@@trentsavage4533 I appreciate your kind words. Not sure what it's for but any congratulations always welcome! Ready for another if you're feeling generous
Really enjoyed the tour. I was the co-pilot on this particular tail number "596" on 1Apr73 on a night bombing mission from Guam to Vietnam. Brings back lots of memories.
MY dad flew one of these in the VIETNAM war. I still remember us going on base and him letting me see all of the planes. I sure do miss him and his stories!!
My Dad filmed many of his bombing missions over Vietnam as an Aircraft commander. The magic of 8mm home movies! We lived on SAC bases for most of my fathers 24 year career and got tours of every model B 52 from the D model to the H. My father passed away last year. He’s gone now, but many of the aircraft he flew are still in use today.
Fabulous video! When my family moved to Wichita Kansas in 1962, our next door neighbor was Boeing's chief test pilot for the B-52 program. Our home was due north of the runway and B-52s flew over all day long. Test B-52s had fluorescent orange paint on the fuselage and the vertical stabilizer. If we were in the yard playing and our neighbor flew overhead as he was about to land, he would wag the wings at us to wave. It was so cool! Thanks for this interesting video!!
Been there, done that, tail number 2596 was one of the BUFF's I worked. Spend several years of my young life crawling through every inch of B-52G's. It's amazing where they used to stick Electronic Countermeasures Equipment on BUFF's. Everything from the nose to the top of the tail. We had to fix it all and fix all RF paths and electrical wiring (including the Chaff Dispensers in the Wing and Flare Dispensers in the Rear). It was a great job, though sometimes stinky, dirty, cold/hot, and everything in between.
Aww . . you just miss pouring DC-200 into the HD's on the alternator deck with a donkey dick on pre-flight. Why not Minot? Freezin's the reason. And if your ECM you know exactly what I'm talking about.
@@52griz It's just as much fun at 0200 and the windchill just went below -40 at Loring AFB. Or for more fun try changing all the equipment mounts on all the ALT-28 Transmitters and HDs on all 15 Bombers at Robins in 95 degrees with 95 percent Humidity in 1978. All because the Depot at Kelly bought the mounting racks from a crap supplier and the DCM wants the TCTO done yesterday (including the Alert Birds). Oh and of course the Day Shift Flightline Crew with three people gets to do it all, because Night Shift is so busy handling the returning Buffs (an average of three a day) from training missions. I did finally talk the Boss into grabbing some Shop Troops into helping us after the DCM realized that we weren't fully manned and only three people were actually doing the work (Boy, was he hot when he found out.). My back still hurts from heaving all those Heavies. We finally got Hydraulic Loaders for the ALT-28's/AlQ-155's when I got to Loring in 83 and no one even knew we had them or how to use them. They were awkward to use, but saved our backs on many occasions.
As a B52 crew chief i would like to compliment you on a truly completely accurate tour. I watched very closely to see mistakes and saw none. Very good job. I can't say that about most "expert" videos. Matt. B52H 60-0001 Memphis Bell IV 20th Bomber Squadron 8th Air Force Barksdale AFB 1996-2000
My dad was a B-52 Navigator stationed at Barksdale AFB (SAC) in the early 60's. I remember going to a little hole in the wall seafood shack nearby. Miss those days with my dad.
I I was a B-52 crew chief at BAFB from 89-92, one of the last 4 crew chiefs on the alert pad before the START treaty, I sent a few G models to the boneyard and recovered a couple TAC ferry H models when we first started getting them as the G's were being retired. Good times.
@@jamesrudd8705 Balls One dropped in for a visit to Wurtsmith AFB (G unit) once. It had an interphone problem and we were asked to take a look. Oops, wrong model of interphone! So we took turns laying in the bunk just to say we did and buttoned it up and went back to the shop.
As a child my husband was inside one of these at the airshow in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. It was returning to America from Vietnam and the crew took a side trip to the airshow. He remembers the USAF crew being very friendly and kind with children. They made a big positive impression on my husband who was 12 years old at the time. God bless America, NORAD, Canada and NATO.
@@styldsteel1 Boeing is not the same company that used to be, It suffers from extremely poor and unreasonable management today. Companies that do business with Boeing are generally very unhappy with their business tactics and attitudes.
@@TheHomeExpert5 that's very sad. In all honesty, now, I can't confirm nor deny what you day is true, if companies are dissatisfied with Boeing, companies will look to Airbus, or maybe even Embraer.
Thank you for the guided tour of my old office. I was a member of The Strategic Air Command and began flying F-111's. When my Aardvark was retired, I got the "keys" to my very own BUFF! My late father was an Admiral in the US Navy and was not pleased when I decided to enlist into the US Air Force vs US Navy. He worked on General Electric jet engine designs in the 1950's and 1960's. He had taught me how to fly many years before I learned how to drive a car. I prefer flying, less traffic! The only saving Grace my father allowed was I at "least" I would use engines he had designed. The US Navy had nixed the F-111 so my father was unsure of its air worthiness. I no longer fly because I am a terrible back seat driver!
I have over 2000 hours flying as an EWO in the B-52...most of it in the G model at Barksdale and Castle. Fond memories...can almost hear the noise and smell that distinctive BUFF aroma that never changed. Thanks for the post!
@@robinsites9790 I believe we got 155's while I was at Castle. I remember being with company tech reps out on the flight line. The 28's were heavy enough. These were much heavier. Problem with avionics maintenance is it is difficult to duplicate some malfunctions on the ground since the aircraft is stationary. We'd wiggle wires and cables in attempt to do so. And sometimes we'd just swap out seemingly good components due to repeat write ups. Air pressure changes and vibrations in flight were often a cause. We always tried to provide the best equipment and maintenance. I always wanted to go for a ride to see the equipment I maintained in actual operation. Felt I'd get a better appreciation of our jobs.
@@52griz They were just getting the 155s when I was a student at Castle in 1982. It took a few years to get the bugs out. Lots of things happen at altitude that you can’t always duplicate on the ground. Also we would run our system check at high level cruise then cold soak them a few hours and turn them on and use them after a 2 hour low level run. Too many of our guys would write stuff up I thought...Years later I was the lead ECM Program Manager at the F-16 SPO at Wright-Patt. Got experience with 2 level maintenance. Maintenance troops would send a malfunctioning ALR-56M box to the ALC and they would send it back NFF (no fault found) and charge the unit for it. Discovered the thing was getting wet and failing and would dry out on the way to Warner -Robins and the could not duplicate the fault. The fix was to plug 2 hole in top of the box where water was getting in from an in insulated air conditioning line above it...
Great video. I lived about 20 miles downrange of the flightline at Warner Robins AFB base when I was a kid and these things were constantly rumbling over the house, either on missions or check flights just having been repaired. Warner Robins did an yearly airshow, Navy one year and Airforce the next. Other than the SR-71's, the B52's were the most badass plane in the show. They would simulate a napalm bombing run and just annihilate the grass between the runways, right before the choppers with special forces troops would come in on helicopters. Fun times, and thanks to all you guys who served.
Great tour. I retired in 1992 and have about 3550 hours in B-52 D, F, G and H models as a Nav/RN so it brought back many memories. Being downstairs with no windows meant (at Grand Forks ND) that one could take off before dawn, fly 12 hours and land at night so never saw the sun at all.
Ahhhh yes, memories. I remember eating my flight lunch on the crew bus after one of those missions because I never got time to eat it aloft...for 10+ hours. The Nav was the donkey of the crew. Someone need something???? Hey nav, when you got a minute !!
As a former taingunner we only used the water injection on take off for extra thrust. You could actually feel it when it kicked in. Great video, brings back a lot of memories.
You should have crawled down the back end. The one at Duxford in UK had graffiti from the Vietnam war era scratched into the main bulkhead, including mission dates and bomb tallys. Very cool.
Seen the one at Duxford. It was outside and one could appreciate how big this plane is. This video can't really demonstrate its size tucked into a hanger
Darwin is wet and stormy for six months of the year, so I'd imagine it's safer inside than out. Having been to the Aviation Museum, the B52 truly dominates the space.
The Bell X-1 precedes the B-52 by about 6 years and was dropped from the bomb bay of a modified B-29 and later a B-50. You might be thinking of the North American X-15 which was released from a hardpoint mounted on the aircraft's wing between 1959 and 1968.
Former B-52 EWO here. Wanted to correct a few misunderstandings. Regarding your story about ECM and ATC, no... just, no. First, during peacetime, we're squawking via an IFF transponder, so we wouldn't be invisible to air traffic control. We also don't fly around actively jamming or doing so indiscriminately because if we were jamming an airport surveillance radar, it's not only not seeing us, it's not seeing anyone else. Also, there is no radar absorbent material on a B-52, or at least not for the purpose of rendering the aircraft less visible on radar. While serrations are used to scatter incoming RF on some aircraft, those on the B-52 tail wouldn't have that effect. That said, given the proximity of the ALQ-153 TWS on the vertical stabilizer, it might be related to it (although having spent 8 years and 2000+ hours in the B-52, no one has ever mentioned that, so...). Fun fact: Going to the "loo," aka "honey bucket" is taboo for the obvious issue of aroma. Having flown a Global Power mission, we carried a chemical camp toilet. Also, the urinal is close to very hot electronic equipment, so it tends to simmer, which lends to the distinctive aroma inside the cockpit. Good times.
@@jamesrudd8705 I did! My co-pilot had to use it. As the EW, I went to 100% O2 and put the a/c to max. I turned around at one point and he was shivering while doing his business. I think he had to buy beers after the flight.
@@jamesrudd8705 I never used it. And I don't think I remember anyone else ever using it. I think the work load and rapid pace of even the training missions kept your mind off your need.
A testament to the insane longevity of this platform. My Uncle entered the Air Force 50 years ago as a pilot during Vietnam and flew the F4 Phantom (B52 had already been in service for years at this point). He stayed in the Air Force long enough to fly in the Gulf War as an A10 pilot some 20 years later before retiring as a Brigadier General (B52 still in service). After retiring, he stayed involved as a civilian contractor / advisor involved in the mid 90's study of re-engining the B52 to 4 modern turbofans. He passed away a few years ago, and the Air Force is FINALLY moving forward with re-engining the B52 in earnest with the CERP program and the platform will be in service for decades to come.
