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	<title>Pedometer Reviews &#187; 1000&#8242; Foot Od Olive Drab Green Parachute</title>
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		<title>1000&#8242; Foot Od Olive Drab Green Parachute</title>
		<link>http://pedometerreviews.info/outdoor-recreation/1000-foot-od-olive-drab-green-parachute/</link>
		<comments>http://pedometerreviews.info/outdoor-recreation/1000-foot-od-olive-drab-green-parachute/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Dec 2011 11:35:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Anthony Vincent</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Outdoor Recreation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American Airpower]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Collings Foundation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North American B-25 Mitchell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Republic Airport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII bombers]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[1000' Foot Od Olive Drab Green Parachute]]></description>
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<p>Driving  down  New  Highway,  which  skirts  the  perimeter  of  Farmingdale,  Long  Island&#8217;s,  Republic  Airport,  on  the  still-warm,  crystal-blue  Labor  Day  morning  in  2006,  and  glimpsing  the  tails  of  the  World  War  II  B-24  Liberator,  B-17  Flying  Fortress,  and  B-25  Mitchell  bombers,  I  had  once  again  realized  that  the  Collings  Foundation&#8217;s  annual  Wings  of  Freedom  fleet  rotation,  more  than  any  other  year,  had  transformed  the  frequent  aviation  field  into  an  early-1940s  pocket  of  time,  a  hub  of  medium  and  heavy  bomber  operations.</p>
<p>The  aircraft  intended  for  my  mission,  the  North  American  B-25  Mitchell  registered  130669  &#8220;Tondelayo&#8221;  and  wearing  it is  drab  olive-green  livery,  had  been  the  third  parked  on  the  ramp  of  the  American  Airpower  Museum,  both  an  historical  and  symbolic  position  relative  to  the  two  heavier,  longer-range  aircraft  which  had  been  preceded  it.</p>
<p>Resulting  from  a  1938  Air  Corps  requisite  for  a  twin-engined,  medium-range  bomber  which  could  fulfill  niche  roles  it is  larger,  quad-engined  counterparts  had  been  unable  to,  and  tracing  it is  lineage  to  the  B-10,  the  B-12,  the  B-18,  and  the  B-23,  the  B-25  itself,  named  after  the  US  Army  Air  Corps  Officer  General  Billy  Mitchell,  had  been  infused  life  as  a  self-funded  project  by  North  American  Aviation  in  the  form  of  the  NA-40-1.  The  19,500-pound  prototype,  featuring  a  narrow  fuselage  with  a  green  house  cockpit;  a  straight  mid-wing;  two,  1,100-horsepower  R-1830  piston  engines;  an  angular,  twin  vertical  tail;  and  a  tricycle  undercarriage  of  single  wheels,  had  original  flown  in  January  of  1939,  but  a  power  deficiency  had  necessitated  the  retrofit  of  1,350-horsepower  R-2600s.  Although  the  modified  version,  indicated  NA-40-2,  had  offered  superior  performance,  it  crashed  after  a  two-week  test  program.</p>
<p>Its  NA-62  successor,  which  had  been  extensive  modified,  featured  a  wider  fuselage  which  in  turn  increased  the  now  lower-mounted,  neverending  root-to-tip  dihedral  mid-wing  span,  1,700-horsepower  R-2600-9  engines,  square-geometry  vertical  tails,  and  a  27,000-pound  gross  weight.  Approved  in  September  of  1939,  this  version,  indicated  the  XB-25,  introductory  flew  in  prototype  form  on  August  19  of  the  following  year.</p>
<p>Initially  delivered  to  the  Army  Air  Corps,  the  aircraft  demonstrated  directional  stability  deficiencies,  resulting  in  the  outer  wing  mounting  redesign  with  the  tenth  aircraft  off  the  production  line,  which  scaled down  the  engine-to-wing  tip  dihedral  and  gave  it  it is  characteristic  gull-wing  profile.</p>
