And it did a hell of a loop when lofting a nuke....a GREAT airplane that never saw a day of planned "combat mission(s)" in the bomber variant that it was designed for --
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And it did a hell of a loop when lofting a nuke....a GREAT airplane that never saw a day of planned "combat mission(s)" in the bomber variant that it was designed for --
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A4s said:a GREAT airplane that never saw a day of planned "combat mission(s)" in the bomber variant that it was designed for --
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And it did a hell of a loop when lofting a nuke....
A more dynamic variant of toss bombing, called over-the-shoulder bombing, or the LABS (Low Altitude Bombing System) maneuver (known to pilots as the "idiots loop"), is a particular kind of loft bombing where the bomb is released past the vertical so it is tossed back towards the target. This tactic was first made public in 1957 at Eglin AFB, when a B–47 entered its bombing run at low altitude, pulled up sharply (3.5 g) into a half loop, releasing its bomb under computer control at a predetermined point in its climb, then executed a half roll, completing a maneuver similar to an Immelmann turn or Half Cuban Eight. The bomb continued upward for some time in a high arc before falling on a target which was a considerable distance from its point of release. In the meantime, the maneuver had allowed the bomber to change direction and distance itself from the target.
I think we made our run-in < 1000' (500'?) to the target -- the maneuvers were designed for nuclear deliveries, so all NUKE-capable crews had to maintain proficiency and get an annual "certification" on the drops as part of SIOP ....
I think we made our run-in < 1000' (500'?) to the target -- the maneuvers were designed for nuclear deliveries, so all NUKE-capable crews had to maintain proficiency and get an annual "certification" on the drops as part of SIOP ....
Some BULLS were obtained -- I got one ... but in general, not a "real accurate" delivery ... but then 1/4 of a mile ain't bad w/ a NUKE. LABS IP and LABS TGT were two of the "BULL" categories on the side of the SKYWARRIOR Theater @ NUW for the monthly bombing competition(s).
Bottom line: a gut's-ball delivery for NUKES and not too particularly accurate. You could almost smell the fear on the radio from the guys in the rake shacks when one would commence a LABS run ...![]()
And now the P-3s clutter it up with Safety "Ses" and SOYs . . . :icon_tongLABS IP and LABS TGT were two of the "BULL" categories on the side of the SKYWARRIOR Theater @ NUW for the monthly bombing competition(s).
Damn, that would be something top see. The B47 was no baby in stature, in fact it was a pretty big assed airplane even by some standards today!
Yeah .. my crew -- me and my former circa-WW2 NAVY enlisted air-gunner-now-jet-B/N (I kid you not) did the first A-6E QAST drop @ Tonopah for the West Coast Medium ATKRON's in 1974 (?) ... quite the cluster-fuck at the end of the day ...I was the Nuke Weapons Training Officer in my first squadron when we were tasked to drop two B-43 on a test range @ Eglin. This was a QAST delivery - Quality Assurance Service Test...
Yeah, in the ol' days the "hero of the month" options were:And now the P-3s clutter it up with Safety "Ses" and SOYs . . . :icon_tong
The Nuclear delivery profile from an A-4 Skyhawk: One man, one bomb, one way....
QUOTE]
It's pronounced nuculear....