I was a crew chief on the B52G from 83 to 87 assigned to the 379th OMS Wurtsmith AFB. MI. I was on flight status and loved to sit in the IP seat between the pilot and co-pilot. Working on the BUFF was the best time of my life.
I was crew chief on a B52H in the 319th OMS at Grand Forks from 75-78. Even though cocking a KC-135 onto alert took much less time and effort than my BUFF, I never envied the tanker guys needing to heat water during the winter nights. I can still hear in my mind the MD-3 chugging away on those cold nights.
@@jeffburrell7648 HI Jeff, I spent my fair share of time on uploads and alert. Cart starts and rollers were fun too. Nice to hear from a fellow crew chief.
@@williamepstein4837 Those were good days for me, too, but I really don't miss ORIs or rebuilding my bird after a month on cann status. It was a hard decision to cross train into satellite communications, but it was the right decision for me.
@@jeffburrell7648 hey chiefs, I was also crew chief B-52H 5TH OMS MINOT 80-84 ACFT 61-019 60-053 (RIP now in the pacific Guam) 60-008 (lucky lady lV) Darwin guam missions were great, but some your just glad you made it back. 21 hrs was my longest flight but was super cool cause I sat in the copilot seat & flew at cruse while he got a couple hrs of sleep :)
Thanks for the tour. 1975 to 1979 I was involved with the B 52G, first as the 97th OMS Bomber Branch Officer In Charge, ending up as the OMS Maintenance Supervisors for both the KC 135 and B 52, based in Blytheville, Arkansas.
Hey, I was stationed there from 01/09/73 to 01/10/80, and again from 08/01/88 to 15/12/92, when they closed the gates. I worked in DFCS, trying to keep those guns firing until the last flight with a gunner October, 1991. I was assigned to OMS my second tour there.
I was a Bomb/Nav avionics tech in the Air Force in the early 70s and I worked on B-52s for four years. I remember R&R-ing the EVS and FLIR modules outside at night when it was 20 below zero. Thanks for the video. Really brought back memories!
As a former mechanic for the egress systems on the BUFF, this was a trip down memory lane. Thank you so much for sharing. I actually kinda miss this old rust bucket.
Finally a walk through thats an actual walk through and films everything. Good job. Most "walk throughs" just start recording when the person is sitting in the pilots seat and you don't see shit except out the window and front dash board.
In the late 1960’s, I was stationed at McConnell AFB in Wichita, KS. The base shared its runways with the adjacent Boeing plant where they did refurbishment work on the B-52. It was quite a sight to see a BUFF flying low over the access road on final approach. We used to call it an “aluminum overcast.” And quite a contrast to the aircraft on the other side of the boundary fence at the factory where Cessna built their light singles, 152, 172, 182, etc.
I flew test flights in a KC-135 at McConnell. On one flight the weather and visibility was so bad at McConnell we had to make 3 passes before we could get down. The next morning, when I came in, I saw a B-52 off the end of the runway, mired in the grass. Evidently, it was being delivered to Boeing and had the same problem we did getting it on the ground. (that was in 1978 or 9).
I was an ECM technician for 4 years in the USAF from 1967 to 1971. I worked B-52Ds which were the primary BUFFs used in Viet Nam. This aircraft had ECM components located everywhere and most of the ECM black boxes were over 100lbs (this was before miniature circuit components). Working inside of these things on the flight line in Texas heat was brutal, no windows! That being said, I still love the BUFF!
Those are magnificent aircraft. I worked around them for years while I was in the USAF. They are big, loud, and stunning when you are up close to them like you are in this video. Watching them take off and seeing the wings curl up at the ends was astonishing when I first saw it.
I was a Electrical/Environmental maintainer on G model BUFF's at Wurtsmith AFB in Michigan. Thanks for the ride down memory lane. I did a lot of crawling and banging my head in these birds and loved every minute.
When I was a small child, my kindergarten teacher was married to a B-52 pilot. For our field trip we were allowed on a USAF base and were allowed to crawl through the B-52 and the KC-135. The B-52 variant we were in still had the crew station in the rear with the quad .50's and it was tiny there. The coolest part of the trip though was the large matted surface in the KC-135 where the crewmember laid and looked out the windows to fly the boom.
I was a USAF Security Policeman from 1973-1982, and guarded countless B-52s from South Dakota to North Carolina to California. They are awe-inspiring aircraft just sitting in their parking spots, but to watch a scramble and simulated launch from the alert apron is an other-worldly experience. Thanks for the memories, Paul!
What a great tour of the famous B-52 Bomber. Back in the mid 60's during the Vietnam War I was in the USAF repairing the radios on these great aircraft. The main HF radio for long distance communications was the ARC-65 made by Collins Radio Company and it was quite ugly, looking more like a round garbage can. It had many vacuum tubes putting off an enormous amount of heat and was remote controlled from the cockpit. It ran about 250 watts output on both SSB (Phone) and CW (Morse Code). I spent many an hour troubleshooting this beast to make sure it could do it's important duty in combat. All of the ARC-65's have been replaced by modern solid state radios which are much more reliable. The RB-47H Bombers also used the ARC-65. I am very proud I was able to serve our country and be at least a little part of the history of the mighty B-52 Stratofortress.
Interesting! As an EW, I used the HF radio many times to report emergencies on the aircraft back to our command post, or reach the nearest SAC base. It always worked!
Interesting seeing the G and comparing. I was Master Crew Chief on 61-011 Chameleon, an H model. I was one who had the pleasure of powering up those 8 throttles from time to time. Also was one who crawled on that crawlway in flight. Not fun! I gave many static display tours in my time, you did a good job. I've slept with that plane, loaded for alert, and flown all over the world in that plane. Low level flying is awesome. I was even blessed a few times to take the stick and fly it, shhhhh! Those were very fond days.
As a Crew member in the 70s, we did occasional static display days where the public climbed stairs to look in the cockpit. My all-time favorite question was, "Now, does this thing have one key to start, or eight?" Nice tour and great memories. Built with slide rules.
Thought the story was that some tried using the new computer models to come up with a model and it wasn't meeting requirements so a few people at Boeing were talking about it and literally grabbed a block of wood and carved out a fuselage
@@penguin2ab OK, that story has been distorted a bit. George Schairer, Ed Wells, Bob Withington and several others were in Dayton, OH pitching their concept for a new bomber. The Air Force rejected it saying it needed to be jet powered and faster. So back in the hotel they redesigned the airplane based upon what wind tunnel data they had with them. While the others were drafting the report Schairer went to a hobby shop and bought supplies and built a balsa model. It was more than the fuselage, it was the entire airplane. Schairer was Boeing's rep to Operation Paperclip. His letter back to Seattle concerning sweep is (was?) displayed in Boeing's HQ in Chicago. I had the pleasure of working with Mr. Schairer and Mr. Withington as a young engineer - and had Mr. Withington's son as one of my employees. Those guys were good engineers, believe me.
As a crew member in the '60's, no civilian was allowed inside of a B52. It would have been nice to allow our wives to see "our office" but that wasn't the SAC way. Actually, wives were considered unnecessary complications that just complicated the war mission
I was with the 633rd MXS on Guam in 1995 and actually flew to Darwin to work on the B-52 tow bars in storage. I got to see this B-52 on display at the museum. I really enjoyed Darwin and the friendly people. Great job on the video!
My father was stationed at Pease AFB, NH with the 509th Bomb Wing. When my father would go to his office on weekends, which was in the main hanger, he would take me with him. There was a B-52 in the hanger, painted black, for maintenance. He would let me Go inside the B-52 and walk around the interior. I just couldn’t touch anything. What a great dad, retired E-9, and what an incredible memory.
Great video. My father Colonel William R. Gilmore graduated from the USNA in 1954. He transferred into the US Air Force and was a navigator in the B-47 then B-52. He is now buried at the US Air Force Academy near the B-52 on display.
Thank you! Very well done! I was a USAF "sky cop" who walked around buffs at Loring Maine in 1970. I never got the opportunity to see the inside of one of these aircraft until now! Thanks!
A walk down memory lane!!! I worked on the B-52 D/F/G/H when I was stationed at Castle AFB (now closed) in Merced, CA from May '73 to Oct '75. This is an amazing aircraft and the fact that it continues to be on active service is a testament to the engineering behind it.... It was quite an experience for a 19 year old from a small borough outside Pittsburgh, PA.
Thanks for the video; brought back fond memories! One correction: All wing flaps moved in sync! The non-flying pilot had to watch the flap indicator needles to make sure both needles (left and right) kept in sync. If a split flap condition was shown; it was an 'emergency procedure'! I instructed in 'G' and 'H' B-52's for 13 years ('77 - '90). I have 5000+ flying hours. Your 'G' model is a non-ALCM carrier. The leading edge wing root would have been flared into the fuselage if it was an ALCM carrier. Russia used satellites to see that identifier to determine ALCM capability. Hello, John Shockey!
Former B-52H mechanic here. The periscopic sextant was used only a little (1977-1981 time frame) so some enterprising mechanics in the flying mechanic program would connect a flexible hose to it to use as a vacuum cleaner. The ejection hatches under the downstairs ejection seats would accumulate stuff like cigarette butts, sunflower seed hulls, paper clips etc., this vacuum was the best way to clean up.
I got to tour inside a B-52 any time I wanted in 75-76. I was stationed at B-52 SAC base Merced CA. then, last piglet training base in the world. One wet winter night student pilot landed, hit his brakes too hard, blew 8 tires, skidded 100' into the mud at the end of the runway, took rest of the night to jack the plane up, change the tires & tow it back on the runway.
