WELCOME

Welcome to my blog. It is called Eaves-droppings because many of my short pieces arise from comments I overhear in public places. These comments trigger ideas, thoughts, recollections and even stories. Some are pure stimulus-response, stream of concsiousness reactions.

Cellphones have made my field of observation much richer.

I hope you will enjoy my wandering through public places.

Contact me at ronp70000@aol.com with your comments and observations.
Ron

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

BOMBING IN THE TIME OF OZZIE AND HARRIET


BOMBING IN THE TIME OF OZZIE AND HARRIETT

The tone came on clearly through the helmet earphones. Even with the sound of the engine at near full throttle, and the wind rushing past the canopy the tone was strong and clean. The horizontal needle on the LABS dropped to the bottom of the instrument and I pulled steadily back on the control stick counting “One potato, Two potato” to get the exact profile. The needle centered at 4 1/2 G’s and I held it steady. The vertical needle indicated the position of the wings so a perfect + meant I was flying the plane to the right position in space. I continued to hold the pickle down, the button on the control stick that was used to release bombs, and after about 3 seconds and with a pitch angle of about 49O the bomb was ejected from the centerline station on the bottom of the airplane. The thump was reassuring, and the slight increase in G load didn’t matter since the bomb, I suppose it should be called a weapon, which weighed about 1700#, was on its way to the target. The sharp smell of cordite, that’s what other people have called it at least, filled the cockpit and then quickly disappeared. Now, I was working for myself. I had done all that I could to put the weapon on the target and now it was time to get out of there. The nose continued to come up to vertical, and I looked over my shoulder to find the ground for a reference. A few seconds more and the nose passed through the horizontal. Inverted at about 1800’ the airspeed had bled off from 275kts to a little over 90 kts, slightly above stall speed. The nose continued to fall through the horizon and the airspeed began to increase slowly. I had to be easy on the controls so that the plane wouldn’t fall out of the sky. A gentle touch on the control stick to let the nose descend a little more and I slowly began to gain a little more airspeed. Now the controls would be more effective, so that I could roll the wings level and begin a gentle pull out. I had done this hundreds of times in practice on the bombing range at Fallon, NV. The official name for the maneuver was the Medium Angle Loft, the aerobatic maneuver was the Half Cuban Eight, but to all of us, it was the Idiot Loop. Practice for this delivery was not particularly safe and several pilots were lost during training, but the accuracy was surprisingly good, well within 100’. (There is a phrase or homily that goes “Close only counts in Horseshoes and Atom bombs.” My guess is that the original version had hand grenades in place of atom bombs.)

No need to be at the 50’ that I had held from the Initial Point (IP) to the pull up where the tone had come on; retracing my previous course was not of much concern since the people on the ground that I had awakened were going to be really busy in a couple of minutes, they had a lot more to worry about than a single navy airplane flying fast through their backyards. I figured I needed a couple of hundred feet of cushion to maintain control when the light flash would blind me and a few seconds later when the pressure wave would overtake me. Was I outside the lethal range of the effects, the thermal and overpressure that would be destroying everything I had just flown over? Who knew! We were told that we could escape, but the flash would certainly penetrate the hand I held over one eye, and we didn’t have the gold impregnated visors on our old helmets that became opaque under illumination from a very bright light source yet. Those came later and went to the big guys. The radiation didn’t matter since it would be hours before I started to feel any of the consequences and I would be back home by then– I hoped. Still. If I could see, I figured I had a pretty good chance of getting back to the carrier – perhaps a better chance than it had of surviving the certain attach that would ensue. But there were options, and I had looked at some airfields on the way in and knew where there were some straight sections of beach that I could land on gear up.

The primitive weapons of the ‘50s took a lot of care and attention on route to the target. After launch from the carrier there was a check list to complete that got the bomb ready to detonate. The central fin had to be lowered, the U235 (I recalled it as plutonium) ball had to be inserted into the high explosive sphere using a small electric motor, and other systems had to be armed and monitored through a control panel that had been installed in the cockpit. We were given a small case that contained fuses, spare lamp bulbs and a piece of metal that looked like a bottle opener to pull circuit breakers with. I had signed for the bomb when it was loaded. If I had to divert, I knew how to take it apart to retrieve the U235 sphere, and was expected to keep it with me until I could find a responsible party to take possession and sign for it. Strange set of circumstances to be considering while a nuclear exchange (or should that be called the end of civilization? That term “nuclear exchange” may be the biggest euphemism of all time!) was going on. Strange too that considering these contingency plans tended to create a false sense of normalcy in what was certainly a world gone crazy. (Another bizarre thought: Would I get radiation burns on my leg as it swung back and forth as I carried it to the BOQ room at a divert base?) For more information about the MK7, check the quite extensive discussion at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_7_nuclear_bomb