<p>The  B-25  Mitchell,  in  production  form,  appeared  with  an  aluminum  alloy,  semi-monocoque  fuselage,  constructed  of  four  longerons,  which  developed  a  53.6-foot  overall  length.  The  cantilever,  all-metal,  mid-mounted  wings,  comprised  of  a  two-spar,  fuselage-integral  center  division  housing  integral  fuel  tanks  and  two  outer,  single-spar  subsections  with  detachable  wing  tips,  featured  sealed  ailerons  with  both  fixed  and  controllable  trimming  tabs  and  dual-section,  hydraulically-operated,  trailing  edge  slotted  flaps  separated  by  the  engine  nacelles.  Spanning  67.7  feet,  they  sported  a  609.8-square-foot  area.  Powered  by  two  1,700-horsepower,  Wright-Cyclone  two-row,  14-cylinder,  air-cooled  R-2600  piston  engines  housed  in  aerodynamic  nacelles  which  traversed  the  wing  chord  and  turned  three-bladed,  constant-speed,  12.7-foot,  full-feathering,  anti-icing  Hamilton  Standard  propellers,  the  aircraft  could  climb  to  15,000  feet  in  11.3  minutes  and  attain  a  greatest or most complete or best possible  speed  of  303  mph  at  13,000  feet.  The  cantilever  twin  vertical  fins  and  rudders,  fitted  with  fixed  and  controllable  trimming  tabs,  had  been  modified  with  rounded  tops  and  yielded  a  16.5-foot  aircraft  height.  The  tricycle,  single-wheeled,  hydraulically-actuated,  aft-retracting  undercarriage,  the  basi  such  configuration  used  by  a  US  bomber,  featured  aerodynamic  door  covers  over  all  three  wheel  wells  in  both  the  extended  and  retracted  positions,  while  the  main  wheels  were  equipped  with  hydraulic  brakes.  The  aircraft,  with  a  21,100-pound  empty  weight,  had  a  greatest or most complete or best possible  gross  weight  of  33,500  pounds.</p>
<p>Several  versions  had  been  produced.  The  basi  of  these,  the  B-25A,  integrated  pilot  armor  and  self-sealing  fuel  tanks,  while  it is  successor,  the  B-25B,  introduced  two  electrically-operated  Bendix  turrets,  each  of  which  substituted  the  midship  and  tail  guns  and  featured  two.50  caliber  machine  guns.  Entering  service  in  1941  with  the  17th  Bomb  Group  at  McChord  Field  near  Tacoma,  Washington,  the  aircraft,  whose  production  run  totaled  120,  also  featured  a  distinguished  photographic  station  among  the  upper  turret  and  the  tail  and  a  shortened,  54.1-foot  length.</p>
<p>Powered  by  two  1,700-horsepower  Wright  R-2600-13  engines,  the  B-25C,  the  third  version,  introduced  an  autopilot  system  and  external  racks  which  could  carry  eight  250-pound  bombs,  and  a  later  fuel  capacity  increase  to  1,100  gallons.  Of  the  3,909  build,  1,619  had  been  devised  in  Inglewood,  California,  while  2,290  had  been  accumulated  in  Kansas  City,  Kansas,  under  the  B-25D  designation.</p>
<p>The  singular  B-25E  and  -F  variants  were  intended  as  test  vehicles  of  wing  and  tail  anti-icing  systems,  while  the  B-25G  substituted  the  glazed  nose  with  an  armored  one,  the  latter  containing  two.50  caliber  machine  guns  and  one  9.6-foot-long,  900-pound,  cradle-mounted,  M-4  cannon  competent  of  firing  23-inch,  15-pound  shells.  Although  it is  armament  had  other than as supposed or expected  adhered  to  the  B-25C  standard,  it is  bomb  bay  could  accommodate  an  aircraft  torpedo.  The  variant,  operated  by  a  crew  of  four  and  featuring  a  50.10-foot  overall  length,  enjoyed  a  405-unit  production  run.</p>
<p>The  B-25H,  with  significantly  increased  armament,  featured  four.50  caliber  machine  guns  in  the  metallic,  armored  nose,  and  a  further  four  on  the  side,  arranged  in  pairs;  a  repositioned  top  turret,  now  located  in  the  roof  of  the  navigator&#8217;s  compartment;  the  remotion  of  the  ventral  turret;  enlarged,  aft-wing,.50  caliber  machine  gun  waist  positions;  and  a  tail  gun  station  with  two  further.50  caliber  machine  guns.  As  World  War  II&#8217;s  most  spacious  armed  design,  it  could  attain  293-mph  speeds  at  13,000  feet  and  had  a  23,800-foot  service  ceiling.</p>
