maxum96 wrote:
How would they have shipped the "parts out?
They
wouldn't have.
That was the whole point from what I've been told. Yes, one point of contact in the USAF at Thule allowed them to operate the Caribou (which apparently did meet the criteria set up to operate from the field) out of there, but the guy I know wasn't from the same chain of command. He once said that
his boss argued over letting the caribou fly out of there at all (but they allowed scientific flights and commercial operators to go in and out of there from time to time anyway). The behind-the-scenes parts of this would make for a good book. My understanding is that the plan was to let them fly in, tell the crew they need to have it meeting all FAA requirements (and they were going to be ridiculously strict in enforcing them, not that anyone there thought it'd get to that anyway) before they'd be allowed to leave or they were welcome to box it up and take it home that way. And oh yes, no support for breaking it down at all.
His boss said in a meeting about the project that he wasn't going to risk a high-visibility incident with a WW2 bomber on
his field on
his watch. He was apparently worried that a headline reading, "USAF allows beat up WW2 plane to fly out of AFB, plane crashes and kills all aboard" would come back to haunt him at promotion time and he was't going to risk that.
Being ex-military myself, I have no problem accepting this as a likely scenario as officers that high up the food chain know how to cover their six at all times. I've seen this kind of thing happen personally several times with other things...
But anyway, it's a moot point because they never got there.
But as for the runway, anyone here know the true conditions of that runway and if a B-29 really could have gotten off the ice? I've heard from some people who swear it couldn't have been done in those conditions...