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-   -   Victor as conventional bomber (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/588910-victor-conventional-bomber.html)

Heathrow Harry 30th Dec 2016 13:16

Victor as conventional bomber
 
Re reading Gunston's "jet Bombers" over a mince pie he shows a picture of a Victor dropping conventional bombs

http://www.pprune.org/members/326184...tor-s.jpg[

The caption reads

" There's a story behind this photo of a B.1 dropping "35thousand-pounders" but we won't blow the gaff."

What was the story???

denachtenmai 30th Dec 2016 13:23

there's only 33?;)

Coochycool 30th Dec 2016 13:28

Don't know but wasn't there once a similar show of force during Confrontation?

Heathrow Harry 30th Dec 2016 13:35

Clearly 5 sticks each of 7 bombs in the original picture

JG54 30th Dec 2016 14:19

I believe the picture is 'retouched' (early 'photoshopping' for you young 'uns), although both the reason and source of that information are long forgotten. Hopefully, someone else can flesh that out a little.

The Victor is known to have been able to loft 35 x 1,000 pounders (and close to 70,000 lbs of sea mines, iirc), but perhaps the B.1 was height / payload restricted in some way, making tinkering with the image the easier PR solution?

BEagle 30th Dec 2016 14:34

From what I've read, there was some concern that when the lowest bomb in the stick of 35 dropped from Victor B1A XH648 by Flt Lt Thomson's crew over Song Song range (to send a clear message to the Indons...) detonated, it might set off the next...and that would continue progressively up the stick. At which point the highest bomb would still be rather close the bomber...:uhoh: This was because the release interval had been set to a short value, making the release photo look impressive whilst ensuring that all 35 bombs remained within the Danger Area!

No-one let slip this piece of gen to those observing the drop...:hmm:

morton 30th Dec 2016 16:52

I vaguely remember reading that it couldn't release all the bombs as quickly or as closely as the picture shows. I stand to be corrected though. If they were released as shown it would be interesting to know what the G force was after the almost instantaneous release of 35,000 pounds from the Bomb bay!

Pontius Navigator 30th Dec 2016 18:08

Morton, the PESJ - pilots emergency safe jettison - could literally drop the lot on the Vulcan. I imagine the Victor had a similar system.

The release system was the 90-way. This was used to set the time interval between bombs.

From memory we used a setting of 0.30 seconds. For a stick of 35 bombs as 0.3 seconds the time between 1 and 35 was 10.2 seconds. The vertical distance between first and last would be about 1,800 feet.

Again from memory the available shorter intervals were 0.18 and 0.09. Assuming the shortest would give an interval of 3.06 seconds and a vertical separation of 150 feet. This looks pretty close to the setting. I am not sure if there was a shorter time available.

Apart from the rapid weight reduction there was also CofG change but minimised through bomb sequencing stn 3-5-1 in sequence followed by 4-2.

MPN11 30th Dec 2016 19:02

Aside from the technicalities, that has alway been my favourite V-Force bombing photo. Shame they weren't still available in Iran or 'Stan [OK, I know, collateral etc. etc.] because that's close to a good B-52 delivery.

morton 30th Dec 2016 19:39

The internet is a wonderful thing and I am now standing corrected!
V-Force: Victors in Malaya » Finest Hour Warbirds

denachtenmai 30th Dec 2016 20:31


Clearly 5 sticks each of 7 bombs in the original picture
Whooosh:rolleyes:

Pontius Navigator 30th Dec 2016 20:56

From Morton's link

What the propagandists wanted was a trail of bombs released in sequence, the first bomb exploding on impact with the sea before the last bomb left the aeroplane, the intention being to create a ‘wall of water’ as an impressive spectacle.
and my calculations you can see that the vertical stack of bombs would have been about 1,800 feet with standard spacing and assuming a low level drop to achieve the aim the aircraft would have been in the 1% range of frag damage from ONE bomb and well inside the blast range damage zone.

PS, they never let us Vulcans drop HE out there after the odd Victor 'heard but not seen' on both China Rock and S2.

langleybaston 30th Dec 2016 21:34

QUOTE

it would be interesting to know what the G force was after the almost instantaneous release of 35,000 pounds from the Bomb bay!

I cannot get my head round how a decrease of mass can cause a G Force. Can someone please explain? If my leg drops off, I do not rise in the air even though I am lighter [and disregarding falling over!]. It matters not if I am at rest or at constant velocity ...... the leg drops-off and I soldier on, comparatively legless and certainly 'armless.