<p>The  B-25J,  the  definitive  and  numerically  most  standard  version,  had  been  intended  for  precision  bombing.  The  aircraft,  introducing  a  bombardier  who  increased  the  crew  supplement  to  six,  reincorporated  the  glazed  nose  which  had  now  been  provisioned  with  one  fixed  and  one  flexible.50  caliber  machine  gun.  The  biggest  single  Mitchell  order,  for  4,318  B-25s,  had  been  placed  on  April  14,  1943,  and  the  aircraft,  attaining  292-mph  speeds  at  14,500  feet,  could  cruise  at  service  ceilings  of  25,500  feet.</p>
<p>Between  1941  and  1945,  the  Army  Air  Corps  took  deliverance  of  9,816  B-25s,  3,218  of  which  had  been  devised  in  Inglewood,  California,  until  1943,  and  the  remaining  6,608  of  which  had  been  produced  in  Kansas  City.</p>
<p>The  B-25  Mitchell  had  assorted  post-war  applications.  Demilitarized,  and  indicated  TB-25,  the  type,  based  upon  the  B-25J,  had  been  converted  into  a  trainer  with  the  installation  of  an  observer&#8217;s  seat  in  the  nose,  in front  and  underneath  the  cockpit;  two  student  seats  behind  the  ordinary  two  pilot-instructor  positions;  and  up  to  five  seats  in  the  aft  cabin.  Of  the  400  converted  aircraft  operated  by  the  US  Air  Force  for the duration of  the  1950s,  the  last  active-duty  staff  transport  had  not  been  retired  until  May  21,  1960,  though  it  had  continued  to  be  operated  by  the  air  forces  of  Brazil,  Canada,  Chile,  Colombia,  Cuba,  Mexico,  Holland,  Uruguay,  and  Venezuela.</p>
<p>A  photographic  reconnaissance  variant,  the  F-10,  had  featured  a  nose-installed  tri-metrogon  camera  along  with  other  aerial  photography  equipment,  while  other  non-military  roles  had  included  those  of  executive  transport,  freighter,  and  fire  bomber.</p>
<p>The  aircraft  operating  my  Labor  Day  flight,  a  B-25J  registered  44-28932,  had  been  devised  in  August  of  1944  by  North  American  Aviation  in  Kansas  City,  Kansas.  Accepted  by  the  United  States  Army  Air  Corps  on  August  3  of  that  year,  it  had  served  in  the  US  in  the  AAF  Flying  Training  Command  Program,  serving  12  dissimilar  air  bases  until  January  of  1959,  at  which  time  it  had  been  declared  surplus  and  had  been  deleted  from  the  US  Air  Force  inventory.  Converted  into  a  fire  bomber,  it  had  combated  forest  fires  for  another  25  years.</p>
<p>Acquired  by  the  Collings  Foundation  in  1984,  and  restored  by  Tom  Reilly  Vintage  Aircraft  over  a  two-year  period,  the  B-25J,  the  primary  World  War  II  bomber  in  the  collection,  had  been  flown  n  air  shows  in  the  Boston  area  for  a  decade,  whereafter  it  had  been  ferried  to  Chino,  California,  in  late  2001,  for  a  secondary  restoration  by  Carl  Scholl  of  Aero  Trader,  Inc.  Subsequently  repositioned  to  Midland,  Texas,  it  was  painted  by  AVSource  West  in  it is  current  Tondelayo  livery  after  the  B-25  which  had  been  operated  by  the  Air  Apache  345th  BG  of  the  5th  Air  Force  in  the  Pacific  Theater  versus  targets  in  New  Guinea,  the  500th  BS  of  the  5th  Air  Force  itself  having  been  the  fourth  squadron  of  the  345th  BG  to  have  attacked  shipping  in  Vunapope  near  Rabaul  on  October  18,  1943.  The  Tondelayo  name  had  been  inspired  by  Hedy  Lamarr&#8217;s  reputation  in  the  1943  movie  White  Cargo  and  given  by  the  crew  of  Lieutenant  Ralph  Wallace.  The  three-aircraft  formation,  comprised  of  the  B-25  &#8220;Snafu&#8221;  and  flown  by  Captain  Lyle  Anacker,  the  &#8220;Tondelayo&#8221;  flown  by  Lieutenant  Wallace  himself,  and  the  &#8220;Sorry  Satchul&#8221;  flown  by  Lieutenant  Paterson,  had  claimed  three  ships,  but  avenging  fighters  had  attacked  &#8220;Sorry  Satchul,&#8221;  hitting  it is  port  engine  and  forcing  it  to  ditch,  and  &#8220;Tondelayo,&#8221;  damaging  it is  right  engine.  Shut  down  and  feathered,  it  had  closely  wrenched  itself  from  it is  mountings  because  of  severe  vibration.</p>