The B-52 never carried the X-1. They did modify one or two B-52's to carry the X-15. Those modified B-52's also carried carried a lot of other research aircraft as well. But never the X-1
@@dtyr123 Pretty sure he knows that which is why he made his comment. In the video around the 10:00 mark the voice over erroneously mentioned carrying the Bell X-1 using the underwing pylon.
We have a number of BUFFS visit the uk several times a year to Fairford . This aircraft looks as good as it did 50 years back . And in its day could seriously ruin your day .Amazing aircraft .
I discovered by chance that I worked on this aircraft at Beale AFB, California, in 1969 with the 456th A&E Sq. ("Armament and Electronics", later changed to AMS "Avionics Maintenance Squadron"). Worked in radio shop night shifts mostly. During a visit to Darwin in October 2023 I checked out the Air Museum before my flight back to Melbourne and discovered this G model with a familiar sounding tail number. The jet's history exhibit confirmed it was at Beale at the same time I was. Traveling alone, I spoke to a fellow who was there with his wife and kids who turned out to have been part of the museum team that received this B-52 years earlier. He was almost as excited as I was to hear I had been all over this aircraft over 50 years ago. Definitely a highlight of that trip for me. Small world!
Excellent tour of the old Buff. I worked ECM on these D & G models in the 70's for 6 years. We literally had equipment all over the aircraft. On the D model that catwalk went all the way back to a separate pressurized manned tail gunner. We would crawl up through the aft wheel well to get to our equipment when the 47 section door was blocked. One Buff tried to kill me when some clown left a drogue parachute on top of the hatch. I opened it after some resistance, and the door flew open knocking me unconscious. Normally that door has resistance to the cables so it comes down slowly. I survived with a minor concussion.
I worked Fire Control for almost 20 years, on D’s and G’s. Had to go through the 47 section to get to most of our system. Got pretty proficient at grabbing the edge of the hatch and swinging my legs up and in. Worked on the D’s at Carswell but started off in Blytheville on the G’s. Good times!!
Thank you for making this video! I was stationed at Griffiss AFB, Guam from 1988 to 1990. I was a flightline electronic warfare technician assigned to the 416 OMS squadron. I worked on all of the ECM gear you pointed to in the tour. This video brought back a lot of great memories. The bumps in the nose and around the aft section near the tail gun were part of the ALQ-172 radar countermeasure system. It was an automated system. The EWO (pronounced "E Whoa") would turn it on and the system would do all the work. It was the newest ECM system onboard. The surfboard-looking antennas on the belly belonged to the ALQ-155 receiver/transmitter system. The EWO manually operated them. The wing-like antennas mounted more on the side of the aircraft belonged to the ALT-32 radio jammers. The radome on both sides of the verticle stabilizer belonged to the ALQ-153. It constantly scanned aft of the aircraft looking for missiles. The EWO could connect it to the flare and/or chaff system to automatically dispense chaff and/or flares. It was the most hated ECM system for flightline techs. Going up to the radome required a cherry picker (bucket lift). I read one of our BUFFs was donated to the museum in Darwin. We regularly deployed 3-4 aircraft there so aircrews could do low-level flying. Darwin had an area for B-52s called the BRA. It stood for "bomber recovery area." The idea was if there was a nuclear strike, any BUFFs that survived after delivering their payload, would try to land at Darwin. Thank God it was never required. I enjoyed my one visit to Darwin. I got to see saltwater crocs and I was introduced to one of the finest beers I've ever tasted, Victoria Bitter.
I started my USAF career in ECM in 1978 at Keesler AFB. Tech school was mostly ECM systems on the BUFF but I ended up on F4s at Hill AFB. I trained on some of the systems you mentioned but ended up on mostly pods and RHAW systems. Finished college and became an Aircraft MX Officer for 20+ yrs. Really miss my AF career, but age and retirement were stronger callings, hehe.
@@ridingwithairbubble1694 I went to Keesler in 1984. From there I went to work on F-4s at Clark AB, the Philippines for three years. While there, I got heavily into scuba diving. The Philippines had some of the greatest scuba diving in the world, but Clark AB was far away from them. It meant I could only go diving on three-day weekends. I realized if I was stationed at Andersen AFB on Guam, I could literally dive every day. So I volunteered for another overseas assignment if it was at Andersen AFB. I got my wish and it was great. I hated working on F-4s. I loved working on the B-52. I felt like I committing fraud. The Air Force was paying me to hang out with my friends and work on B-52s. I loved it so much, I would have paid for the privilege. It was the best two years of my working life. And yes, I got to go scuba diving all the time. 😁
Wasn't this the plane that, if they switched on their ECM (erroneously, I would think) above urban areas, that they disrupted power/TV for the whole area? (could have been AWACS as well...) Must have been some serious generators to supply all power. And, tracing wires all the way from the cockpit to the tail... Plus, if damaged (SAMs over Vietnam) even more complex to repair and test everything. Thanks for the info!
I agree about VB, sometimes called "Very Beautiful" by my friends in Melbourne. I was aircraft radio maintenance in the 456th Armament and Electronics Sq., 1968, just before "Avionics" simplified the name, at Beale AFB, CA. B-52Gs and KC-135s. (The SR-71s were over there across the red security line; other people went there, not me). We had a couple UHF and VHF antenna masts on the belly toward the nose end. All those mast antennas were a head-knocking hazard for us maintenance troops walking around, constantly ducking to go under. The HF radio antenna coupler in the vertical stabilizer had to be changed on a cherry picker. No one trained me on it but somehow I did it at night without slamming into the tail, or worse. This was a good video tour of the aircraft but it ended just as I was hoping to see him get into the 47 section, the long open bay behind the bomb bay that had various radios and other gear. I spent some time in there as well as the flight deck. One other memory was being on board during a ground engine run up that was pretty fun. Everything rocking and rolling but the brakes held of course. All this was evening or at night on swing shift.
I worked the ECM systems on the B52Hs in Minot. T 2:35 Behind the Dome is a phased array antenna for one of the receivers/jammers. The RWR antennas are in a different part of the nose. Very great and detailed video. Thank you for this. Brings back memories.
Great video! This brings back some memories. I've logged a few hours in this aircraft. 59-2596 was last assigned to the 60 Bomb Squadron, 43rd Bomb Wing Andersen AFB Guam. It was gifted to the Darwin museum in 1990-91 when the 60th BS closed its doors after the first round of the BRAC (base realignment and closure). We used to have a regular deployment to the Northern Territories at RAAF Darwin back in the late 1980s. One thing incorrect in the narration, the B-52 H models did have a tail gun, but was removed in the 90s after Desert Storm. The B-52H had the M61 20 mm rotary gun. The gunner operated the gun remotely from his station on the upper flight deck Side note @ about 8:20 in the video on the left tip tank, you see an Indian head. That is the squadron symbol for the 93rd Bomb Squadron Barksdale AFB La. This was the first Air Force Reserve B-52 squadron. In 1995 we were part of a deployment to RAAF Darwin for an exercise with the Australian Air Force. One of our reserve aircraft needed a part to return to Barksdale. Some of our more industrious maintainers were able to "borrow" a part from 2596, the display aircraft. Of course the unit symbol had to be zapped on the tip tank of the museum display. I swear I had no knowledge of that operation when it happened. Short video for the 93rd ruclips.net/video/cdbXJYA8RNQ/видео.html. Also, airhistory.net has a great picture of this aircraft circa 1983 in the UK when 59-2596 was assigned to the 2 Bomb Wing. www.airhistory.net/photo/108303/59-2596
I used to work on the B-52 bomber and the KC 135 tanker from 1971 to 1975. Thanks for sharing I really enjoyed this clip it definitely took me back in time👍🏻👍🏻
I actually crawled through the detached tail end of a B-52 bomber in a jungle on Guam when I was a kid back around 1976 or so. I was surprised to see that the electronics in the tail there utilized small vacuum tubes. Such was the state-of-the-art in electronics back in those days. How did the tail end of a B-52 end up in a jungle on Guam? That particular B-52 was actually out-of-service as a bomber and was used for firefighting practice at Andersen AFB on Guam while I was an AF brat there. Typhoon Pamela hit the base in 1976 and, along with other damage, blew the tail end of the old B-52 over the airfield fence and into the nearby jungle. I came across the tail end when I noticed it while biking on a nearby road and went to investigate it.
Excellent job. Great tour of a B-52, best I've ever seen. It's incredible that the first flight of the B-52 was in 1952 & expect the buff to continue unti 2050. That kind of longevity just doesn't happen usually.
I've really enjoyed reading all the B52 reminiscence and nostalgia. I served in the SAC 416th Bombardment Wing at Griffiss AFB (Rome NY) from 1965 to 1967. I'm 79 years old now and, in retrospect, these were two of the best years of my life. I was a guidance technician on the AGM-28A Hound Dog missile. After a productive year and a half in the guidance shop, I spent a year in the analysis section of the AMMS squadron. There I learned to debrief incoming flights and to read the missile portion of the MADREC recordings. Most importantly I got to fly as an observer on six FSAGA missions (First Sortie After Ground Alert). This privilege and honor was quite extraordinary because I was only a two-stripe, first-term enlistee. These missions tested the reliability of the alert aircraft and all its systems. To qualify for flight status, I had to complete altitude chamber testing at Westover AFB. Before each night flight I was outfitted with a flight suit, helmet, oxygen mask, and parachute. If we had to bail out, I was expected to exit through one of the bottom holes left by the navigators (lol). Before each of my flights, on the short bus ride to the flight line, I briefed the crew on the prior maintenance of the aircraft and missiles. If I was the only observer, which was usually the case, for takeoff, air refueling, and landing I sat behind the pilot and copilot. During the missile runs I sat behind the navigator and radar navigator. We took off from Griffiss in the early evening, flew over Maine for KC-135 in-flight refueling, then made a high-level missile and bombing run to an electronic range in Kentucky and a low-level run to a range at Warner Robins in Georgia. Then back to Griffiss for a few ILS touch-and-go's before landing around 6 AM. What incredible experiences these were. I was transferred to Little Rock AFB and served on a Titan II launch crew for the last year of my enlistment. Another extraordinary experience but of an entirely different nature altogether.
