OK, if my memory doesn't fail me, I'll try to answer the bomb release "thingys". The things with the two arms sticking up were the release solenoids. The shackles, as we called them, attached to the bombs. I'm sure others did it differently, but we usually attached the shackles to the bombs outside the aircraft, and then hoisted everything up. Everything up to the 260# frag bombs we loaded by hand, standing on a small trailer we had that fit perfectly between the bomb bay doors. Load the bombs onto the trailer, then slide the whole thing into the bomb bay from the back, and have at it. It was easier to hook the shackles into the hooks on either side of the release solenoids than to try to latch the bomb lugs into the shackle. The solenoid had two arms. These arms had to be "cocked" prior to attaching the bomb/shackle combination. One of the arms should say "arm" and the other one "rel"(release). They basically gave the pilot the option of dropping the bombs in a "safe" mode or "armed" mode. For instance, if a problem was encountered over friendly territory, the bombs could be dropped "safe". They had this option available from the cockpit armament panel. If you chose to make craters, and drop "armed, the lever on the "arm" side of the solenoid would not trip, and it would retain the arming wires from the bomb, and when it released, the arming wires would be pulled from the fuzes, allowing the propellers to spin up and arm the weapon. If the weapons were dropped in the "safe" mode, the "arm" lever would also trip, releasing the safety wires and allow them to fall with the weapon, and not allowing the fuzes to arm themselves. I know it sounds crazy, dropping a bomb from 1000/1500 ft, it's going to detonate from the impact with the ground anyway, right! Not according to the experts, but I personally wouldn't have wanted to be within range of it to see if that were true or not! We were told in tech school that a M117, 750# bomb, dropped safe from 10,000ft, would not detonate something like 80% of the time. (just don't be in that 20% group!). While I was there, we did fly some very old AWD fuzes,(Anti-With Drawl) and as I remember, the pilots were told NOT to bring them back under any condition.
There, that should be about confusing enough!
_________________ Randy Ryman Project Big Eagle NKP Thailand 1966 http://www.coastcomp.com/av/florence/florandy.htm
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