Vulcan !!!!!!

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
Actually, I doubt the plane would have been a deterrent at ANY point in the process anyway, it would have been the bomb, the whole bomb and nothing but the bomb.

'the bomb' would have been pretty useless (and therefore not much of a deterrent) without a means of delivery...
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
'the bomb' would have been pretty useless (and therefore not much of a deterrent) without a means of delivery...


Um. Missiles?

Or maybe City Link, that would have been a fairly effective preventative measure. They'd just stack the bombs up in the depot and stick a card through the door of the Kremlin saying "We tried to deliver but you were out..."
 
Um. Missiles?

Or maybe City Link, that would have been a fairly effective preventative measure. They'd just stack the bombs up in the depot and stick a card through the door of the Kremlin saying "We tried to deliver but you were out..."

The Vulcan was originally designed to drop a free-fall nuclear bomb at a time when that was pretty much the only option for getting one where you wanted it to go - the UK did not have an independent ICBM capability until Polaris went into RN subs in the 1960s.
 

Mad Doug Biker

Banned from every bar in the Galaxy
Location
Craggy Island
The Vulcan was originally designed to drop a free-fall nuclear bomb at a time when that was pretty much the only option for getting one where you wanted it to go - the UK did not have an independent ICBM capability until Polaris went into RN subs in the 1960s.

Fairynuff, although it would still only be a deterrent until someone decided 'sod it, we are gonna drop a bomb and nothing is going to stop us.

Luckily (and miraculously) common sense seemed to (just about) prevail and nothing ever happened, and the Vulcan was a so called 'deterrent' for something that could never happen in the first place.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
And it was also a strategic platform capable of dropping conventional munitions. Even without the Cold War it was still useful in its day to have a bomber with the range and payload to drop a worthwhile load of conventional munitions while flying high enough to avoid the bulk of AA weaponry of the time (though that last bit was found to beca miscalculation).

And indeed, the only time it was used in combat was to drop conventional munitions, so in an era before cruise missiles it was a tasty bit of kit.
 

guitarpete247

Just about surviving
Location
Leicestershire
I used to see them fly from RAF Finningley in the 60's where they had a "Vulcan Scramble" of 3 thundering down the runway. I used to see them when I was at school flying over.
XH558 was originally stationed there and is back home.
GF just did First Aid training with some of the project staff. They're based somewhere in Hinckley.
 
Actually, to be fair - although it was a magnificent aircraft, it was only ever designed to be a high altitude delivery platform for a single, free-fall bomb intended for somewhere within the USSR.

It sucked as a long range conventional strategic bomber, it sucked as a stand-off weapons platform and it sucked as a low level intruder. It was good at air shows though...
 
OP
OP
gbb

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Actually, to be fair - although it was a magnificent aircraft, it was only ever designed to be a high altitude delivery platform for a single, free-fall bomb intended for somewhere within the USSR.

It sucked as a long range conventional strategic bomber, it sucked as a stand-off weapons platform and it sucked as a low level intruder. It was good at air shows though...

Hmmm...partly true maybe. It was the stand-off weapon itself that sucked, not the plane. The Blue Steel missile had a very short range, less than 100 miles IIRC. There were to be better variants but cost and politics got in the way. I remember my dad saying years ago (probably when he was still working on Vulcans). ...Blue Steel was a waste of time.
Low level intruder...it evaded the best the Argentines had at the time, inc.luding the then advanced Roland AA system...and the RAF didn't even know they had it deployed when they sent the Vulcan in. It evaded all they had with relatively antiquated anti radar jamming systems....the Argentines only ever managed to fire standard AA indiscriminately after the bombs were dropped. Basically the Vulcan got a free run, despite several AA systems wainting for them, some the most sophisticated of their time.
 
Top Bottom