No, I never saw a launch. Once a year a missile was taken from each of the three bases (Little Rock, McConnell, and Davis Monathan) along with an alert launch crew, and sent to Vandenberg for a silo launch. The year I was at Little Rock, our missile failed to launch. The holding clamps didn’t release for some reason. BIG disappointment!
@JackKellyUSA so awesome hearing you were at Griffiss AFB. I remember seeing B52's daily at times fly over as a kid in Utica. The thunder from those birds was incredible. Rome, NY was active back then. I moved away in '82 and base was decommissioned. What a shame.
@@mikewithers299 I moved back to Rome three years ago. The base is an office park now and a little used airport. There’s a B52 on display though - The Pride of the Mohawk Valley. Rome and Utica are still good towns to live in. Come on back! 😊
@JackKellyUSA my family is still there. I'm in construction and that industry was dying when I left there. Still love my home town though. I need to visit the base one day to see that bird. I love that buff
Absolutely amazing engineering long before they had computers worth the name. This was the same generation that put a man on the moon with slide rulers and created the SR-71 with similar equipment. Also, amazing camera work an narration. Thank you, Paul!
Thanks for a great tour. What a beast! Boggles the mind to think that an air frame designed in the early 1950s will likely see service for a century. Those designers with their vision and slide rules really had the right stuff.
Boeing's engineers really knew what the heck they were doing that's for sure!! It still blows my mind that the B-52 was capable of constant flight with in-air refuelling for most of the cold war...
You really only realise how ancient the plane is once you get inside. Even that G model looks archaic. A literal museum piece! It shows why the plane's still in service, because it's so basic and slow that it must be extremely cheap to use as a bomb truck.
I never fail to be blown away by the landing gear raise/lower and stowage on the B52. The gear folds up like some sort of origami trick with door edges diagonal to the line of the aircraft
That is how I remember the G model when I worked on them. We would remove all the control boxes so the electrical people could install upgrades. The pilot/ECM was "A" area, the bomb/nav area "B" area, thru the hatch/door was "C" area. Stories many. A painter once wondered what the handle on the over head hatch was for. Just heard a pop then a bang as it hit the concrete. Ran tests a couple of times when we did engine runs, very noisy. We would rope off and put warning signs when we did radar or ECM checks. It would never fail to walk out and find someone walked past the signs and would be working near a antenna. Very powerful transmitters. It was one of the dirtiest planes to work on but it was fun to work on.
My two favorite memories from those days was the time a bored ECMer wanted to see what the difference was between switching from a training mode to a war mode. As they flew over over Texas the plane engaged different civilian systems. He was transferred the next day. The other, we had just finished putting a B-52 back together and finished its test flight. The first Gulf War had started. The crew came and flew it home. They quickly flew it on a bombing mission in Iraq. The feedback was the ECM consoles lit up like a Christmas tree. They could see the SAMs and when they were being jammed. They thanked us for our work.
I've been through one of these several times when I was a kid, they had a decommissioned B-52 at the airport I lived near. Some kids would always put empty beer cans in the windows, and we'd go up into the craft to remove the trash left behind by them. amazingly cramped, but for a kid in their early teens was a wonderland of mechanical wizardry :D
The straight forward tour and explanation of everything is simply perfect. You clearly have an intimate knowledge of aviation! What a beautiful bird. Hard to believe the 52 will have almost 100 years of service when said and done
Great tour! Former USAF crash fire rescue member, I trained on Buff's at March AFB California in the early 70's. We had to crawl through a 'D' model ramp queen while wearing full bunker suits with breathing apparatus worn under them. It was hot cramped and a long way from nose to tail when you're on the inside. Nice to see a new G model with the fancy bells and whistles many of which came along after 'Nam. The early models had actual tail-gunners...
About 40 years ago I was part of a group who was given a tour of an active B52 at Loring AFB in Limestone, Maine. We were given an escorted tour of the cockpit and had the opportunity to walk under the B52 for the length of the bomb bay. MASSIVE. Back then, Loring was the second largest AFB in the world.
I was at Loring from 83-85 working ECM on B-52G's. It was large and it was very cold during the winter. One day we got down to 47 below zero (with wind chill). During the summer it was humid and somedays you climbed out of the plane feeling like you just took a shower (you needed one afterwards).
Thanks for the neat video and reminder of what the inside of the G model looked like. I had the pleasure of one 72 hour flight in one in 1968. Long long flight.
I was a Bomb-Nav Systems mechanic for the B-52 G models. 82-86 Loring AFB, Maine. The ECM Shop was right next door to ours at the 42 AMS Squadron. The ECM guys always bragged that they could throw out enough RF energy to shut down and or fry the electronics of a small city. I don't think they were exaggerating.
Thanks for the tour. Did anyone notice the lack of ailerons? The Wings spoilers did that job. The Wings tip was the pivot point, or the high point as the extended spoiler side dropped I do believe. Glad to see a G model not scrapped. I worked them two years, and yes the brakes were re-pucked often. No fun to change in Northern Michigan in the winter.
I worked on this very bomber at Andersen AFB, Guam while assigned to the 43rd Avionics Maintenance Squadron from 1985-89. I even went to Darwin on temporary duty and rented a Moke and had a great time off duty there and managed not to lose money at a casino or be eaten by a croc. Great days. Cheers.
Not a bad tour, but he doesn't know RAM from vortex generators. Then he describes the air exhaust under the Stab as cooling air exhaust for the hydraulics from the slot in the vertical stabilizer. That slot is for the "Q" spring, which provides artificial feel for the flight controls. Brakes are poor? you obviously haven't been on board during landing! How about coming to a complete stop in 2600 feet? Been there. 8:16 your fuel vent leads to a surge tank of 50 gallons. When fuel expands due to high temps, it bleeds over to these tanks. Airflow in flight pushed it back to the main tanks. The primary vent for refuel was behind the aft gear forward of the access hatch to the 47 section. It was known as the "Fuse". I was a Crew Chief on D and H model BUFFs. The external tanks were not jettison able on G and H jets while they could be on D models. But that was purely because of the weight involved. A D model tank was about 20,000 lbs when full. They were never jettisoned just because they were empty, in fact they were usually the last fuel burned to maintain wing stability. OMG Water injection does NOT change RPM! It increases density of the air being burned, thus increasing thrust. I'm out. Please do more research before you mislead the masses into thinking you're an expert.
I used to work on this very aircraft when it was at Robins AFB, GA. OH, the memories this video brings back. I was an instrument systems tech and took care of all the instruments upstairs and some down on the lower level. The B-52G was the first aircraft I ever worked on, a fuel quantity problem as I recall. So sad that the rest of them were chopped up at the boneyard.
I had a client in Rancho Cordova, California, whose office was on the final approach of what was once Mather AFB. The B-52's would come in so low, they would rattle his building and you could practically see the pilots in the cockpit! It was such a trill! All the surrounding businesses were auto salvage yards so no one complained about the noise in those days.
Mather AFB was my first assignment working on the ECM systems on these monsters! I always felt sorry for the trailer park at the end of one end of the runway because of the noise!
I was with the 2nd SPS at Barksdale AFB. La in 1968. I was a security Guard with the B52 and KC135 aircraft. I remember so well standing around the aircraft through all kinds of weather. !
I was hoping you would show the fuel tanks at the end of the wings. My dad worked for the manufacturing company that built them , they are called tip tanks. The name of the company was Benson manufacturing in Kansas city Missouri. Dad passed 2 years ago bus I still remember his stories about building the tip tanks for the B52.
I was a crew chief from 71-73 19th OMS at McCoy first, then we moved to Warner Robbins because Disney wanted the whole airport. Did a bunch of Arc Light tours in Guam and Thailand. Each engine burned about a quart an hour, it was a PITA to fill the oil on top of the engine after a long flight on the dark camo painted wings when it was 100 degrees, loading the drag chute was the worst job, 2 guys had to walk it up a b-5 stand and muscle it into the hole then crank the door shut, I saw a lot of guys hurt doing this operation. If I remember correctly the chute weighed around 200 pounds. The tires were huge and heavy, there were about 50 bolts that held the aluminum wheel halves together, they were torqued to about 400 pounds, changing a tire was a workout, we had to rebuild the wheel bearings every time we changed a tire. The Ejection seats had a bunch of shotgun styled gunpowder charges in each seat. Changing these charges periodically really sucked, you were supposed to disassemble the door panels, but I figured out hot do do it with my very long arms reaching in by feel. I got caught doing this because my senior Msgt saw me at the BX and asked why I wasn't working on the ejection seats, I told him I was done and he said BS and accused me of forging the maintenance card. I had to show him how I did it and he had the TO manual changed. He said he wondered why I always volunteered to do this as everyone hated the job. We lived in tents in Guam, and we worked a 3 to 3 shift 7 days a week so everybody had some cool dark time to sleep, it felt like 150 degrees when the sun came out and cooked the tents. I used to get up and go sleep behind the concrete blast fences for some cool shade. When I got out I went to college on the GI bill, after working 12 hours a day 7 days a week for 2 years, college was so easy I would finish all my work during the week and had a job on the weekend, I remember everyone complaining about how hard school was, I would just laugh!
Did radio maintenance on B-52 at Kinchloe AFB Michigan 1969. Primary radio was on the upper deck right behind the right hand seat. Radio weighed about 30 pounds and we had to carry it through the hatch and up that ladder to install a replacement. What was worse was that the secondary radio was in the tail. We had to climb in through the rear landing gear bay up to the catwalk and then crawl along the catwalk pushing the 30 pound radio ahead of us to get to the rear of the plane. When I saw the right navigator's seat on the lower deck it brought back memories. One night all the planes were headed out on a full alert drill. There was a broken headphone cable on the right side of the navigator's seat. The call me and another guy to go out to the flight line to fix it. While the plane taxied down to the other end of the runway I had to fix the wiring with the plane shaking and bumping. When I was done we were like two miles from where we got on and there was a maintenance truck to take as back the plane took off. Never got in the air in a B-52 but at least I can say I had a ride in one.