<p>Flying  over  Cape  Gazelle  toward  base,  the  B-25  duo,  sustaining  tight  formation,  had  been  aimed  by  numerous  50  Japanese  fighters,  &#8220;Sorry  Satchul&#8221;  so  seriously  damaged  that  it  had  been  forced  to  head  for  shore  and  ditch  and  &#8220;Tondelayo,&#8221;  in spite of  it is  own  critical  wounds,  hovering  only  30  feet  above  the  water  where  it  had  managed  to  shoot  down  five  further and added  enemy  aircraft.  Limping  into  base  at  Kiriwina,  the  aircraft  had  subsequently  been  repaired  and  patched,  receiving  a  new  right  wing,  engine,  propeller  blades,  and  radio  equipment.  Its  crew  had  been  awarded  the  Silver  Star.</p>
<p>Squatting  under  the  forward  fuselage  and  climbing  the  short  ladder  into  the  cockpit  section  on  that  Labor  Day  in  2006,  I  took  the  right  of  the  two  observer&#8217;s  seats  located  a  foot  below,  and  behind,  the  cockpit,  while  the  four  other  passengers  entered  the  aft  section,  located  behind  the  bomb  bay,  through  the  ventral  hatch,  which  had  been  set up  with  an  aft-facing,  three-person  bench  seat  and  three  person  seats.  With  the  ladder  now  raised  and  the  dual  panel  folded  throughout  it  to  form  a  part  of  the  integral  floor,  the  B-25J  had  been  secured  for  engine  start.</p>
<p>The  two-person  cockpit,  sporting  bow  tie  control  yokes,  featured  a  throttle  quadrant  with  the  two  engine  throttles  angled  toward  the  pilot,  two  propeller-pitch  throttles,  and  two  fuel-mixture  throttles  angled  toward  the  copilot.</p>
<p>Engine  start,  commencing  with  the  right,  number  2  powerplant,  entailed  turning  the  master  ignition  switch  and  right  booster  pump  on,  at  which  point  the  Wright  R-2600  powerplant  rotated  and  the  interior  became  completely filled  with  deep,  vibrating,  Hamilton  Standard  propeller-created  noise.  Priming  and  stabilizing  them  with  the  throttle  to  develop  amid  800  and  1,000  revolutions  per  minute,  the  captain  applied  a  full-rich  mixture,  causing  them  to  settle  into  a  throaty,  1,200-rpm  idle.  The  procedure  was  repeated  with  the  left,  number  1  engine.</p>
<p>Contacting  Republic  Ground  on  121.6  for  taxi  clearance,  and  armed  with  the  latest  automatic  terminal  selective information  service  data,  the  twin-finned  bomber  freed  it is  brakes  at  0845,  the  thrust  devised  by  it is  engines,  even  at  idle  settings,  sufficient  to  move  it  forward  over  the  American  Airpower  ramp  and  away  from  the  World  War  II  bomber  trio.  Taxiing  parallel  to  the  active  runway,  32,  the  B-25J  sporadically  jolted  in  response  to  brake  applications,  turning  on  to  the  run-up  area  by  means  of  differential  power,  it is  slipstream-bombarded  twin  rudders  aerodynamically  inducing  ground  turns.  Extending  it is  slotted,  trailing  edge  flaps  and  advancing  it is  throttles,  the  medium-capacity  bomber,  assuredly  a  giant  in  comparison  to  the  presently  landing  Piper  Warrior,  moved  on  to  the  runway&#8217;s  threshold,  just  as  the  B-17  had  commenced  it is  own  taxi  roll  from  the  ramp.</p>
