficult to see on radar. Given the above...did the RAF ever look at the "stealth" technology in detail and make a decision on it? Just curious : / Chris Do you mean the work done by the great Vice Air Marshal Sir James Haridistan Lacey-Bigglesworth, MC(Bars), DFC(Bars), George Medal (Brs) KC, OG (Companion)? Most likely still quite classified. Cheers, Dave |
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![]() "Peavey_HP_Signature_Guy" wrote in message ... Given the above...did the RAF ever look at the "stealth" technology in detail and make a decision on it? They did, and came up with retiring the Vulcan, and replacing them with the Tornado, which is to be replaced by Typhoon. Typhoon was at one time advertised as a Raptor without stealth, at a fraction of the price. I guess that means the RAF decided against developing pure stealth platfors, although I'm pretty sure they *did* incorporate some of the technology. Stealth is useful, but overrated. During their first peace time overseas deployment in the early 1990s (Gilze-Rijen AB in the Netherlands) we at the GCI station had no problem tracking F-117s on their flights to and from the bombing ranges. In fact, we used to call Wing-Ops to inform them when the birds were about 10 minutes out for recovery. When the US brought the B-2 to Europe (Farnborough, 1996), a BAe/RAF Rapier system had no problem tracking that aircraft either. BAe bragged about it, so the next day it was accompanied by two F-15 escorts. This allowed the USAF to claim that the Rapier crew was not tracking the B-2, but one of the F-15s. Ron -- Non urinat in ventum |
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Ron wrote:
"Peavey_HP_Signature_Guy" wrote in message ... Given the above...did the RAF ever look at the "stealth" technology in detail and make a decision on it? They did, and came up with retiring the Vulcan, and replacing them with the Tornado, which is to be replaced by Typhoon. Typhoon was at one time advertised as a Raptor without stealth, at a fraction of the price. I guess that means the RAF decided against developing pure stealth platfors, although I'm pretty sure they *did* incorporate some of the technology. Stealth is useful, but overrated. During their first peace time overseas deployment in the early 1990s (Gilze-Rijen AB in the Netherlands) we at the GCI station had no problem tracking F-117s on their flights to and from the bombing ranges. In fact, we used to call Wing-Ops to inform them when the birds were about 10 minutes out for recovery. When the US brought the B-2 to Europe (Farnborough, 1996), a BAe/RAF Rapier system had no problem tracking that aircraft either. BAe bragged about it, so the next day it was accompanied by two F-15 escorts. This allowed the USAF to claim that the Rapier crew was not tracking the B-2, but one of the F-15s. Ron -- Non urinat in ventum maybe the transponder was on? %-) redc1c4, just guessing...... -- "Enlisted men are stupid, but extremely cunning and sly, and bear considerable watching." Army Officer's Guide |
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