My intro to BUFFs was swapping out the parachute and survival kit in the tail of a D model in 1976. I was the skinniest and could fit through the bomb-bay catwalk door into the tail section.
So cool, I've had a chance to see two of these. Very awe inspiring to stand under. The size and span of the wings is incredible. Thank you so much to everyone in the comments who served.
There's one at the airport I used to work at, Orlando International (MCO). It was a SAC base in the 60's, until Disney World showed up...LOL. The ammunition bunkers were still present when I retired a while back. We were told to that there were no nukes ever stored there, but I've heard old-timers say that's bunk. They asked me what good a SAC base would be with ready-use B-52s but no nukes? The sheer size of this bird is amazing. The skin was all wrinkled on the fuselage, which I'm guessing if from many aircraft cycles. Can't believe we're using these things for longer than I'll live!
I spent a humid day at the beginning of 2020 looking through this great museum. I walked around the B52 with one of the volunteers and he told me that, although the Buff was in a museum, it technically remained the property of the USAF. He recalled one day some American brass arrived from the airport and needed to remove parts from this airframe to be used on an in service aircraft. It was sort of like a having a handy scrapyard that someone else looked after for you.
Some parts were removed off a B-1A on display at an air museum in Colorado once. The parts were for an in service B-1B. The curator of the museum mentioned it in one of the museum’s videos.
One night we had to do a midnight raid on a static display B-52 to steal some parts in order to fix a grounded BUFF. My job was the lookout. The funny thing was the display was a B model and we needed the part for a H Model.
As far as I know, all displayed USAF Aircraft remain the property of the USAF. This is administered through the National Museum of the United States Air Force, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. An example of an aircraft that was on loan, determined not to be maintained and returned to the Museum, was the B-17, "Memphis Belle". It was on display at a couple of different locations and had suffered from years of neglect and vandalism. Museum staff determined the airplane was not being maintained and gave the City of Memphis, Tennessee the ultimatum of repairing the plane and safeguarding it, or returning it yo the Museum. The Cjty was unable to provide the needed funds and location for the Memphis Belle's care and it was surrendered to the Museum. The Belle was moved from Memphis Tennessee to WPAFB, Dayton via semi trucks. I live near Dayton and got to see with assembled large crowds the Nemphis Belle being transported along the highway. It was placed in the "Restoration Hangar" near the main Museum buildings and painstakingly restored. There are a number of videos on RUclips about this. One is a documentary produced by ThinkTV of the Public Broadcast System.
@@oldfatandtired6406 That's interesting Mike. Further to my comment above, the volunteer I was talking to in Darwin observed that the upper fuselage and wings on the B52 were looking grubby and he remarked to me that part of their agreement with the USAF was that they had to keep any a/c clean and maintained. It costs a bit to get up and clean a big aircraft with all the health and safety concerns. We often forget that when we pay admission.
@@petertocher6845 It was fresh out of the paint barn and flown straight to Darwin. Theres a video of it out there somewhere about the prep and arrival .
My uncle told stories of going along the catwalk next to a nuclear bomb while in flight during a long patrol. I’d never seen that before; thanks so much!
Very well done mate! The B-52 came into the S.A.C. inventory in the early 1950's and we were at one of the S.A.C. bases when the KB-50's, B-29's and B-47's we're being phased out. Barksdale A.F.B. was a mixed piston engined and jet bomber base at the time. I can tell you some stories about those very scary times when we were just old enough to know our lives were in danger every day of being bombed. Kids I went to school with lost their Dad's in plane crashes and other accidents during training and alert exercises. We dreaded those deployment exercises! Scary times!
JUST TO THINK, THIS AIRCRAFT WAS FLYING 2 YRS. BEFORE I GRADUATED HI SCHOOL, I AM NOW 83 YRS. OLD ! AMAZING !!!! MADE OF THE RIGHT STUFF !
It's made of the right stuff too!
@@pastorofmuppets8834 wow congratulations ig?
And the last person to train as a pilot on these probably hasn't even been born yet
@@trentsavage4533 I appreciate your kind words. Not sure what it's for but any congratulations always welcome! Ready for another if you're feeling generous
@@pastorofmuppets8834 Congratulations sir
This is the most comprehensive and straightforward tour of a B-52 I’ve ever seen.
How many B-52 tour videos have you seen?
@@thebeaz1 iioiiiii
@@thebeaz1 pendejo!!
Here's a better and more in depth tour of the B-52H
ruclips.net/video/2sHUJnsMC2M/видео.html
Really enjoyed the tour. I was the co-pilot on this particular tail number "596" on 1Apr73 on a night bombing mission from Guam to Vietnam. Brings back lots of memories.
Tell us some pls!
@@anselrod5699 Where to begin? 48 years ago…
Thank you for your service and sacrifice.
Does it have a shitter
@@gdaeagle
AIR FORCE! We're the smart ones. Send the officers out to fight. :-)
MY dad flew one of these in the VIETNAM war. I still remember us going on base and him letting me see all of the planes. I sure do miss him and his stories!!
My granpa was a engineer in utapao air base during the Vietnam war
@@DerpPilot That is awesome brother. MY DAD WAS STATIONED AT CLARK AFB IN THE PHILLIPINES WHEN I WAS BORN;
My Dad filmed many of his bombing missions over Vietnam as an Aircraft commander. The magic of 8mm home movies! We lived on SAC bases for most of my fathers 24 year career and got tours of every model B 52 from the D model to the H. My father passed away last year. He’s gone now, but many of the aircraft he flew are still in use today.
B29 carried the X1. The B52 carried the X15. Great review.
Fabulous video! When my family moved to Wichita Kansas in 1962, our next door neighbor was Boeing's chief test pilot for the B-52 program. Our home was due north of the runway and B-52s flew over all day long. Test B-52s had fluorescent orange paint on the fuselage and the vertical stabilizer. If we were in the yard playing and our neighbor flew overhead as he was about to land, he would wag the wings at us to wave. It was so cool! Thanks for this interesting video!!
Yeah, first flew about when I was born.
Cool story! (and hello from a fellow Wichitan)
Been there, done that, tail number 2596 was one of the BUFF's I worked. Spend several years of my young life crawling through every inch of B-52G's. It's amazing where they used to stick Electronic Countermeasures Equipment on BUFF's. Everything from the nose to the top of the tail. We had to fix it all and fix all RF paths and electrical wiring (including the Chaff Dispensers in the Wing and Flare Dispensers in the Rear). It was a great job, though sometimes stinky, dirty, cold/hot, and everything in between.
Aww . . you just miss pouring DC-200 into the HD's on the alternator deck with a donkey dick on pre-flight. Why not Minot? Freezin's the reason. And if your ECM you know exactly what I'm talking about.
@@52griz 5 AMXS? I feel bad for you all, that flight line out there gets chilly
Roger that--this vid does a good job of showing the bomb bay and ECM pods past that ominous hatch.
Ah been there done that...that's what Obama said when he cancelled the Orion Moon project.
@@52griz It's just as much fun at 0200 and the windchill just went below -40 at Loring AFB. Or for more fun try changing all the equipment mounts on all the ALT-28 Transmitters and HDs on all 15 Bombers at Robins in 95 degrees with 95 percent Humidity in 1978. All because the Depot at Kelly bought the mounting racks from a crap supplier and the DCM wants the TCTO done yesterday (including the Alert Birds). Oh and of course the Day Shift Flightline Crew with three people gets to do it all, because Night Shift is so busy handling the returning Buffs (an average of three a day) from training missions. I did finally talk the Boss into grabbing some Shop Troops into helping us after the DCM realized that we weren't fully manned and only three people were actually doing the work (Boy, was he hot when he found out.). My back still hurts from heaving all those Heavies. We finally got Hydraulic Loaders for the ALT-28's/AlQ-155's when I got to Loring in 83 and no one even knew we had them or how to use them. They were awkward to use, but saved our backs on many occasions.
As a B52 crew chief i would like to compliment you on a truly completely accurate tour. I watched very closely to see mistakes and saw none. Very good job. I can't say that about most "expert" videos.
Matt. B52H 60-0001 Memphis Bell IV 20th Bomber Squadron 8th Air Force Barksdale AFB 1996-2000
My dad was a B-52 Navigator stationed at Barksdale AFB (SAC) in the early 60's. I remember going to a little hole in the wall seafood shack nearby. Miss those days with my dad.
I I was a B-52 crew chief at BAFB from 89-92, one of the last 4 crew chiefs on the alert pad before the START treaty, I sent a few G models to the boneyard and recovered a couple TAC ferry H models when we first started getting them as the G's were being retired. Good times.
I spent many hours on "Balls One".
@@jamesrudd8705 Balls One dropped in for a visit to Wurtsmith AFB (G unit) once. It had an interphone problem and we were asked to take a look. Oops, wrong model of interphone! So we took turns laying in the bunk just to say we did and buttoned it up and went back to the shop.
@@JamesSmith-gq6hf
Great story! Love it!
As a child my husband was inside one of these at the airshow in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. It was returning to America from Vietnam and the crew took a side trip to the airshow. He remembers the USAF crew being very friendly and kind with children. They made a big positive impression on my husband who was 12 years old at the time. God bless America, NORAD, Canada and NATO.
So, when the B-52 is finally retired, it will have flown for over a 100 years. That is crazy crazy crazy incredible! What a plane!
In my 25 year career I have had to pleasure of seeing these amazing aircraft's in action this is one amazing machine the US can be very proud of
www.minot.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/264580/three-generations-of-b-52-airmen/
Of course. It's a Boeing. Don't forget the queen of the skies.
@@styldsteel1 Boeing is not the same company that used to be, It suffers from extremely poor and unreasonable management today. Companies that do business with Boeing are generally very unhappy with their business tactics and attitudes.
@@TheHomeExpert5 that's very sad. In all honesty, now, I can't confirm nor deny what you day is true, if companies are dissatisfied with Boeing, companies will look to Airbus, or maybe even Embraer.
