Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/08/16

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Subject: [Leica] XB-70 and B-58 and?
From: philippe.orlent at pandora.be (Philippe Orlent)
Date: Thu Aug 16 13:02:00 2007
References: <be7.1d534dfb.33f53f49@aol.com>

Thanks for the info, Ira.
Philippe



Op 16-aug-07, om 07:48 heeft ISILVERMN@aol.com het volgende geschreven:

> On Wed, 15 Aug 2007 22:07:37 +0200, Philippe Orlent
> _philippe.orlent@pandora.be_ (mailto:philippe.orlent@pandora.be)    
> wrote:
>
> "Was it ever operational?"
>
> Hi Phillipe,
>
> It sure was, and was America's first truly intercontinental bomber, in
> squadron service with the Strategic Air Command between 1948 and  
> 1958, until it
> was phased out for the B-52.  Because of its size, it was  
> affectionately
> referred to as the "Aluminum Overcast."
>
> Aside from its normal service, it served as a test bed for several  
> parasite
> fighter programs (XF-85 Goblin, F-84 FICON and Tip-Tow), and was  
> the first
> aircraft to carry a working nuclear reactor aloft (NB-36).
>
> It starred with Jimmy Stewart and Karl Malden in the movie  
> "Strategic Air
> Command."
>
> There is a preserved example at the Air Force Museum at Wright- 
> Patt.   It's
> notable because the plane was moved into position, and then the  
> original
> museum building was built around it.  Hence, one room contains the  
> nose  section,
> another the wing nacelles, another the tail, and so on.  It's one   
> seriously
> large airplane.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Ira
>
>
>
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