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#1
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![]() "Ed Majden" wrote in message news:Rwxyb.533404$pl3.92056@pd7tw3no... What makes you think that these would have been high level blasts??? Tactics with the B52 was a ground hugger to avoid SAMS and radar detection. Incinerating a Bear full of nuclear warheads would have created a severe nuclear fall out problem! The Bomarc entered service in 1959, I believe ground-hugging became the penetration tactic of choice some years after that. |
#2
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"Ed Majden" wrote in message news:Rwxyb.533404$pl3.92056@pd7tw3no...
"Chad Irby" You should remember that with small fission warheads at high altitudes, there is very little fallout, and practically zero compared to even a single megaton-level ground strike. What makes you think that these would have been high level blasts??? Tactics with the B52 was a ground hugger to avoid SAMS and radar detection. Incinerating a Bear full of nuclear warheads would have created a severe nuclear fall out problem! Not to mention that they planned on using the same size of warhead over most of the continental US for air defense.. U.S. Bomarc sites were near the Canada/U.S. border Really? I'd take a gander at a map of US Bomarc sites if I were you, unless you consider places like Newport News, VA "near the Canadian border". Brooks snip |
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"Ed Majden" ) writes:
"Darrell A. Larose" A.V. Roe Canada CF-105 Avro Arrow, a long range interceptor that only had a 700 nm range. The is bearly enough to fly from CFB Cold Lake to Whitehorse, Yukon. The concept as a interceptor that would meet a wave of Soviet bombers over the high Arctic, but didn't have the legs to get there! The replacement was the IM99B Bomarc SAM complete with nuclear warhead. Range of that was in the 200-400 miles bracket, a great place to have a nuclear weapon go off and scatter radiation over Canadian cities and towns. I guess the yanks didn't consider that when they gave them to us! Good thing they were never used, eh! Only good thing about the Bomarc was to be assigned to the debriefing, parking and turn around crews. ;-) The Arrow's replacement was the CF-101 Voodoo, complete with nuclear tipped Genie missles. |
#4
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I'll start that one off with the P-39 Aircobra. Any more?
Arthur Kramer For WW2 era you can't ignore the Brewster F2A Buffalo which was a great handling machine in its earliest versions but was too heavy and underpowered to face the Japanese with any significant success. Though like the P-39 in the USSR the Finnish Air Force did wonders with the Brewster when facing aircraft that were contemporaries in design era. also the Heinkel 177 Grief. John Dupre' |
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#6
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![]() ArtKramr wrote: I'll start that one off with the P-39 Aircobra. Any more? Regards, Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer Mig 1.44? Has it ever really flown to spec? Bob -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#7
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ArtKramr wrote:
I'll start that one off with the P-39 Aircobra. Any more? The successful failu the F-16. Successful (in filling the unneeded slot of the F-5: small and nimble, with a good self defense capability and light- weight severely-limited bombing capability). Ultimately successful, too, (though still limited) when weapons came along which didn't depend upon the launching aurcraft to be accurate: AMRAAM, and the pod-installed capability for shooting HARMS, and for guiding LGBs. Failure, though, in filling the shoes of F-4s, too-rapidly retired to make room for the stripped little sportscar of the skies. |
#8
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"Dweezil Dwarftosser" escreveu na mensagem
... The successful failu the F-16. Is it correct to say that the F-16 is also implicated on the failure of the F-20 Tigershark project ?? In brief : - F-20 should be an aircraft cleared for export for non-NATO countries (F-16 weren't cleared for that) - F-16 were cleared for export (Seems like General Dynamics was in deep financial trouble) - F-20 program went down the drain Does that kind of affirmation have some veridical background or is it just another BS that can be found in some "not very reliable" books and magazines? |
#9
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![]() "Vicente Vazquez" wrote in message ... "Dweezil Dwarftosser" escreveu na mensagem ... The successful failu the F-16. Is it correct to say that the F-16 is also implicated on the failure of the F-20 Tigershark project ?? In brief : - F-20 should be an aircraft cleared for export for non-NATO countries (F-16 weren't cleared for that) - F-16 were cleared for export (Seems like General Dynamics was in deep financial trouble) - F-20 program went down the drain Does that kind of affirmation have some veridical background or is it just another BS that can be found in some "not very reliable" books and magazines? Northrop developed the F-20 on speculation and all aviation is politics. Some have lamented the F-16 being made available, as some sort of conspiracy against Northrop, but export law changes were a part of the times for the entire arospace industry. |
#10
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In article ,
"Tarver Engineering" writes: "Vicente Vazquez" wrote in message ... "Dweezil Dwarftosser" escreveu na mensagem ... The successful failu the F-16. Is it correct to say that the F-16 is also implicated on the failure of the F-20 Tigershark project ?? In brief : - F-20 should be an aircraft cleared for export for non-NATO countries (F-16 weren't cleared for that) - F-16 were cleared for export (Seems like General Dynamics was in deep financial trouble) - F-20 program went down the drain Does that kind of affirmation have some veridical background or is it just another BS that can be found in some "not very reliable" books and magazines? Northrop developed the F-20 on speculation and all aviation is politics. Some have lamented the F-16 being made available, as some sort of conspiracy against Northrop, but export law changes were a part of the times for the entire arospace industry. Dangit, John! I'll say this for you, when you're wrong, you're wrong, but when you're right, you're right. Northrop certainly was gambling on selling the F-5G/F-20 to the same customers who'd bought the F-5A/E - nations that coulsn't get approval to purchase the Fighter of Choice (F-104 or F-4, in the F-5's day), or who couldn't affort to fly/maintain the more sophisticated jets. Unfortunately for Northrop, the world had changed. The export restrictions were loosened, and a lot of smaller countries realiezed that they could keep F-16s running. Sometimes you guess right, and sometimes you guess wrong. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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