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Tocsin 13th Mar 2017 14:18

Bergerie1 - it's not by Richard Rhodes, but Eric Schlosser:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Command-Con...nd+and+control

ISTR it's a bit episodic, but still a lot of intersting info.

ColinB 13th Mar 2017 14:52

It appears Deke Parsons armed it on the ground and the weaponeer, Fred Ashworth, pulled the safety plugs at 4 am
I wrote a review of books of this era which may be helpful

In The period covering the genesis and production of the first atomic bombs is well served by literature. The initial British efforts are elegantly described in three books by Margaret Gowing, the official description of the US efforts were covered by Hewlett and Anderson in The New World and this was updated by Richard Rhodes' magisterial The Making of The Atomic Bomb which rightly won the Pulitzer Prize.
In The Manhattan Project Stephen Groueff covered the industrial problems in a most accessible book and I found Stalin and the Bomb by David Holloway most rewarding.
The later US developments were covered by U.S. Nuclear Weapons: The Secret History by Chuck Hansen

Bergerie1 13th Mar 2017 15:41

Thanks Tocsin

Airbubba 13th Mar 2017 18:03


Originally Posted by Evalu8ter (Post 9704396)
Command and Control however, is a very readable book and contains much new information to digest - and, at times, horrify.

I agree, it is a worthy successor to Schlosser's Fast Food Nation and Reefer Madness. ;)

I've actually never read the other titles but Command and Control is well done and I also would recommend it. :ok:

5645andym 14th Mar 2017 06:08

As I understand it the Uranium bomb design had been tested beforehand but it was not necessary to actually explode a device in order to do so.
The bomb achieved critical mass by firing a cylindrical “bullet” of uranium down a converted gun barrel into a circular uranium target – by slowly sliding the bullet down the barrel and measuring the increase in the flow of neutrons as it approached the target.
They were able to go to something over 99% of critical mass and measure precisely how and when the bomb would explode without actually setting the bomb off so they could be sure that it would work when dropped operationally.
With the Plutonium design there were technical reasons why the “gun” method could not be used and an implosion design was the only viable alternative - that could not be tested other than by detonating a live weapon.


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