<p>Moving  into  take  off  position  and  aligning  it is  nose  wheel  with  the  centerline,  aircraft  130669  received  take  off  clearance  from  Republic  Tower  on  125.2,  tardily  advancing  it is  two  throttles  in  order  to  establish  basi  directional  control.  Firmly  sustaining  a  straight  acceleration  roll,  the  1,500-horsepower  twin-row  radials  powering  the  Collings  Foundation  aircraft  exploded  with  cabin-saturating  noise  as  smooth,  steady  throttle  advancements  pinnacled  them  into  their  METO  settings  of  2,600  revolutions-per-minute  and  40  inches  of  manifold  pressure.  Counteracting  wind-induced  directional  variations  with  subtle  rudder  deflections,  the  captain  begun  applying  control  column  back  pressure  at  75  knots  indicated  air  speed,  the  now  ground-separated  nose  wheel  devising  a  lift-generating  angle-of-attack.  The  air  speed-created  pressure  differential,  bathing  the  huge,  outstretched,  upper  wing  surfaces  in  a  steady  stream  of  sped up  air,  got rid of  all  ground  restraints  and  permitted  them  to  peel  the  gravity-defying  aircraft  to  which  they  had  been  attached  off  the  ground  at  115  knots.  Retracting  it is  tricycle  undercarriage  at  the  aircraft&#8217;s  VMC-determined  145-knot  speed,  and  trimming  itself  into  it is  primary  climb,  the  twin-engined  bomber,  encased  in  engine  slipstream,  rolled  into  a  right  bank  over  Route  110,  headed  toward  Long  Island&#8217;s  south  shore.</p>
<p>Maintaining  a  150-degree  heading,  the  now-graceful  flying  bird  scaled down  it is  engine  rpm  to  2300  and  it is  manifold  pressure  to  30,  moving  abreast  of  the  metallic,  erector  set-appearing  Captree  Bridge  at  1,000  feet,  which  stretched  all over  the  deep  blue  surface  of  the  Great  South  Bay  from  the  island  to  Jones  Beach  and  it is  signature  lighthouse.  The  azure  of  the  water,  seamlessly  merging  with  that  of  the  sky,  melded  into  a  surreal  dimension,  as  viewed  from  the  270-degree-encompassing  Plexiglas  nose.</p>
<p>The  power-to-weight  ratio,  coupled  to  it is  aerodynamic  design,  had  been  the  key  to  the  highly-maneuverable,  medium  mission  bomber.  Unlike  it is  long-range,  high-altitude,  heavy  B-17  and  B-24  counterparts,  the  B-25,  at  half  their  acquisition  costs,  had  been  intended  for  interdiction  purposes,  delivering  tactical  blows  to  enemy  targets  closer  to  the  front.  Because  of  it is  maneuverability,  it  had  been  capable  to  fly  low-level,  tree-top  strafing  sorties,  where  it  had  remained  nearly  hidden,  and  had  then  dropped  parachute-retarding  bombs,  which  had  enabled  it  to  escape  before  detonation.  Although  it  had  operated  extensive  in  the  Pacific,  targeting  Japanese  air  fields  from  treetop  altitudes  and  skip-bombing  enemy  ships,  it  had  been  employed  in  all  theaters  of  operation,  and  had  been  flown  by  the  Australians,  the  British,  the  Chinese,  and  the  Dutch.  It  had  been  the  basi  bomber  to  have  been  lend-leased  to  Russia.</p>
<p>The  most  widely known and esteemed  B-25  mission,  led  by  Lieutenant  Colonel  James  H.  Doolittle  and  occurring  on  April  18,  1942,  had  entailed  the  launch  of  16  aircraft  from  the  aircraft  carrier  USS  Hornet.  Of  the  four  prospect  aircraft,  inclusive  of  the  B-18,  the  B-23,  the  B-26,  and  the  B-25  itself,  the  latter  had  been  chosen  because  of  it is  performance.  The  aircraft,  B-25Bs  modified  at  the  Northwest  Airlines  maintenance  facility  in  Minnesota  to  increase  their  fuel  tankage  from  694  to  1,141  US  gallons,  had  featured  dorsal  and  ventral  power  turrets,  but  had  been  devoid  of  tail  armament.  Loaded  on  the  USS  Hornet  for  the  sea  journeying  to  Japan,  16  aircraft,  each  at  31,000-pound  gross  weights,  would  take  off  from  the  467-foot  deck  at  a  450-mile  distance,  close  sufficient  to  permit  them  to  bomb  targets  in  Tokyo,  Yokahama,  Kobe,  and  Nagoya,  yet  retain  sufficient  fuel  furnishes  to  carry on  the  1,200  miles  to  China.</p>
