Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Convair B-58 Hustler — The Strategic Bomber Built to End the World” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/convair-b-58-hustler/.
Agreed.Another silly title.
But nice pics.
Saw one at the USAF Museum at Dayton few years ago. It was going fast just sitting still.
Are you sure? Fully 22% of all the B-58's that ever flew, crashed. Many of these were ground incidents & early experience but that's the stat. Classic technological over-reach for the time.Would have liked to crew that one!
As a kid I had a B-58 toy replica. Not the scale model from Revell, but the moving parts plastic one. It was about 16 inches long I think.One of many airplanes I simply love.
There were some goofy things about them (the need for an external weapons pod, the clamshell crew escape pods) but there was nothing like them. There still isn’t, aside from the B-1, and only then in the original form.
One of our lab instructors at A&P school said his brother flew them in nuke drop tests. The feel of those four afterburners lighting off was very welcome.
Some of Convair’s plans for B-58 spin-offs were fascinating, if maybe far-fetched (water-based version). I would’ve loved to have seen the passenger variant.
There is a small but very nice collection of airplanes at the former Grissom AFB in Indiana, including a B-58. The highway drops below ground level as it passes the collection, so as you come by southbound you pop out of an overpass to get sudden and interesting upward angle view up at the B-58’s tail stinger.
I had a tiny toy B-58, maybe 1/300th or 350th scale. Even that small, it looked so screaming fast.As a kid I had a B-58 toy replica. Not the scale model from Revell, but the moving parts plastic one. It was about 16 inches long I think.
Thanks. I watched that one right before the other one. Pretty neat.Convair/General Dynamics put out a video at the time it was decided to move to low level missions. Thought this was interesting.
And a new one came out practically every couple of days!The aircraft they built in the mid to late 50's were amazing, only 10-15 yrs after WW2.
I’ve heard it said that WW2 moved aviation forward by 50 yrs, and I believe it. Remember the Bismatk was disabled by Fairey Swordfish cloth wing biplane torpedo planes flying like 75 miles per hour. Within 4 years the Germans were fielding jets and the Brits (Glouster Meteor) and Americans were bringing them on line. AmazingThe aircraft they built in the mid to late 50's were amazing, only 10-15 yrs after WW2.
500AGL or lower at 700 MPH. HA! took big nads to handle that.Convair/General Dynamics put out a video at the time it was decided to move to low level missions. Thought this was interesting.
500AGL or lower at 700 MPH. HA! took big nads to handle that.