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Old February 13th 04, 07:30 PM
Tex Houston
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"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message
...
That might have been a more applicable reason behind the larger warheads

you
found in the SAM's like Bomarc and Nike Hercules, but not in the case of

the
Genie, or especially in the case of the meager warhead yield of the

nuclear
Falcon. Genie had an assured destruction radius of something like 300
meters, IIRC--not likely to get a lot of aircraft that way, though it does
kind of make it hard for the single aircraft you are shooting at to evade

it
(and as it was unguided, no countermeasures could be effective against

it).
Falcon only had around one-sixth the yield of Genie.



People could (and did) stand under a Genie explosion. Your post reminded of
the July 19, 1957 test where just that thing happened. The publicity shot
arranged by Colonel Barney Oldfield was famous at the time. I tried to find
the best site on the web for a description but it appears to no longer be
there, just mentions of it.

On a sadder note I just found out my friend Barney died within the last few
months. See
http://nebraska.statepaper.com/vnews.../3fe1a44fa2747
or http://www.oldfields.org/ .

Regards,

Tex Houston