Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Convair NB-36H Nuclear-Powered Bomber” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/convair-nb-36h-nuclear-powered-bomber/.


YesIs that a B-50 in background?
Insanity.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Convair NB-36H Nuclear-Powered Bomber” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/convair-nb-36h-nuclear-powered-bomber/.
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Definitely easier in Navy ships. They just used the reactor to replace the boiler. The rest of the plant was the same as before. On submarines the steam turbines replaced the diesel engines, negating the need to surface for air.I was aware of this project previously, but there is one thing I've never read, this article doesn't address, and I'm not sure I understand - how exactly was the nuclear reactor supposed to power the plane? In a ship the reactor creates steam, steam drives the turbines for propulsion and power. In a nuclear power plant steam drives turbines that drive generators to make electricity. Neither approach seems feasible in an aircraft. Does anyone know what they were thinking?
Air was brought in to the engine and compressed in the normal manner where it then passed to a heat exchanger instead of a combustion chamber. Hot water from the reactor was to be sent to those heat exchangers in the engines where cold compressed air flowing into the engine would be heated, making it expand and spin the turbine blades to generate thrust. The cooled water from the heat exchanger was returned to the reactor for cooling the core and the process repeated. It is a different way of making heat than burning fuel, but similar to a normal jet engine, its just making hot air to turn the turbine blades that drive the compressor.I was aware of this project previously, but there is one thing I've never read, this article doesn't address, and I'm not sure I understand - how exactly was the nuclear reactor supposed to power the plane? In a ship the reactor creates steam, steam drives the turbines for propulsion and power. In a nuclear power plant steam drives turbines that drive generators to make electricity. Neither approach seems feasible in an aircraft. Does anyone know what they were thinking?
Heat from the reactor(s) expanded air which drove the turbine which pulled in more air. The reactor heat replaced the heat of combustion of jet fuel. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_Nuclear_PropulsionI was aware of this project previously, but there is one thing I've never read, this article doesn't address, and I'm not sure I understand - how exactly was the nuclear reactor supposed to power the plane? In a ship the reactor creates steam, steam drives the turbines for propulsion and power. In a nuclear power plant steam drives turbines that drive generators to make electricity. Neither approach seems feasible in an aircraft. Does anyone know what they were thinking?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_Tu-95LAL details the Soviet equivalent which flew from 1961 to 1965, despite what your article claims. Please do not hire Peter Suciu to write any more articles for you as he clearly does not do his research.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Convair NB-36H Nuclear-Powered Bomber” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/convair-nb-36h-nuclear-powered-bomber/.
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I was a senior engineer at the Nevada Test Site in the 80s and 90s. This project was long gone but its facilities were still there abandoned. I remember from a historical briefing that the reactors would heat air, and create thrust out the back of the jet engine. Essentially same way burning fuel heats air and creates thrust out back of conventional jet engine. Turbine at the discharge end drives a compressor at the intact end to keep everything flowing in the right direction.I was aware of this project previously, but there is one thing I've never read, this article doesn't address, and I'm not sure I understand - how exactly was the nuclear reactor supposed to power the plane? In a ship the reactor creates steam, steam drives the turbines for propulsion and power. In a nuclear power plant steam drives turbines that drive generators to make electricity. Neither approach seems feasible in an aircraft. Does anyone know what they were thinking?