I am well aware of the anecdotal evidence of the heave of a Lancaster as a Grand Slam departs, and do not doubt the reality of the effect, but my knowledge of aerodynamics is inadequate to explain. Perhaps the late hour and the red biddy is to blame.

andytug 30th Dec 2016 21:47

Well, from a purely physics point of view, before you drop any bombs the wings are producing enough lift to hold up the plane+crew plus 35000lbs of bombs. Then you drop them, suddenly(ish) lightening the plane by 35000lbs, so unless something else changes you suddenly have an extra net force of 35000lbs pushing the aircraft upwards, which is quite a lot. Would think in a more modern plane there would be some sort of automatic compensation thing going on?

Donkey497 30th Dec 2016 22:14

Hey LB, check your PMs

morton 31st Dec 2016 08:09

LB. My simplistic thinking is as follows. In flight at a constant altitude the Aircraft generated lift (upwards force) equals the Aircraft weight (downward force). Any change to either will, obviously, cause an imbalance and the Aircraft will either rise or fall. The loss of 35,000lb would, I assume, result in a large upward movement and bending of the wings due to this movement and felt as a G force.

You are quite right though, the loss of your legs does indeed cause you to fall to the ground – as I have found on a few lost weekends. However, it was the muscles in your legs that kept you upright and no amount of arm flailing will generate enough lift to compensate for the loss of leg muscle – again as I have found in the past!

Heathrow Harry 31st Dec 2016 08:13

excellent link Morton - great pictures and all the detail as well!!!

Many thanks!!!

RetiredBA/BY 31st Dec 2016 08:55


Originally Posted by morton (Post 9625442)
LB. My simplistic thinking is as follows. In flight at a constant altitude the Aircraft generated lift (upwards force) equals the Aircraft weight (downward force). Any change to either will, obviously, cause an imbalance and the Aircraft will either rise or fall. The loss of 35,000lb would, I assume, result in a large upward movement and bending of the wings due to this movement and felt as a G force.

You are quite right though, the loss of your legs does indeed cause you to fall to the ground – as I have found on a few lost weekends. However, it was the muscles in your legs that kept you upright and no amount of arm flailing will generate enough lift to compensate for the loss of leg muscle – again as I have found in the past!

It's a long time since I flew a Victor 1, 49 years in fact, but I wonder how far a Victor 1 could carry 35 1000 pounders at a max tow of 185,000 pounds? Marham to Leuchars?

As for the G loading on release, the increase would be about only . 28g . If the aircraft weighed 160,000 pounds then released 35,000 pounds then it now weighs 125,000 pounds with 160,000 pounds of lift, so 160 divided by 125 equals 1.28, assuming instant release and no pitch control input. Not a lot of G even for an airliner in a steady turn at 25 degrees of bank in light turbulence!

QFI hat off !

Fareastdriver 31st Dec 2016 09:02


Would think in a more modern plane there would be some sort of automatic compensation thing going on?
The Nav Radar would have done all the flying and ranging through the bombing radar. The NBS bombing computer would have opened the doors and released the bombs IAW the sequence selected.

Any aerodynamic effects from the release would be corrected by the autopilot. There might have been a "Cor" from the pilots.

A Valiant was planned to carry more bombs, One of the projects was to have a bomb carrier with 10 1,000 bombs under each wing, (the underwing fuel tanks had a 12,500lbs each capacity). This with 21 1,000 pounders in the bomb bay would have totalled 41,000 lbs still with full (five hours) internal fuel.

orionsbelt 31st Dec 2016 09:08

As BE says the picture is fixed as one bomb was out of frame but 35 were droped.
In August 1964, 10/15 Sqdn with Victor B1a, Detached to RAAF Butterworth and 55 /57 Sqdn at RAF Tengha stood Dawn to Dusk QRA, loaded with 21 x 1000lb bombs with Radio fusing (PN (Roy) who came out in Nov 64 in the Vulcans that relieved us, can tell you more about the fusing and he has a paper recording the Vulcan involvement).
The Aeroplanes were fitted with a bomb-bay tank that took the first two bomb positions.
We dispersed 2 Bombers to Gan and 55 Sqdn sent up 2 to Butterworth.
For those don’t know the history see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indone..._confrontation
The Victor detachment from Cottismore and Honington had been ongoing since early 1963,
The Vulcans did not arrive until Nov 1964 when as such it was all over after political changes in Indonesia.
My 15 Sqdn detachment returned to the UK in Nov 64 however we left XA941 behind as it had a centre line closure on one of its stb engines, which were then being fixed by the MU. Meanwhile I was posted to Honington and was promptly returned to Butterworth on New Years day as part of the servicing crew to recover the aeroplane.
Happy days
***

Edited to add comment about the http://www.finesthourwarbirds.co.uk/...ors-in-malaya/
This link is more concerned with the Tengha Operation. It was a Butterworth aeroplane that droped the first 35 bomb load sometime before May 1964. Additionally RAAF Butterworth on the mainland not on the island of Penang.


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