B-17 in the movie Thunderball

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I''ve shot a .378 Weatherby a few times, with an enormous charge of IMR 4350 and a Hornady 300, it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be, about like a light 870 slug gun with a 1 oz. slug, not fun, but not really bad. The Magnaporting helped a lot. The little shooting I've done with BP has been with .45 roundballs in a buddy's CVA home-build. It was pretty nice. I was a pretty good pistolero at one time, and spent more of my time with handguns than rifles.
 
You're probably right, I'd forgotten that the early ejection seats were fired by a cartridge, and after a lot of injuries, they switched to rocket-powered seats,
The ejection trainer I rode was a Douglas Escapac III of the A4 Skyhawk variety, and it was a hybrid. It had a cartridge to get the seat up the rail and clear of the cockpit, then a six foot lanyard pulled the pin on the rocket boost which could give it about 450 ft gain from a level flight attitude. Needless to say, the trainer had no rockets, and the rail was extended up to 35 feet with hydraulic "arresting gear" at the top to "re-extend" your compressed vertebrae.
If you've read "Jonathan Livingston Seagull" and absorbed the concept of "perfect speed" (to-"BE THERE!"), then you have a frame of reference for the boom bucket. As the face curtain handles start to come down across your helmet visor, you're looking at the back wall of the Aerophysiology Training Center, and when they clear your line of sight, you're looking through the face curtain across the entire base from atop the third tallest structure on the admin side. Only Base Admin and Paraloft are taller.
Cheers,
Wes
 
I DO know that my back and knees have never been the same after my time in the 82nd,
I know nothing about paratroop chutes, but what videos I've seen imply that they're unsteerable and give the jumper no control of anything. Murderous! I've only jumped a T10, which had steering toggles, and could give you a semblance of a flare for landing by pulling both at once. We were cautioned not to attempt a flared landing until we had 10+ jumps and a jumpmaster approval. I graduated from mech school and moved away after five jumps, so never got there.
Cheers,
Wes
 
The little shooting I've done with BP has been with .45 roundballs in a buddy's CVA home-built.
I have a .45 kit-built Numrich flint Kentucky tack driver, which is fun, but a friend's custom built .36 flint squirrel rifle is a real treat. 42 inch barrel, gain twist rifling, featherweight, and about as much recoil as a .22LR. If I want to introduce a lady to black powder, I get him to come over with his squirrel gun. He shows up dressed like Hawkeye and a grand time is had by all.
Cheers,
Wes
 
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I know that feeling !
After quite a number of very hard military parachuting landings, and then continuing with civilian freefall jumps, all over a period of 20 years, now, thirty years later, I really feel it. Legs and knees are bent and knackered, base of spine and neck and shoulders constantly ache.
"Here, jump with this 60 lb 'Bergen', plus a radio, personal weapon and ammo, plus 200 rounds for the GPMG and six, 2 inch mortar bombs. You'll be fine, no problem."
Yeah, right !!
 
Yep, but at least it made me really want to get out of the aircraft !
And to think, I could lift that load one-handed, and travel cross country for miles. Now, I struggle to lift even 6 lbs, and can only walk, with difficulty, a few yards !
 
After quite a number of very hard military parachuting landings,
A distant cousin of mine dropped out of medical school in his fourth year and was inducted into the Army as an enlisted medic, per the terms of his ROTC scholarship. He wound up attached to HQ, 101st Airborne, which meant that he jumped with every subordinate unit at every exercise. While the organic medics in the various units were tasked with the theoretical combat casualties, the HQ medics dealt with the actual jump injuries, hence got lots of hands on practice. Especially aging senior officers, a little out of shape, who felt they had to show the flag for the troops, and only showed their own vulnerability.
Cheers,
Wes
 
Hi
Thanks for that, interesting if short lived method. Not quite sure how the parrot got picked up safely, but I presume it recovered from the trauma. I presume inanimate objects must have been thrown into the 'bucket' to pick them up?

A related technique is still in use today. Not to pick things up, but to establish the polarization of an antenna.

Certain aircraft in use today (like the E-6 Mercury) have very long wire antennas they trail behind them, specifically to work at VLF for submarine communications. Picture an aircraft, oh say one that might Take Charge And Move Out, in flight with a wire antenna trailing behind, and the length of that antenna is measured in miles. Now realize that vertical polarization of the antenna increases the efficiency of that antenna to communicate with submarines, but a trailing wire is mostly horizontal.

What to do, oh what to do....

So these aircraft occasionally cause a stir with the conspiracy folks when ADS-B tracks show them turning tight circles for extended periods. Yep, they turn tight circles, and the trailing wire spirals down near vertically below them, so they end up with a 1+ mile (up to 5 miles) tall vertical antenna for VLF communications.

T!
 
I believe this Fort was part of the collection in Oregon where the Spruce Goose is. Now owned by the Collings Foundation she was intended to replace 909 on tour but future tours may not happen after a recent FAA decision regarding the crash of 909.
 
Pictures of course, Tie Leader! Show us the result of your handiwork.
Not going to happen until December probably now. Least that was what I was told. I'm going to to pick up a few pieces of some extra wing panel skins from 909 (previously hail damaged) to try a test piece first sometime before that. I'll post those when I finish.
 
Same principal the AC-47/130s use only the messages delivered are of a different nature.
 
I graduated with class WOC class 67-19, I was made a aircraft commander after 200 hours (it took six weeks) and then transfered to guns (UH1-C's) where I flew as an A/C and fire team leader often leading Lts and captians. Not uncommon for WO's to be the command pilot, the roles were reversed when we landed.
 

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