Thank you for the guided tour of my old office. I was a member of The Strategic Air Command and began flying F-111's. When my Aardvark was retired, I got the "keys" to my very own BUFF! My late father was an Admiral in the US Navy and was not pleased when I decided to enlist into the US Air Force vs US Navy. He worked on General Electric jet engine designs in the 1950's and 1960's. He had taught me how to fly many years before I learned how to drive a car. I prefer flying, less traffic! The only saving Grace my father allowed was I at "least" I would use engines he had designed. The US Navy had nixed the F-111 so my father was unsure of its air worthiness. I no longer fly because I am a terrible back seat driver!
I have over 2000 hours flying as an EWO in the B-52...most of it in the G model at Barksdale and Castle. Fond memories...can almost hear the noise and smell that distinctive BUFF aroma that never changed. Thanks for the post!
I was a ECM tech at Castle '76-'81. May have debriefed you - CND, Cannot duplicate indicated malfunction - IAW 1B52G-2-23.
@@52griz Always something wrong with the ALQ-155s on a check ride:)
But you probably spent more time on the ALT-28 and ALQ-117
@@robinsites9790 I believe we got 155's while I was at Castle. I remember being with company tech reps out on the flight line. The 28's were heavy enough. These were much heavier. Problem with avionics maintenance is it is difficult to duplicate some malfunctions on the ground since the aircraft is stationary. We'd wiggle wires and cables in attempt to do so. And sometimes we'd just swap out seemingly good components due to repeat write ups. Air pressure changes and vibrations in flight were often a cause. We always tried to provide the best equipment and maintenance. I always wanted to go for a ride to see the equipment I maintained in actual operation. Felt I'd get a better appreciation of our jobs.
@@52griz They were just getting the 155s when I was a student at Castle in 1982. It took a few years to get the bugs out. Lots of things happen at altitude that you can’t always duplicate on the ground. Also we would run our system check at high level cruise then cold soak them a few hours and turn them on and use them after a 2 hour low level run. Too many of our guys would write stuff up I thought...Years later I was the lead ECM Program Manager at the F-16 SPO at Wright-Patt. Got experience with 2 level maintenance. Maintenance troops would send a malfunctioning ALR-56M box to the ALC and they would send it back NFF (no fault found) and charge the unit for it. Discovered the thing was getting wet and failing and would dry out on the way to Warner -Robins and the could not duplicate the fault. The fix was to plug 2 hole in top of the box where water was getting in from an in insulated air conditioning line above it...
"This is a Boeing B-52 lets take a look at its quirks and features and then we'll give it a Doug Score."
"Thhhhhhhissss...."
You forgot the "take it out on the road" part
And soon to be found on "Caaars and Bids...!"
Great video. I lived about 20 miles downrange of the flightline at Warner Robins AFB base when I was a kid and these things were constantly rumbling over the house, either on missions or check flights just having been repaired.
Warner Robins did an yearly airshow, Navy one year and Airforce the next. Other than the SR-71's, the B52's were the most badass plane in the show. They would simulate a napalm bombing run and just annihilate the grass between the runways, right before the choppers with special forces troops would come in on helicopters.
Fun times, and thanks to all you guys who served.
Great tour. I retired in 1992 and have about 3550 hours in B-52 D, F, G and H models as a Nav/RN so it brought back many memories. Being downstairs with no windows meant (at Grand Forks ND) that one could take off before dawn, fly 12 hours and land at night so never saw the sun at all.
Ahhhh yes, memories. I remember eating my flight lunch on the crew bus after one of those missions because I never got time to eat it aloft...for 10+ hours. The Nav was the donkey of the crew. Someone need something???? Hey nav, when you got a minute !!
As a former taingunner we only used the water injection on take off for extra thrust. You could actually feel it when it kicked in. Great video, brings back a lot of memories.
Is that the plane version of pushing the nitrous button?
@@pastorofmuppets8834 Exactly. Simplest way to describe it.
KC-135 also had water injection. The rivets would rattle when the dumped it!
When men burned water!
How did you felt being alone in the tail gun compartment. You hadn't really that much space there
You should have crawled down the back end. The one at Duxford in UK had graffiti from the Vietnam war era scratched into the main bulkhead, including mission dates and bomb tallys. Very cool.
Seen the one at Duxford. It was outside and one could appreciate how big this plane is. This video can't really demonstrate its size tucked into a hanger
Darwin is wet and stormy for six months of the year, so I'd imagine it's safer inside than out.
Having been to the Aviation Museum, the B52 truly dominates the space.
@@glen1555 It's now in a custom made dome, along with a load of other USAF planes.
The Bell X-1 precedes the B-52 by about 6 years and was dropped from the bomb bay of a modified B-29 and later a B-50. You might be thinking of the North American X-15 which was released from a hardpoint mounted on the aircraft's wing between 1959 and 1968.
@adam dubin thank you, I was going to post the same thing… 👍
This is correct. A special loading pit/ramp was designed in the tarmac to load the Bell X-1 into the B-29.
Correct. When I was at NASA Dryden in the 80s we used the B52 to drop various X manned aircraft and drones.
Former B-52 EWO here. Wanted to correct a few misunderstandings. Regarding your story about ECM and ATC, no... just, no. First, during peacetime, we're squawking via an IFF transponder, so we wouldn't be invisible to air traffic control. We also don't fly around actively jamming or doing so indiscriminately because if we were jamming an airport surveillance radar, it's not only not seeing us, it's not seeing anyone else. Also, there is no radar absorbent material on a B-52, or at least not for the purpose of rendering the aircraft less visible on radar. While serrations are used to scatter incoming RF on some aircraft, those on the B-52 tail wouldn't have that effect. That said, given the proximity of the ALQ-153 TWS on the vertical stabilizer, it might be related to it (although having spent 8 years and 2000+ hours in the B-52, no one has ever mentioned that, so...). Fun fact: Going to the "loo," aka "honey bucket" is taboo for the obvious issue of aroma. Having flown a Global Power mission, we carried a chemical camp toilet. Also, the urinal is close to very hot electronic equipment, so it tends to simmer, which lends to the distinctive aroma inside the cockpit. Good times.
I never saw the honeypot ever get used. Not even once. I am not aware of anyone that did.
@@jamesrudd8705 I did! My co-pilot had to use it. As the EW, I went to 100% O2 and put the a/c to max. I turned around at one point and he was shivering while doing his business. I think he had to buy beers after the flight.
Agree, the B-52 has a huge cross section. ATC couldn’t miss it. We did not actively jam outside of an authorized location.
@@crew-dog2668 , yikes!! Yeah, that had to be bad.
@@jamesrudd8705 I never used it. And I don't think I remember anyone else ever using it. I think the work load and rapid pace of even the training missions kept your mind off your need.
A testament to the insane longevity of this platform. My Uncle entered the Air Force 50 years ago as a pilot during Vietnam and flew the F4 Phantom (B52 had already been in service for years at this point). He stayed in the Air Force long enough to fly in the Gulf War as an A10 pilot some 20 years later before retiring as a Brigadier General (B52 still in service). After retiring, he stayed involved as a civilian contractor / advisor involved in the mid 90's study of re-engining the B52 to 4 modern turbofans. He passed away a few years ago, and the Air Force is FINALLY moving forward with re-engining the B52 in earnest with the CERP program and the platform will be in service for decades to come.
I was a crew chief on the B52G from 83 to 87 assigned to the 379th OMS Wurtsmith AFB. MI. I was on flight status and loved to sit in the IP seat between the pilot and co-pilot. Working on the BUFF was the best time of my life.
I was crew chief on a B52H in the 319th OMS at Grand Forks from 75-78. Even though cocking a KC-135 onto alert took much less time and effort than my BUFF, I never envied the tanker guys needing to heat water during the winter nights. I can still hear in my mind the MD-3 chugging away on those cold nights.
@@jeffburrell7648 HI Jeff, I spent my fair share of time on uploads and alert. Cart starts and rollers were fun too. Nice to hear from a fellow crew chief.
@@williamepstein4837 Those were good days for me, too, but I really don't miss ORIs or rebuilding my bird after a month on cann status. It was a hard decision to cross train into satellite communications, but it was the right decision for me.
@@jeffburrell7648 hey chiefs, I was also crew chief B-52H 5TH OMS MINOT 80-84 ACFT 61-019 60-053 (RIP now in the pacific Guam) 60-008 (lucky lady lV) Darwin guam missions were great, but some your just glad you made it back. 21 hrs was my longest flight but was super cool cause I sat in the copilot seat & flew at cruse while he got a couple hrs of sleep :)
I was there at the same time! Defensive Fire Control. I loved almost every minute of it. Working at the tail in January wasn't so pleasant.
Thanks for the tour. 1975 to 1979 I was involved with the B 52G, first as the 97th OMS Bomber Branch Officer In Charge, ending up as the OMS Maintenance Supervisors for both the KC 135 and B 52, based in Blytheville, Arkansas.
Hey, I was stationed there from 01/09/73 to 01/10/80, and again from 08/01/88 to 15/12/92, when they closed the gates. I worked in DFCS, trying to keep those guns firing until the last flight with a gunner October, 1991. I was assigned to OMS my second tour there.
My step father flew this through desert storm. I lived on barksdale AFB for a bit of my childhood. Loved watching these fly over near daily
I was stationed at BAFB from 89-92, crew chief on the B-52. Your dad probably flew a bird I crewed.
@@scottgshomewrenching1352 i know he had blue tails and red tails there... i believe he was the blue tail squadron.
I was a Bomb/Nav avionics tech in the Air Force in the early 70s and I worked on B-52s for four years. I remember R&R-ing the EVS and FLIR modules outside at night when it was 20 below zero. Thanks for the video. Really brought back memories!
As a former mechanic for the egress systems on the BUFF, this was a trip down memory lane. Thank you so much for sharing. I actually kinda miss this old rust bucket.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Finally a walk through thats an actual walk through and films everything. Good job. Most "walk throughs" just start recording when the person is sitting in the pilots seat and you don't see shit except out the window and front dash board.
