ChickenOfTheSea
Posts: 579
Joined: 6/7/2008 From: Virginia Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Anthropoid I've been reading some of these wiki pages on all these Bees (B-29, B-36, B-47, etc.) and it sounds to me like any effort to answer the question of whether any one of them was a "good investment" can only be really answered post-hoc. So in effect, unless they turned out to be a bad investment, they were a good investment by simple virtue of the chance that not exploring these developments might have been a bad lack of investment. It sounds like the B-29 had a very troubled development, serious problems with engine design and became "obsolete" pretty quickly as a result of jet fighters. But given how young aviation was at the time, and how rapidly it evolved, it seems like any new system that was not a complete 'loss' must have been a good investment. The B-29 stayed in service till 1960, served in two wars, dropped a great deal of destruction in general, and in particular two of the most famous bombs ever (which helped bring a resistant regime to unconditional surrender), had significantly better range than any other aircraft of its day, and was signficantly advanced for its day (thus driving the evolution of other later models I would think). I don't see how it could be seen as a 'bad' investment. Sounds to me like the B-36 and B-47 were more sketchy, though even with them, as intermediate forms in a transformation from prop to jet and very high altitude very long range how could you argue they were 'bad' investments? Without the B-36 would there have been a B-47? Without the B-47 would a B-52 have been possible? Good points here. My home town was a B-47 base when I was growing up (yeah, I'm a geezer) and many of my classmates were children of B-47 crew members. Unfortunately, some of them lost their fathers due to crashes in training missions. I got to sit in the cockpit of one when I was in 5th grade, but they didn't let me take off. A lot of these early jets owed a lot (positive and negative) to captured German designs and designers. The development of the B-52 owes a lot to experiences with the B-47 and how long have B-52's been in service? Edited to point out geezerness.
< Message edited by ChickenOfTheSea -- 4/10/2010 3:49:54 AM >
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In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice, but in practice, there is. - Manfred Eigen
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