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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Tue, 22 Jun 2004 22:46:32 -0400, "Kevin Brooks" wrote: The A3D was not the only member of that family that experienced such a problem. Knew a guy who flew B-66's (and later EB-66's) who told me that it was unnerving to do a bomb drop from the Destroyer because it sometimes had a habit of having bombs "bounce" around in the bomb bay after release before actually leaving the aircraft (which may explain why its career as a bomber was rather short). Brooks Early prototypes of the F-105 attempted conventional rigging of the B-28-RE in the internal bomb-bay. No one anticipated the boundary layer along the fuselage at 600 knots IAS. When the bombbay opened for bomb release, shackles opened and bomb dropped a few inches but didn't come through the high speed airflow. Bombbay doors reclosed with bomb simply resting on the doors. (Shape--of course, not hot weapon!) Solution was a "displacing gear"--a roughly six-inch diameter, pneumatic piston that had about a two foot throw. Charged to a couple of thousand pounds/sq-inch, the piston was said to either push the bomb down or the airplane up. All became moot because the airplane never carried an internal nuke operationally. Displacing gear was still in place, however. The boundary layer flow was the reason for the B-66 problem as well, from what I remember of the gent's explanation. But in his case ISTR he experienced it when dropping conventional ordnance during a training evolution; I remember him distinctly mentioning "bombs" (plural) thudding around, and IIRC he indicated a little pull up on the nose was used to ensure their eventual departure. I do know he said it was not a pleasant experience! Brooks Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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