Glad you enjoyed it! I’m working on more detailed tours
In the late 1960’s, I was stationed at McConnell AFB in Wichita, KS. The base shared its runways with the adjacent Boeing plant where they did refurbishment work on the B-52. It was quite a sight to see a BUFF flying low over the access road on final approach. We used to call it an “aluminum overcast.” And quite a contrast to the aircraft on the other side of the boundary fence at the factory where Cessna built their light singles, 152, 172, 182, etc.
I flew test flights in a KC-135 at McConnell. On one flight the weather and visibility was so bad at McConnell we had to make 3 passes before we could get down. The next morning, when I came in, I saw a B-52 off the end of the runway, mired in the grass. Evidently, it was being delivered to Boeing and had the same problem we did getting it on the ground. (that was in 1978 or 9).
I worked on this model of B52. That was in 1979 and it is amazing how much this aircraft has changed. Thank you for a great video.
Glad you enjoyed it
I was an ECM technician for 4 years in the USAF from 1967 to 1971. I worked B-52Ds which were the primary BUFFs used in Viet Nam. This aircraft had ECM components located everywhere and most of the ECM black boxes were over 100lbs (this was before miniature circuit components). Working inside of these things on the flight line in Texas heat was brutal, no windows! That being said, I still love the BUFF!
Those are magnificent aircraft. I worked around them for years while I was in the USAF. They are big, loud, and stunning when you are up close to them like you are in this video. Watching them take off and seeing the wings curl up at the ends was astonishing when I first saw it.
Yes they are!
I was a Electrical/Environmental maintainer on G model BUFF's at Wurtsmith AFB in Michigan. Thanks for the ride down memory lane. I did a lot of crawling and banging my head in these birds and loved every minute.
When I was a small child, my kindergarten teacher was married to a B-52 pilot. For our field trip we were allowed on a USAF base and were allowed to crawl through the B-52 and the KC-135. The B-52 variant we were in still had the crew station in the rear with the quad .50's and it was tiny there. The coolest part of the trip though was the large matted surface in the KC-135 where the crewmember laid and looked out the windows to fly the boom.
Did y'all go to Barksdale?
@@KingAladeen Carswell AFB. Now named NAS JRB Fort Worth
I had a similar experience. Went through a B52 at Peace AFB in New Hamshire some 60 years ago. I can remember siting in the bombardiar's station.
I flew several times across the US on tankers laid out in the refueler's pod watching this gorgeous country sail by. Awesome way to fly!
I wonder if that was a D model?
I was a USAF Security Policeman from 1973-1982, and guarded countless B-52s from South Dakota to North Carolina to California. They are awe-inspiring aircraft just sitting in their parking spots, but to watch a scramble and simulated launch from the alert apron is an other-worldly experience. Thanks for the memories, Paul!
What a great tour of the famous B-52 Bomber. Back in the mid 60's during the Vietnam War I was in the USAF repairing the radios on these great aircraft. The main HF radio for long distance communications was the ARC-65 made by Collins Radio Company and it was quite ugly, looking more like a round garbage can. It had many vacuum tubes putting off an enormous amount of heat and was remote controlled from the cockpit. It ran about 250 watts output on both SSB (Phone) and CW (Morse Code). I spent many an hour troubleshooting this beast to make sure it could do it's important duty in combat. All of the ARC-65's have been replaced by modern solid state radios which are much more reliable. The RB-47H Bombers also used the ARC-65. I am very proud I was able to serve our country and be at least a little part of the history of the mighty B-52 Stratofortress.
Interesting! As an EW, I used the HF radio many times to report emergencies on the aircraft back to our command post, or reach the nearest SAC base. It always worked!
Interesting seeing the G and comparing. I was Master Crew Chief on 61-011 Chameleon, an H model. I was one who had the pleasure of powering up those 8 throttles from time to time. Also was one who crawled on that crawlway in flight. Not fun! I gave many static display tours in my time, you did a good job. I've slept with that plane, loaded for alert, and flown all over the world in that plane. Low level flying is awesome. I was even blessed a few times to take the stick and fly it, shhhhh! Those were very fond days.
As a Crew member in the 70s, we did occasional static display days where the public climbed stairs to look in the cockpit. My all-time favorite question was, "Now, does this thing have one key to start, or eight?" Nice tour and great memories. Built with slide rules.
Thought the story was that some tried using the new computer models to come up with a model and it wasn't meeting requirements so a few people at Boeing were talking about it and literally grabbed a block of wood and carved out a fuselage
@@penguin2ab OK, that story has been distorted a bit. George Schairer, Ed Wells, Bob Withington and several others were in Dayton, OH pitching their concept for a new bomber. The Air Force rejected it saying it needed to be jet powered and faster. So back in the hotel they redesigned the airplane based upon what wind tunnel data they had with them. While the others were drafting the report Schairer went to a hobby shop and bought supplies and built a balsa model. It was more than the fuselage, it was the entire airplane. Schairer was Boeing's rep to Operation Paperclip. His letter back to Seattle concerning sweep is (was?) displayed in Boeing's HQ in Chicago. I had the pleasure of working with Mr. Schairer and Mr. Withington as a young engineer - and had Mr. Withington's son as one of my employees. Those guys were good engineers, believe me.
As a crew member in the '60's, no civilian was allowed inside of a B52. It would have been nice to allow our wives to see "our office" but that wasn't the SAC way. Actually, wives were considered unnecessary complications that just complicated the war mission
This one was built in 1959 and it still looks futuristic now. Incredible plane.
I was with the 633rd MXS on Guam in 1995 and actually flew to Darwin to work on the B-52 tow bars in storage. I got to see this B-52 on display at the museum. I really enjoyed Darwin and the friendly people.
Great job on the video!
My father was stationed at Pease AFB, NH with the 509th
Bomb Wing. When my father would go to his office on weekends, which was in the main hanger, he would take me with him. There was a B-52 in the hanger, painted black, for maintenance. He would let me
Go inside the B-52 and walk around the interior. I just couldn’t touch anything. What a great dad, retired E-9, and what an incredible memory.
Great video. My father Colonel William R. Gilmore graduated from the USNA in 1954. He transferred into the US Air Force and was a navigator in the B-47 then B-52. He is now buried at the US Air Force Academy near the B-52 on display.
When was he born?
@@sidv4615 January 9 1933.
Thank you! Very well done! I was a USAF "sky cop" who walked around buffs at Loring Maine in 1970. I never got the opportunity to see the inside of one of these aircraft until now! Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
A walk down memory lane!!! I worked on the B-52 D/F/G/H when I was stationed at Castle AFB (now closed) in Merced, CA from May '73 to Oct '75. This is an amazing aircraft and the fact that it continues to be on active service is a testament to the engineering behind it.... It was quite an experience for a 19 year old from a small borough outside Pittsburgh, PA.
Thanks for the video; brought back fond memories! One correction: All wing flaps moved in sync! The non-flying pilot had to watch the flap indicator needles to make sure both needles (left and right) kept in sync. If a split flap condition was shown; it was an 'emergency procedure'! I instructed in 'G' and 'H' B-52's for 13 years ('77 - '90). I have 5000+ flying hours. Your 'G' model is a non-ALCM carrier. The leading edge wing root would have been flared into the fuselage if it was an ALCM carrier. Russia used satellites to see that identifier to determine ALCM capability. Hello, John Shockey!
Thanks for the extra info.
Fun Fact: the flaps and Crab transmitter are the same, so you can actually swap those two gauges if you're trying to trace a malfunction.
I had no idea there were more than two people flying in these planes until I watched this. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it
Former B-52H mechanic here. The periscopic sextant was used only a little (1977-1981 time frame) so some enterprising mechanics in the flying mechanic program would connect a flexible hose to it to use as a vacuum cleaner. The ejection hatches under the downstairs ejection seats would accumulate stuff like cigarette butts, sunflower seed hulls, paper clips etc., this vacuum was the best way to clean up.
I got to tour inside a B-52 any time I wanted in 75-76. I was stationed at B-52 SAC base Merced CA. then, last piglet training base in the world. One wet winter night student pilot landed, hit his brakes too hard, blew 8 tires, skidded 100' into the mud at the end of the runway, took rest of the night to jack the plane up, change the tires & tow it back on the runway.
Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier in the X-1 in 1947, he was carried aloft by a B-29. The B-52 carried the X-15.
The B-52 never carried the X-1. They did modify one or two B-52's to carry the X-15. Those modified B-52's also carried carried a lot of other research aircraft as well. But never the X-1
@@dtyr123 Pretty sure he knows that which is why he made his comment. In the video around the 10:00 mark the voice over erroneously mentioned carrying the Bell X-1 using the underwing pylon.
@@LinenAssociate The X-1 was not carried by a B-52 at all. They used a B-50, which was an upgraded version of the B-29.
@@MarkLoundy Reading comprehension is a bit lacking on your end isn't it?
The B-52 didn't carry a Bell X-1 for any of it's flights. The X-1 made it's last flight before the B-52 was put into service.
We have a number of BUFFS visit the uk several times a year to Fairford . This aircraft looks as good as it did 50 years back . And in its day could seriously ruin your day .Amazing aircraft .
I discovered by chance that I worked on this aircraft at Beale AFB, California, in 1969 with the 456th A&E Sq. ("Armament and Electronics", later changed to AMS "Avionics Maintenance Squadron"). Worked in radio shop night shifts mostly. During a visit to Darwin in October 2023 I checked out the Air Museum before my flight back to Melbourne and discovered this G model with a familiar sounding tail number. The jet's history exhibit confirmed it was at Beale at the same time I was. Traveling alone, I spoke to a fellow who was there with his wife and kids who turned out to have been part of the museum team that received this B-52 years earlier. He was almost as excited as I was to hear I had been all over this aircraft over 50 years ago. Definitely a highlight of that trip for me. Small world!
