I ran into Walter at Gathering of Eagles on Saturday. He's had some health crises. (He kept repeating, "I'm a dying man.") But he looked better than he did last year. He's certainly a character. Everything for sale? That'd be different.
Re the B-36:
The jet pods were the same as the inboard pods on the B-47. They even had the doors and mounts for the outrigger gear. The engines would burn avgas ok, but crewmen have told me that efter every flight they'd have to scrape lead deposits off the tailpipe.
I was involved with the effort to restore the last B-36, #2827, back in the late 70's. At one point they managed to get all six engines running - one at a time. They only had one set of engine instruments; the flight deck had been trashed by vandals:
(I took this picture in the late 70's when the plane was still at Greater Southwest.)
The AF pulled the plug on the project, and just as well. The '36 was a maintenance hog. (Count the spark plugs alone!) ISTR a figure of 80 mx hours per flight hour.
However, the volunteers in Ft. Worth did a splendid job of restoring 2827 for static display before the USAF gave it to Pima a couple of years ago:
(Don Pyeatt via Goleta)
The entire story is documented on Don Pyeatt's excellent CD "Saving the Last Peacemaker", available here:
http://www.prowebfortworth.com/