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Jets Anonymous
Got any high Resolution pics of Jets?
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>> Anonymous
I'm done, next person can have a go.
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>> Anonymous
OP do you know where that pic was shot? It looks very familiar.
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Fighter jets are all fine and dandy, but we must never forget who the real Queen Of The Sky is.

I give you the Mighty 747
>> Anonymous
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the F4, my favorite jet.... keep'em coming :)
>> Doppelgänger !.97.to9elc
>>172063
That's an A10.
>> Anonymous
>>172063
Shit.... I know thats an A-10 I was just commenting on an earlier pic :)
>>172009
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>>172063
I named the file :)
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>> Bat Guano
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US F-86F Sabre jet (1953); the F-86F-35-NA variant could carry a 1200-lb Mk 12 12-kiloton 'special store' atomic bomb. Quite a feat for such a little fighter.
>> Anonymous
>>172022

Heh, retard bomb.
>> Anonymous
>>172220
WMD. Weapon of Mass Dementation.
>> Anonymous
>>172220

Retard bombs don't fall like the regular bombs.
>> Anonymous
www.af.mil

the USAF site
>> Bat Guano
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US Snakeye retarded bomb, fielded in 1964, the retarder tail (Mk 14 & Mk 15 fins for Mk 81 250-lb, Mk 82 500-lb bombs) allowed low-level attack. The fins/vanes would pop open like the petals of a flower on the moment of release that would greatly slow the descent of the bomb, giving the bomber the chance to fly away from the blast zone while doing low-level bombing runs.
A demonstration of this was in the movie "Flight of the Intruder" where A-6 Intruders dropped these Snakeyes.
For more information, read "Bombs for Beginners" at
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/munitions/intro-bombs.htm
http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/dumb/mk82.htm
>> Bat Guano
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Here's the retarded BSU-86-B bomb fin used with the Mk 82 models of general-purpose bombs.
>> Anonymous
>>172555
NO WAY!!
>> Bat Guano
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The Mk-28 “hydrogen” bomb, although first produced in 1958, is still an active item. It was designed to be carried by various fighter and bomber aircraft (F-100, F-104, F-105, B-47, B-52 and B-66); the “28” warhead was also used in Hound Dog and Mace missiles, which have now been retired from service. The Mk-28 is capable of a ground or air burst and may be carried internally or externally, with a free-fall or parachute retarded drop, depending upon its configuration. http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=1036
>> Bat Guano
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The Mk 28 was produced from 1958 through 1966. It used the W28 lightweight, Class D warhead (also shared with the TM-76 Mace surface-to-surface missile and the GAM-77 Hound Dog air-launched cruise missile). After 1968 it was redesignated B28.
20 different versions were offered, distinguished by their yield and safety features. The B28 used the ‘building block’ principle, allowing various combinations of components for different aircraft and roles. The principal configurations were:
* B28EX: streamlined external-carriage version for free-fall delivery; no parachute.
* B28RE: streamlined external-carriage version with parachute retarder
* B28IN: unstreamlined internal-carriage version for free-fall delivery; no parachute.
* B28RI: unstreamlined internal-carriage version with parachute retarder
* B28FI: unstreamlined internal-carriage version with parachute for laydown delivery; used only by SAC B-52s.
The B28 had a diameter of about 22 in (58 cm), with a length varying between 96 in (2.44 m) and 170 in (4.32 m) and weight of 1,700 lb (771 kg) to 2,320 lb (1,053 kg), depending on version. Explosive yield was 1.1 megaton for Mod 1 warheads, 350 kiloton for Mod 2, 70 kiloton for Mod 3, and 1.45 megaton for Mod 5. It could be configured for airburst or groundburst detonation.
4,500 B28s were produced. The last examples were retired in 1991. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B28_nuclear_bomb
>> Bat Guano
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Sorry, I don't have any pictures of the Mk-28 falling with its retarding parachute open.

The massive 27-ton Soviet "Tsar Bomba" 50 to 100 megaton bomb was also slowed with a massive parachute, allowing the modified Tu-95V Bear bomber to flee the area before detonation. When tested over Novaya Zemlya Island in the Arctic Sea in 1961. The fireball touched the ground, reached nearly as high as the altitude of the release plane, and was seen and felt 1,000 km away. The heat from the explosion could have caused third degree burns 100 km away from ground zero. The subsequent mushroom cloud was about 60 km high (nearly seven times higher than Mount Everest)and 30–40 km wide. The explosion could be seen and felt in Finland, even breaking windows there. Atmospheric focusing caused blast damage up to 1,000 km away. The seismic shock created by the detonation was measurable even on its third passage around the Earth. Its Richter magnitude was about 5 to 5.25. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsar_bomb
Footage of this test can be seen in the film, "Trinity and Beyond."