The catapult launch was always a couple of hours before sunrise, and there was the predictable intense relaxation that came with the warmth of the sun, the brightening of the world outside, and the easing of the tension of the launch. I was alone and on my own, and it was the first time I had not been in a two plane formation. Cruising a hundred or so feet off the water gave a surprisingly safe and secure feeling. The big radial reciprocating engine didn’t need high altitude to be efficient. I knew how to read the wind from watching the waves and could cover long distances and arrive at a land fall with surprising accuracy. Figuring the wind at altitude was always a guess, but down here it was like reading a book or a gauge. However, the coast that I was going to cross was not the California that I had become so familiar with. I thought I would recognize the point I had selected while I was still several miles at sea, but I wasn’t sure. I wanted to be between the search radars that were constantly looking for intruders, and they would be especially on guard today. Still, I thought I could cross the beach and get into the hills to hide before they could vector the MIGs to intercept me. The 12 wing bomb racks, the four 20mm canons and the armor plate had been removed to make the airplane as light as possible to maximize our range,  so the only defense we had was to evade the radar and the fighters. The long practice flights were known as “Sandblowers.” These were not without hazard, we lost a CO on one of them. He ran into a steep canyon near Yosemite Park trying to get his two wingmen out of a box canyon they had flown into. Both of junior pilots survived. .) I remember going through the aviation gasoline soaked personal effects of one of our pilots who was killed. The items in his wallet stuck together and had to be carefully separated and checked before they were sent to his family. (A fantasy: I look out of the cockpit just after the bomb is kicked off the center station and see an Air Force B47 with the bomb bay doors open. . . .)

What was my target? I’ll never tell, but if you swing an arc 500 miles inland parallel to the coast of a potential enemy at the time, recall the war in Korea was recently over, in the Western pacific, you have covered the five or six targets I planned, and was on alert to attack during my years in the business. (Bizarre recollection – Lead tape. Lead tape is like scotch tape, but it is made with lead. It is unlikely that most people have ever heard about or thought about lead tape. There is only one use that I know of that it has and that is to cover the seams on nuclear weapons. The lead tape was the last thing that was added, and it was to me the most profound item that clearly identified this as something out of the ordinary, this silver colored smooth metal shape was not filled with fuel, or HE, or napalm, it was filled with something that we needed to be protected from

Is this story true, you may be wondering. Yes, everything about the story is true – except for the actual flight. The 1950s was a time of great competition between the nascent Air Force, and the U. S. Navy. Nuclear weapons had caused a total transformation in the priorities. The Air Force was in the early stages of building the Strategic Air Command, and the Navy wanted to build a fleet of large aircraft carriers – and the budget was really tight. Therefore, anything that could move – surface ships, tanks, submarines, helicopters, aircraft of all types and infantrymen were outfitted with nuclear weapons. So, we were added to the list and actually became a somewhat significant part of the deterrent force. Our airplane the Douglas AD (later A1) Skyraider was designed at the end of the 2nd World war and over  3100 were produced. It served in Korea and Vietnam and was retired from service after extensive use in Vietnam in the early 1970’s. With two 300 gallon drop tanks we could stay airborne for over 12 hours and hit a target over 1000 nautical miles away from the ship. We were a part of the nuclear deterrent just like the B47s, B36s and the newly developed B52s. Twelve hours is a long time in a small cockpit, and it was difficult extricating ourselves from the airplane at the end of the flight. We were given Dexedrine to take just before landing to sharpen our reaction time, I took it once and didn’t like the feeling I got. At least one of the pilots saved up his pills and took them when we were in port to increase his stamina on liberty – he would have been classified as a drug abuser now. I was 21 in 1957 when this story could have taken place. Would I have gone on the flight if the “balloon had gone up?” I can’t imagine not going, it was simply expected that we would do what we were told, that is what we had signed up for. The menace was real, and I was from the “Duck and Cover” generation. One of my squadron mates later admitted that his plan was to go over the horizon, out of sight, drop the bomb in the ocean on safe and orbit for 12 hours before returning to the ship – was he telling the truth? I knew him pretty well and I think he was.

(A final bizarre thought: I remember thinking that it would have been wonderfully interesting to watch a half dozen or so atom bombs going off over actual targets – no, I’m not sad that I didn’t get to see it happening, but I always thought . . .)

When I returned to an operational squadron following three years of shore duty, the business had changed substantially. The weapons were smaller, lighter and more modern; the air burst option was largely dismissed so the weapons were “laid down” on the target, no more Idiot Loop, and set to detonate after a specified period giving plenty of time to escape the lethal effects. (I suppose because concerns about fallout had been reduced in favor of increased standoff distance for the pilots – that seems odd.) I don’t recall as much about this time since we were involved in actual combat and standby combat readiness didn’t seem to be as interesting.