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jon

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I took this photo at Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park in Alaska in 2007. The camera was a shirt-pocket size Pentax digital point-and-shoot.

 

IMGP1859%28e%29.jpg

 

And here's a photo that my wife took nearby with her Nikon D90.

PICT0030.jpg

Bill Sexauer
http://bulk-share.slickpic.com/album/share/zyNIMDOgTcgMOO/5768697.0/org/p/PCA+++Logo+small.jpghttp://bulk-share.slickpic.com/album/share/zyNIMDOgTcgMOO/5768694.0/org/p/Blk+Pen+Society+Icon.jpghttp://bulk-share.slickpic.com/album/share/TE3TzMUAMMYyNM/8484890.0/300/p/CP04_Black_Legend%2C_Small.jpg
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During the Korean War my father was recalled to active duty in the Air Force and stationed at Walker Air Force Base in Roswell, New Mexico. So we all moved into an apartment in a "temporary" WWII barracks that had been converted into married officers' housing, it was about two hundred yards from the main runway centerline. While we were there the Air Force retired their B-29 bombers and replaced them with the then new B-36 "Peacemaker". There were three squadrons of eight planes each. These were very large aircraft, nearly the size of a 747, and had 10 engines, six pusher propellers and four turbojets. Really noisy, especially on takeoff. Our old barracks building shook badly every time a B-36 took off!

 

On a recent vacation to Arizona we stopped at the Pima Air Museum just South of Tucson and I saw one of the very few remaining B-36 planes. Here are a couple of photos that I took at the museum. It's difficult to make out the size of the plane from ground level photos so I added a couple of shots further down that I did not take so that you can see a better view of the plane.

 

 

B-36 Bomber in the foreground. Note the propellers facing the rear on the trailing edge of the wing, and the jet engine pod hanging under the wing.

B-36_at_Pima_1.jpg

 

From straight ahead you can see all 10 engines.

B-36_at_Pima_4.jpg

 

 

images%5B1%5D.jpg

 

The "little" plane in this photo is a B-29! The B-36 pictured here is an early model that did not have the four jet engines. With a full fuel and bomb load it required an 18,000 foot runway to take off and there just weren't that many runways like that around. So the Air Force had to delay operations until the early planes could be modified to add the jet engines, which were used only for take-off. Once off the ground, the propeller engines were perfectly adequate.

B-36aarrivalcarswell1948_1%5B1%5D.jpg

Bill Sexauer
http://bulk-share.slickpic.com/album/share/zyNIMDOgTcgMOO/5768697.0/org/p/PCA+++Logo+small.jpghttp://bulk-share.slickpic.com/album/share/zyNIMDOgTcgMOO/5768694.0/org/p/Blk+Pen+Society+Icon.jpghttp://bulk-share.slickpic.com/album/share/TE3TzMUAMMYyNM/8484890.0/300/p/CP04_Black_Legend%2C_Small.jpg
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  • 2 weeks later...

I'm so impressed with everyone's skills. These are frame worthy. Though the cubs are amazing.

Fountain pens are my preferred COLOR DELIVERY SYSTEM (in part because crayons melt in Las Vegas).

Create a Ghostly Avatar and I'll send you a letter. Check out some Ink comparisons: The Great PPS Comparison 

Don't know where to start?  Look at the Inky Topics O'day.  Then, see inks sorted by color: Blue Purple Brown Red Green Dark Green Orange Black Pinks Yellows Blue-Blacks Grey/Gray UVInks Turquoise/Teal MURKY

 

 

 

 

 

 

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During the Korean War my father was recalled to active duty in the Air Force and stationed at Walker Air Force Base in Roswell, New Mexico. So we all moved into an apartment in a "temporary" WWII barracks that had been converted into married officers' housing, it was about two hundred yards from the main runway centerline. While we were there the Air Force retired their B-29 bombers and replaced them with the then new B-36 "Peacemaker". There were three squadrons of eight planes each. These were very large aircraft, nearly the size of a 747, and had 10 engines, six pusher propellers and four turbojets. Really noisy, especially on takeoff. Our old barracks building shook badly every time a B-36 took off!

 

On a recent vacation to Arizona we stopped at the Pima Air Museum just South of Tucson and I saw one of the very few remaining B-36 planes. Here are a couple of photos that I took at the museum. It's difficult to make out the size of the plane from ground level photos so I added a couple of shots further down that I did not take so that you can see a better view of the plane.

 

 

B-36 Bomber in the foreground. Note the propellers facing the rear on the trailing edge of the wing, and the jet engine pod hanging under the wing.

B-36_at_Pima_1.jpg

 

From straight ahead you can see all 10 engines.

B-36_at_Pima_4.jpg

 

 

images%5B1%5D.jpg

 

The "little" plane in this photo is a B-29! The B-36 pictured here is an early model that did not have the four jet engines. With a full fuel and bomb load it required an 18,000 foot runway to take off and there just weren't that many runways like that around. So the Air Force had to delay operations until the early planes could be modified to add the jet engines, which were used only for take-off. Once off the ground, the propeller engines were perfectly adequate.

B-36aarrivalcarswell1948_1%5B1%5D.jpg

 

There is a Jimmy Stewart movie, 'Strategic Air Command', that features the B-36 and the later B47. Jimmy Stewart plays a professional baseball player and former WWII bomber pilot who gets called up during the early days of the Cold War (circa 1954). It is impressive to see an aircraft that large in that time flying, even on film.

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Thanks, Pen two paper, just playing with the slide in hue and saturation, reds , yellows , and magentas, btw happy new year to you and yours.

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  • 4 weeks later...

You all are so impressive. Would you all mind if I downloaded the pictures and used them for backgrounds on my computer?

Fountain pens are my preferred COLOR DELIVERY SYSTEM (in part because crayons melt in Las Vegas).

Create a Ghostly Avatar and I'll send you a letter. Check out some Ink comparisons: The Great PPS Comparison 

Don't know where to start?  Look at the Inky Topics O'day.  Then, see inks sorted by color: Blue Purple Brown Red Green Dark Green Orange Black Pinks Yellows Blue-Blacks Grey/Gray UVInks Turquoise/Teal MURKY

 

 

 

 

 

 

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