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SG1_Lud 03-27-2012 03:35 AM

Thank you for the gift Richie.

BP_Tailspin 03-27-2012 03:52 AM

Thanks for posting.

Herbs107 03-27-2012 04:18 AM

Fantastic images thanks for posting them Richie.

335th_GRAthos 03-27-2012 04:10 PM

Vulcan
 
For those interested....



Falklands' Most Daring Raid in Channel4

http://www.channel4.com/programmes/f...st-daring-raid

On 30 April 1982, the RAF launched a secret mission: to fly a Vulcan bomber to
the Falkland Islands and bomb Port Stanley's runway, putting it out of action
for Argentine fighter jets. The safety of the British Task Force depended on
its success.

However, the RAF could only get a single crumbling, Cold War-era Vulcan 8000
miles south to the Falklands, because one bomber needed an aerial fleet of 13
Victor tanker planes to refuel it throughout the 16-hour round-trip. At the
time it was the longest-range bombing mission in history.

From start to finish, the seemingly impossible mission was a comedy of errors,
held together by pluck and ingenuity.

On the brink of being scrapped, only three of the ageing nuclear bombers could
be fitted out for war, one to fly the mission and two in reserve. Crucial spare
parts were scavenged from museums and scrap yards: one vital component had been
serving as an ashtray in the Officers' Mess.

In just three weeks, the Vulcan crews had to learn air-to-air refuelling, which
they hadn't done for 20 years, and conventional bombing, which they hadn't done
for ten.

The RAF scoured the country for Second World War iron bombs, and complex
refuelling calculations were done the night before on a £5 pocket calculator.

With a plan stretched to the limit and the RAF's hopes riding on just one
Vulcan, the mission was flown on a knife-edge; fraught with mechanical
failures, unreliable navigation, electrical storms and not enough fuel.

Of the 21 bombs the Vulcan dropped, only one found its target. But it was
enough to change the outcome of the war.

Astonishingly, this great feat has been downplayed into near obscurity by
history, but this documentary brings it back to life, providing a thrilling and
uncharacteristically upbeat account from the Falklands War: the Dambusters for
the 1980s generation.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

~S~

PeterPanPan 03-27-2012 05:12 PM

Was first aired last week. EXCELLENT program - incredible story.
PPP

arthursmedley 03-27-2012 05:37 PM

"Of the 21 bombs the Vulcan dropped, only one found its target. But it was
enough to change the outcome of the war."

Absolute TV history bullsh#t!

PeterPanPan 03-27-2012 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arthursmedley (Post 403403)
"Of the 21 bombs the Vulcan dropped, only one found its target. But it was
enough to change the outcome of the war."

Absolute TV history bullsh#t!

Agreed re that bit ;). Why do they feel the need to write that stuff?! Never-the-less an amazing story, very well told IMHO.

No1 Cheese 03-27-2012 06:35 PM

Gents i think the post was trying to say it was a great mission? and if you agree or not on the war it was a great mission.

Cheese

PeterPanPan 03-27-2012 08:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by No1 Cheese (Post 403420)
Gents i think the post was trying to say it was a great mission? and if you agree or not on the war it was a great mission.

Cheese

Totally agree - sorry if my post was vague! I thought it was an incredible mission in every respect. The book, Vulcan 607, tells the whole story in detail and is superbly written - gripping stuff!

Richie 03-27-2012 11:18 PM

I was just thinking about Robert Redford telling a story about when he was a young man walking down a long stretch of highway and being able to hear a car coming from a mile away. That is real "One The Road" moment. You'll probably never find that now a days.


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