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WOW! Those shots with the "horsecollar" (external) JATO and
water/alcohol injection were obviously taken with a lightweight fuel load, no? I was awestruck during "bomber stream" launchs, after dusk at Davis Monthan AFB. The max gross weight of a fully loaded "E" model was many thousand pounds over design max gross take-off weight. After the first one or two had left a heavy black smokescreen on the runway, one could watch the next one thunder along, and see the wing tip navigation lights rise well up above the runway, while the tail position light maintained it's altitude all the way down the runway. (B-47 wings flew higher than the fuselage when at or near max gross weight) I think complete emptying (and lightening) of the water/alcohol tanks (de-ionized water in warm weather) kept them from flying down mainstreet of Nogales, Mexico. I was told, and I think it must have be true, that that aircraft, so configured, would not lift off in the runway length available, during a hot day, at Davis Monthan AFB. The reason that practice "bomber streams" were exercised AFTER the heat of the day. Thanks for the pics, those were the days, no? Old Chief Lynn |
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Great pictures!
What I have not seen are the JATO take-offs with a much sharper angle of attack as I'd witnessed at the then USAF Brize Norton, when I was a youngster. As soon as we kids saw that silver shark's fin passing Easterly between the trees parallel to Milestone Road in Carterton (accompanied by the tell-tale goddamn awful screeching noise) we all ran down to the Westerly end of the runway and clung on to the chain link fencing, too scared to go further West where the fencing kinked in and much closer to the runway, just in case! The angles of attack seemed much closer to the Vulcan's, one which indicentally passed through USAF Brize Norton one day, promptly nosed up and vanished into the cloud bank without fuss. Whether with the B47 that was a noise abatement thing I don't know (they never did it after about 6pm until morning but practiced 'circuits and bumps' solidly through the night) but we did joke that at the usual shallower angle of take-off, it was possible to poke the aircraft with a stick even by the time it had passed over Upper Heyford. Richard. |
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