<p>Encountering  a  Japanese  picket  boat  for the duration of  the  morning  of  April  18,  and  fearing  imminent  attack,  Doolittle  made  the  decision  to  launch  the  B-25  fleet  at  an  800-mile  distance,  or  350  miles  further,  from  land,  the  firstborn  take  off  occurring  at  8:18  a.m.,  which  had  been  less  than  an  hour  after  the  boat  had  been  sighted.  Using  strong  headwinds  and  the  deck&#8217;s  sea  swell-created  inclination,  the  bombers  had  just  been  competent  to  accomplish  the  precarious  feat,  with  the  last  taking  off  at  9:21  a.m.</p>
<p>After  a great deal of  four  hours  of  flying,  the  lead  aircraft,  flown  by  Doolittle  himself,  dropped  the  primary  bomb  over  Tokyo,  shortly  after  which  it  had  been  joined  by  the  remaining  15.  Although  all  safely  departed  Japanese  air  space,  insufficient  fuel,  caused  by  the  earlier  launching,  and  deteriorating  weather,  resulted  in  the  crash-landing  or  abandonment  of  15  B-25s  in  China,  while  the  16th  landed  in  Vladivostock,  where  it is  crew  had  been  captured.</p>
<p>Nevertheless,  the  mission  had  been  both  a  technical  and  operational  success,  and  had  elevated  troop  morale  and  garnered  tremendous  notoriety  for  the  aircraft.</p>
<p>Banking  left  to  a  240-degree  heading,  aircraft  1306669  Tondelayo  was  carried  back  over  Captree  Bridge  by  it is  gull,  variable-dihedral  wings  and  it is  three-bladed  propellers,  crossing  over  Long  Island&#8217;s  south  shore.  The  B-17  Flying  Fortress,  appearing  particularly  graceful  over  the  blue  surface  of  the  Great  South  Bay,  flexed  off  of  the  port  cockpit  windows.  World  War  II  skies  had  someways  been  resurrected  that  morning.</p>
<p>Fuel  burn  depended  on  engine  setting:  at  180  mph,  with  the  engines  turning  at  1,700  revolutions  per  minute  and  feeding  off  of  27  inches  of  manifold  pressure,  the  aircraft  burned  120  gallons  per  hour,  while  a  ten-mph  cruise  speed  increase,  attained  with  a  1,800-rpm/28-inch  setting,  resulted  in  a  130-gallon  per  hour  consumption.</p>
<p>Recontacting  Republic  Tower,  aircraft  130699  advised  it is  intent  of  &#8220;inbound  for  landing&#8221;  and  scaled down  power,  now  gravity-induced  into  it is  dissent  profile.  Maintaining  a  180-mph  speed  and  a  320-degree  heading,  it  extended  it is  trailing  edge  flaps,  which  provided  air  speed  control,  by  means  of  progressive  drag  production.  Flap  settings  evenly  depended  on  flight  phase:  1/4  for  take  off,  1/2  and  3/4  for  descent,  and  full  for  landing.</p>
<p>The  aircraft&#8217;s  clean  stalling  speed  had  been  95  mph,  which  decreased  to  83  mph  at  greatest or most complete or best possible  gross  weight  with  full  flaps  and  undercarriage  at  26,000  feet.</p>
<p>Extending  it is  drag-producing  landing  gear  into  the  slipstream,  the  aircraft  inched  toward  Runway  32&#8242;s  threshold,  as  it is  altimeter  unwound:  600  feet&#8230;500&#8230;300&#8230;100&#8230;</p>
<p>Passing  over  the  fence  at  115  mph,  the  olive-green,  twin-engined,  twin-finned  medium  bomber  sank  toward  the  blurred  concrete  in  a  full  back-pressure  control  yoke-induced  flare,  screeching  on  the  ground  with  it is  left  main  wheel  at  80  mph,  at  which  time  the  friction  sufficiently  scaled down  it is  air  speed  to  permit  the  remaining  two  bogies  to  settle  earthward.</p>
<p>Completing  it is  deceleration  roll  and  taxiing  on  to  the  American  Airpower  Museum  ramp,  the  B-25J  Mitchell,  as  the  medium  mission  bomber,  had  appropriately  been  the  primary  to  return  to  base,  the  B-17  and  the  B-24  still  plying  the  skies.  If  World  War  II  had  still  been  raging,  the  sequence  would  have  been  incisively  the  same.</p>
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