Want to Dive..Looking for a Nuclear Bomb

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cdiver2

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From the BBC

Missing for 50 years - US nuclear bomb

Colonel Howard Richardson ditched the bomb off Tybee Island
More than 50 years after a 7,600lb (3,500kg) nuclear bomb was dropped in US waters following a mid-air military collision, the question of whether the missing weapon still poses a threat remains.

In his own mind, retired 87-year-old Colonel Howard Richardson is a hero responsible for one of the most extraordinary displays of aeronautic skill in the history of the US Air Force.

His view carries a lot of weight and he has a large number of supporters - including the Air Force itself which honoured his feat with a Distinguished Flying Cross.

But to others, he is little short of a villain: the man who 50 years ago dropped a nuclear bomb in US waters, a bomb nobody has been able to find and make safe.

'Top-secret flight'

Shortly after midnight on 5 February 1958, Howard Richardson was on a top-secret training flight for the US Strategic Air Command.

It was the height of the Cold War and the young Major Richardson's mission was to practise long-distance flights in his B-47 bomber in case he was ordered to fly from Homestead Air Force Base in Florida to any one of the targets the US had identified in Russia.



We thought maybe it was something from outer space, but it could only be another plane

Colonel Howard Richardson
The training was to be as realistic as possible, so on board was a single massive H-bomb - the nuclear weapon he might one day be instructed to drop to start World War III.

As he cruised at 38,000 feet over North Carolina and Georgia, his plane was hit by another military aircraft, gouging a huge hole in the wing and knocking an engine almost off its mountings, leaving it hanging at a perilous angle.

At his home in Mississippi, Colonel Richardson said: "All of a sudden we felt a heavy jolt and a burst of flame out to the right.

"We didn't know what it was.

"We thought maybe it was something from outer space, but it could only be another plane."

The colonel thought his number was up. His bomber started plummeting to earth and he struggled with the flight deck to get any kind of response.

"We had ejection seats - I told 'em: 'Don't hit the ejection seats just yet. I'm gonna see if we can fly.'"

As he dropped to 20,000 feet, he somehow got the damaged craft under control and levelled out.

He and his co-pilot then made a fateful decision which probably saved both their lives and the lives of countless people on the ground.



The B-47's engine was left hanging from the plane
Colonel Richardson told me that the decision was instantaneous - and he still has no doubt it was the right thing to do.

They would ditch their nuclear payload as soon as possible in order to lighten the aircraft for an emergency landing and also to eliminate the danger of an enormous explosion when they made their unsteady arrival at the nearest available runway.

"The tactical doctrine for Strategic Air Command gave me the authority to get rid of it (the bomb) for the safety of the crew - that was the number one priority," Colonel Richardson said.

He managed to direct the B-47 a mile or two off the coast of Savannah and opened the bomb doors, dropping the bomb somewhere into the shallow waters and light sand near Tybee Island.

He then managed a perfectly executed descent from which he and his crew walked away unscathed.

The pilot of the other aircraft, an F-86 fighter jet, also survived, after his ejector seat shot him clear of his aircraft.


I've been living with it now for 51 years

Colonel Howard Richardson
Immediately after the crash, a search was set up to find the unexploded nuclear weapon, buried somewhere too close for comfort to the US's second-largest seaport and one of its most beautiful cities.

Numerous other searches have followed, both official and unofficial, and each of them has also proved unsuccessful.

So the bomb remains tucked away on the sea-bed, in an area which is frequently dredged by shrimp fishermen, any one of whom could suddenly find that they have netted something a touch larger and scarier than a crustacean.

How dangerous the bomb is after all these years is a matter of hot debate.

The US Air Force insists it is safest to leave it wherever it is, and Colonel Richardson is adamant that it is incapable of a nuclear explosion because it lacks the vital plutonium trigger.

'Practice mission'

He said these were routinely left out of the bombs used on training flights.

"This was just a practice mission. We were continually working out any problems, that's why we had to practise - we wanted to be perfect," he said.

But his case has been vigorously contested by opponents who raise apocalyptic fears of a thermonuclear explosion which could destroy much of the US eastern seaboard.

Fears have also been expressed that the bomb could be located and recovered by a terrorist group, and there are even some who believe that may already have happened.

For Colonel Richardson, the event which shaped his life has not ended quite the way he thought it would.

"I've been living with it now for 51 years.

"We had an accident and I landed the aircraft safely... I did get a Distinguished Flying Cross from a general for that.

"I thought that would be the story. That's not the story - everything's about the nuclear weapon."
 
Miley Cyrus is shooting a movie on Tybee right now.
 
You know, I was just thinking, for the fun of it I ought to put it on Ebay. Pickup only.
 
Ok.... I might be missing something "HUGE" here. If the ordnance was real but lacking the detonator per say. The statement says it was "safe" to dump it as not to crash land with and create a massive explosion. But in the same statement it says it lacks the plutonium trigger? So why dump it in the first place if it lacked a sufficient detonation trigger?

US fighter collides with Nuke carrying bomber. (Ok who was on radar duty that day?):shakehead:

Medallion awarded pilot dumps a SAFE??? payload that lacks the detonator for the possibility of crash landing and the safety of his "um" CREW that supposedly cant detonate? :no:

Now he knew approximately where it was dumped but no one can seem to find it. And its quite alright to have a nuke sitting somewhere in our coastal waters inviting TERRORIST on a nuke hunting vacation. :rofl3:

Smells like a big rotten shrimp to me.:popcorn:
 
You know, I was just thinking, for the fun of it I ought to put it on Ebay. Pickup only.

Dare ya. :popcorn:
 
The statement says it was "safe" to dump it as not to crash land with and create a massive explosion. But in the same statement it says it lacks the plutonium trigger? So why dump it in the first place if it lacked a sufficient detonation trigger?

If I understand my nukes a bit (and I admit freely I have only a vague understanding of how they work), a nuclear weapon detonation is a multi-part event that includes detonating a large chunk of explosives that causes the nuclear detonation. Even if there were no way to set off the nuclear part, the primary explosives could detonate and cause a real mess and if there was any nuclear material it could be scatter (like a dirty bomb) even without the fusion reaction. Plus the things are heavy as heck, so keeping on board would create a much more difficult landing and increase the chances of a severe crash.
 
The Navy found one in over 200 feet of water off the European coast, so it's highly unlikely that, if one was dropped off our shore, the Navy didn't recover it.

Probably a total SB story.
 
The Navy found one in over 200 feet of water off the European coast, so it's highly unlikely that, if one was dropped off our shore, the Navy didn't recover it.

Probably a total SB story.

I'm not so sure.

I saw a TV documentary on this not too long ago. ( couple years ) I can't recall who produced it, but it seemed credible enough.

The Nav did an extensive search and as far as I know ( which ain't much ) they didn't recover it. It appeared to be one snafu after another after they dropped it if I recall correctly.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/teric/

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