"Jcarr" (jcarr)
11/21/2019 at 23:28 • Filed to: Planelopnik | 6 | 17 |
Shamelessly stolen from r/aviation.
CB
> Jcarr
11/21/2019 at 23:34 | 5 |
I would trust all except one of those to be able to fly over British Columbia and not lose a nuke.
facw
> Jcarr
11/21/2019 at 23:39 | 1 |
No sure on the date here, but I think it’s not impossible that one or both of the two in the top left are still flying. The last B-52 was built in ‘62 and the last KC-135 in ‘65.
gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
> Jcarr
11/21/2019 at 23:42 | 2 |
its crazy how tiny the b50 looks to the 36
oldmxer
> Jcarr
11/21/2019 at 23:55 | 0 |
B-36 “Peacemaker” could fly over the pole and drop on ruskies and come home on one tank, never had to use in anger
Only Vespas...
> Jcarr
11/22/2019 at 00:03 | 2 |
It’s also crazy how big the Voodoo looks next to the F-86. It may be the perspective, but she’s almost as big as the Canberra.
Chariotoflove
> Jcarr
11/22/2019 at 00:11 | 1 |
I salute whoever arranged that picture for us to enjoy.
glemon
> Only Vespas...
11/22/2019 at 00:26 | 1 |
Noticed the same thing
Distraxi's idea of perfection is a Jagroen
> facw
11/22/2019 at 00:34 | 0 |
What about the C-130? A s recently as 2015 the USAF still ha d 50+ year old Hercs in service: dunno about now.
facw
> Distraxi's idea of perfection is a Jagroen
11/22/2019 at 01:04 | 0 |
I’m not 100% sure, but I think the older C-130s would have been replaced. The C-130 has of course been in continuous production, and Congress tends to make sure the Air Force keeps ordering new ones.
facw
> Distraxi's idea of perfection is a Jagroen
11/22/2019 at 01:15 | 0 |
I’m not sure how that tail number works though. There is an L-100 (civilian C-130) serial number 5022, that has apparently flown for Ethiopia sometime recently):
I don’t think they are the same plane, and the cockpit window configuration is different, but who knows.
Tristan
> Distraxi's idea of perfection is a Jagroen
11/22/2019 at 03:01 | 0 |
That’s an A- model. there are still some H-models and maybe one or two E-models kicking around, but they’re all slowly getting shit canned in favor of J-models.
I spent 8 years turning wrenches on 130s. They're a hell of an aircraft.
ttyymmnn
> gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
11/25/2019 at 10:04 | 0 |
ttyymmnn
> Jcarr
11/25/2019 at 10:04 | 0 |
That’s a great picture.
user314
> facw
11/25/2019 at 10:35 | 1 |
I can’t say for sure on the KC-135, but that’s a tall tail B-52, B-E model, which was probably dismantled at AMARC sometime in the 80s:
Aside from Balls 8, the NASA NB-52B which was in active service until 2004, all the BUFFs flying now are H models.
If I were a betting man, I’d say that Grumman Albatross is still flying somewhere though.
gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
> ttyymmnn
11/26/2019 at 23:41 | 0 |
I was amazed how tiny the 17 looked upclose. the crew were really crammed in there.
ttyymmnn
> gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
11/26/2019 at 23:54 | 0 |
A few years ago, I paid a few bucks to climb through a B-17. I was blown away by how small it is inside. I had to turn sideways and suck in my fat gut to get down the catwalk through the bomb bay. When I climbed out, I saw this stencil:
Max crew weight: 1200 lbs. And that’s with a crew of ten . So that’s an average of just 120 pounds per crewman. Granted, people were smaller and thinner back then, and most of those crewmen were 18-year-0ld farm boys. But still. No way you could find 10 guys that small to crew that plane today.
ttyymmnn
> gmporschenut also a fan of hondas
11/26/2019 at 23:56 | 0 |
The B-17 was also very much a product of 1930s thinking. It was, in many ways, not much more than an enlarged Boeing 247 . It took it’s first flight in 1935.