Quad Dog said:
There was a brief period of time where Abraham Lincoln could have received a fax from a samurai.
Is there some kind of semantical game with this statement?
Quad Dog said:
There was a brief period of time where Abraham Lincoln could have received a fax from a samurai.
Correct, but the end game was to have an aircraft that could stay aloft for days at a time. Not unlike our nuclear powered carriers and subs. The shielding involved made the plane to heavy from what dad has said.jkag89 said:
It would have been one thing it the nuke reactor was actually testing the concept of powering the engines but using it as a test bed for shielding of a reactor one would think you did not actually need to be on a flying aircraft.
Really nice blog, thanks for linking. Good history, great pics.
Leonard H. Stringfield said:
My dad (now 92) worked on a project at General Dynamics/Convair in Ft. Worth that was aimed at using a nuclear reactor to power an airplane.
Didn't see it if he didJabin said:
Didn't spyder post a pic of a shielded cockpit insert?
Oh, yeah. Can't keep up with all his socks and bansJabin said:
It was at the link he posted.
I suspect that the essence of that is correct. It's the same reason that so many legal documents contain repetitive and redundant words. The deed to your house, for example, probably states that the Sellers "grant, bargain, and sell, and convey" to you your property. I had always thought that was simply lawyers being redundant, but apparently those words were all the same but from different languages: Latin, Saxon (or old Anglo-Saxon), and French. I don't know why or where the 4th word came from. English apparently has a lot more synonyms than other languages, and that is the reason why - it's actually multiple languages compressed into one.p_bubel said:
Not sure if this is an wives' tale or not:
After the Norman Conquest of England, nobles referred to the meat they ate in French, but the peasants who raised animals for meat referred to them in Anglo-Saxon. This is why modern English has words such as beef and pork for what we eat, but cow and pig for the animals it comes from.
Bighunter43 said:
The Bonnie and Clyde death car was stolen from Ruth Warren from Topeka, Kansas. They put over 7,000 miles on it in the 24 days they had it. Of course everyone knows the bodies were towed in the car to the Arcadia furniture store and funeral home. Mrs. Warren and a friend came to claim it, and after a court battle, DROVE it home, blood and all. She leased it to the Crime Doesn't Pay tour until 1952. It changed hands several times, and in 1987 it ran in an antique car race (The Great American Race) from California to Florida! Of course it now resides at Pistol Pete's Casino in Primm, Nevada!
Rongagin71 said:
That first aeroplane came to Ft Sam in a box from the Wrights.
It was intended to join Pershing's chase of Villa in Northern Mexico,
and a plane (not sure if it was the same one) did fly scouting missions.
CanyonAg77 said:
When I was a kid (1960s or 70s) I recall seeing "The Bonnie and Clyde Car" at the traveling carnival at the South Plains Fair, Lubbock
My suspicion is that the carnival people found an old Ford, shot it full of holes, and took it on tour
CanyonAg77 said:
When I was a kid (1960s or 70s) I recall seeing "The Bonnie and Clyde Car" at the traveling carnival at the South Plains Fair, Lubbock
My suspicion is that the carnival people found an old Ford, shot it full of holes, and took it on tour