trexx wrote: |
It's been my understanding the reactor was a proof of concept for safely operating a nuclear reactor while airborne and was not 'hooked' up to the propulsion system of a B-36 at all. |
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Yes, there are those who go by the "official" sanitized story, so as to minimize the apparent risk to the public if the darned thing crashed or developed a coolant/steam leak.
If you think about it Trexx, it does not make sense to have an operating atomic reactor with it's pump driven coolant loop, producing tons of horsepower in heat in an airborne platform, and not do anything with it, when hooking a turbine/generator set to is is a very simple matter, as well as running the power cables to each engine, which would be far simpler then the typical hydraulic and fuel lines.
This version was good press to placate the public (yeah, those Air Force guys really didn't use the reactor's power output while operating it?) as well as throw off Russian spies in the U.S. at the time.
This is not unlike the disinformation regarding the "flying saucers", which until recently exposed on a NOVA/PBS special were thought to be Sci-Fi fiction novel "hype". As it turns out, the Germans actually had them successfully operational, which was captured by the Russians who freely intruded our airspace off-and-on all during the Cold War Years.
You might consider subscribing to an outfit like the Military Book Club, which in addition to having a lot of the nice Osprey publicaltions, as well as others for the scale modeller, is now getting various sorts of then top-secret Cold War expose's in print. It can be an eye-opener.
As a for instance, I literally had a Korean War vet emphatically deny that the top secret mission called "Operation Broken Reed" ever occured. This was a top secret mission where we flew some spies inbehind Chinese lines under the cover of a crashed B-29 crew to assess Chinese military strength. The veteren who wrote this book had to break his vow to lifetime secrecy to write this book.
To underscore his "expetise" in knowing that this newly revealed writing is false, in his adamacy, he told me how he was amongst the U.S. Army veterens at the slugfest during the Chosin Reservoir campaign. I still fail to see how his position as a U.S. Army grunt qualified him to be "in the know" regarding a top secret mission prdered by President Truman.
My impression is that he "knew it was false" was because he is still stuck in the official mentality, repeating the rhetoric as told to him by the Government, without considering the possibility of this occuring as a factor as well. Also, he kind of a belligerant attitude regarding "Those guys who wrote books who weren't really there", failing to hear my comment that this book was written by a veteren.
As the famous Fench author Voltaire once wrote, "None are so blind as those who can see but will not see".
Cheers
Tom T
Tom T
“Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”-Henry Ford
"Except in the fundamentals, think and let think"- J. Wesley
"I am impatient with stupidity, my people have learned to live without it"-Klaatu: "The Day the Earth Stood Still"
"All my men believe in God, they are ordered to"-Adolph Hitler