Excellent tour of the old Buff. I worked ECM on these D & G models in the 70's for 6 years. We literally had equipment all over the aircraft. On the D model that catwalk went all the way back to a separate pressurized manned tail gunner. We would crawl up through the aft wheel well to get to our equipment when the 47 section door was blocked.
One Buff tried to kill me when some clown left a drogue parachute on top of the hatch. I opened it after some resistance, and the door flew open knocking me unconscious. Normally that door has resistance to the cables so it comes down slowly. I survived with a minor concussion.
Glad you enjoyed it
I worked Fire Control for almost 20 years, on D’s and G’s. Had to go through the 47 section to get to most of our system. Got pretty proficient at grabbing the edge of the hatch and swinging my legs up and in. Worked on the D’s at Carswell but started off in Blytheville on the G’s. Good times!!
Thank you for making this video! I was stationed at Griffiss AFB, Guam from 1988 to 1990. I was a flightline electronic warfare technician assigned to the 416 OMS squadron. I worked on all of the ECM gear you pointed to in the tour. This video brought back a lot of great memories.
The bumps in the nose and around the aft section near the tail gun were part of the ALQ-172 radar countermeasure system. It was an automated system. The EWO (pronounced "E Whoa") would turn it on and the system would do all the work. It was the newest ECM system onboard. The surfboard-looking antennas on the belly belonged to the ALQ-155 receiver/transmitter system. The EWO manually operated them. The wing-like antennas mounted more on the side of the aircraft belonged to the ALT-32 radio jammers. The radome on both sides of the verticle stabilizer belonged to the ALQ-153. It constantly scanned aft of the aircraft looking for missiles. The EWO could connect it to the flare and/or chaff system to automatically dispense chaff and/or flares. It was the most hated ECM system for flightline techs. Going up to the radome required a cherry picker (bucket lift).
I read one of our BUFFs was donated to the museum in Darwin. We regularly deployed 3-4 aircraft there so aircrews could do low-level flying. Darwin had an area for B-52s called the BRA. It stood for "bomber recovery area." The idea was if there was a nuclear strike, any BUFFs that survived after delivering their payload, would try to land at Darwin. Thank God it was never required. I enjoyed my one visit to Darwin. I got to see saltwater crocs and I was introduced to one of the finest beers I've ever tasted, Victoria Bitter.
I started my USAF career in ECM in 1978 at Keesler AFB. Tech school was mostly ECM systems on the BUFF but I ended up on F4s at Hill AFB. I trained on some of the systems you mentioned but ended up on mostly pods and RHAW systems. Finished college and became an Aircraft MX Officer for 20+ yrs. Really miss my AF career, but age and retirement were stronger callings, hehe.
@@ridingwithairbubble1694 I went to Keesler in 1984. From there I went to work on F-4s at Clark AB, the Philippines for three years. While there, I got heavily into scuba diving. The Philippines had some of the greatest scuba diving in the world, but Clark AB was far away from them. It meant I could only go diving on three-day weekends. I realized if I was stationed at Andersen AFB on Guam, I could literally dive every day. So I volunteered for another overseas assignment if it was at Andersen AFB. I got my wish and it was great. I hated working on F-4s. I loved working on the B-52. I felt like I committing fraud. The Air Force was paying me to hang out with my friends and work on B-52s. I loved it so much, I would have paid for the privilege. It was the best two years of my working life. And yes, I got to go scuba diving all the time. 😁
Wasn't this the plane that, if they switched on their ECM (erroneously, I would think) above urban areas, that they disrupted power/TV for the whole area? (could have been AWACS as well...)
Must have been some serious generators to supply all power. And, tracing wires all the way from the cockpit to the tail... Plus, if damaged (SAMs over Vietnam) even more complex to repair and test everything. Thanks for the info!
I agree about VB, sometimes called "Very Beautiful" by my friends in Melbourne.
I was aircraft radio maintenance in the 456th Armament and Electronics Sq., 1968, just before "Avionics" simplified the name, at Beale AFB, CA. B-52Gs and KC-135s. (The SR-71s were over there across the red security line; other people went there, not me). We had a couple UHF and VHF antenna masts on the belly toward the nose end. All those mast antennas were a head-knocking hazard for us maintenance troops walking around, constantly ducking to go under. The HF radio antenna coupler in the vertical stabilizer had to be changed on a cherry picker. No one trained me on it but somehow I did it at night without slamming into the tail, or worse. This was a good video tour of the aircraft but it ended just as I was hoping to see him get into the 47 section, the long open bay behind the bomb bay that had various radios and other gear. I spent some time in there as well as the flight deck. One other memory was being on board during a ground engine run up that was pretty fun. Everything rocking and rolling but the brakes held of course. All this was evening or at night on swing shift.
Worked with Rick.
I worked the ECM systems on the B52Hs in Minot.
T 2:35 Behind the Dome is a phased array antenna for one of the receivers/jammers. The RWR antennas are in a different part of the nose.
Very great and detailed video. Thank you for this. Brings back memories.
Why not Minot? Freezin's the reason! (Fellow Northern Tier inhabitant, Wurtsmith AFB.)
Great video! This brings back some memories. I've logged a few hours in this aircraft. 59-2596 was last assigned to the 60 Bomb Squadron, 43rd Bomb Wing Andersen AFB Guam. It was gifted to the Darwin museum in 1990-91 when the 60th BS closed its doors after the first round of the BRAC (base realignment and closure). We used to have a regular deployment to the Northern Territories at RAAF Darwin back in the late 1980s. One thing incorrect in the narration, the B-52 H models did have a tail gun, but was removed in the 90s after Desert Storm. The B-52H had the M61 20 mm rotary gun. The gunner operated the gun remotely from his station on the upper flight deck
Side note @ about 8:20 in the video on the left tip tank, you see an Indian head. That is the squadron symbol for the 93rd Bomb Squadron Barksdale AFB La. This was the first Air Force Reserve B-52 squadron. In 1995 we were part of a deployment to RAAF Darwin for an exercise with the Australian Air Force. One of our reserve aircraft needed a part to return to Barksdale. Some of our more industrious maintainers were able to "borrow" a part from 2596, the display aircraft. Of course the unit symbol had to be zapped on the tip tank of the museum display. I swear I had no knowledge of that operation when it happened. Short video for the 93rd ruclips.net/video/cdbXJYA8RNQ/видео.html. Also, airhistory.net has a great picture of this aircraft circa 1983 in the UK when 59-2596 was assigned to the 2 Bomb Wing. www.airhistory.net/photo/108303/59-2596
That's too awesome!
I used to work on the B-52 bomber and the KC 135 tanker from 1971 to 1975. Thanks for sharing I really enjoyed this clip it definitely took me back in time👍🏻👍🏻
Glad you enjoyed it Jim!
I actually crawled through the detached tail end of a B-52 bomber in a jungle on Guam when I was a kid back around 1976 or so. I was surprised to see that the electronics in the tail there utilized small vacuum tubes. Such was the state-of-the-art in electronics back in those days.
How did the tail end of a B-52 end up in a jungle on Guam? That particular B-52 was actually out-of-service as a bomber and was used for firefighting practice at Andersen AFB on Guam while I was an AF brat there. Typhoon Pamela hit the base in 1976 and, along with other damage, blew the tail end of the old B-52 over the airfield fence and into the nearby jungle. I came across the tail end when I noticed it while biking on a nearby road and went to investigate it.
Seriously!?! 🙄 🤔 😂
Lucky!
Excellent job. Great tour of a B-52, best I've ever seen. It's incredible that the first flight of the B-52 was in 1952 & expect the buff to continue unti 2050. That kind of longevity just doesn't happen usually.
I had a quite a few hours working on some of these, back in the mid sixties. Sure have changed since then. 380th BW, SAC, Plattsburgh, NY.
I've really enjoyed reading all the B52 reminiscence and nostalgia. I served in the SAC 416th Bombardment Wing at Griffiss AFB (Rome NY) from 1965 to 1967. I'm 79 years old now and, in retrospect, these were two of the best years of my life. I was a guidance technician on the AGM-28A Hound Dog missile. After a productive year and a half in the guidance shop, I spent a year in the analysis section of the AMMS squadron. There I learned to debrief incoming flights and to read the missile portion of the MADREC recordings. Most importantly I got to fly as an observer on six FSAGA missions (First Sortie After Ground Alert). This privilege and honor was quite extraordinary because I was only a two-stripe, first-term enlistee. These missions tested the reliability of the alert aircraft and all its systems.
To qualify for flight status, I had to complete altitude chamber testing at Westover AFB. Before each night flight I was outfitted with a flight suit, helmet, oxygen mask, and parachute. If we had to bail out, I was expected to exit through one of the bottom holes left by the navigators (lol). Before each of my flights, on the short bus ride to the flight line, I briefed the crew on the prior maintenance of the aircraft and missiles. If I was the only observer, which was usually the case, for takeoff, air refueling, and landing I sat behind the pilot and copilot. During the missile runs I sat behind the navigator and radar navigator. We took off from Griffiss in the early evening, flew over Maine for KC-135 in-flight refueling, then made a high-level missile and bombing run to an electronic range in Kentucky and a low-level run to a range at Warner Robins in Georgia. Then back to Griffiss for a few ILS touch-and-go's before landing around 6 AM.
What incredible experiences these were. I was transferred to Little Rock AFB and served on a Titan II launch crew for the last year of my enlistment. Another extraordinary experience but of an entirely different nature altogether.
Did you see Titans launch?
No, I never saw a launch. Once a year a missile was taken from each of the three bases (Little Rock, McConnell, and Davis Monathan) along with an alert launch crew, and sent to Vandenberg for a silo launch. The year I was at Little Rock, our missile failed to launch. The holding clamps didn’t release for some reason. BIG disappointment!
@JackKellyUSA so awesome hearing you were at Griffiss AFB. I remember seeing B52's daily at times fly over as a kid in Utica. The thunder from those birds was incredible. Rome, NY was active back then. I moved away in '82 and base was decommissioned. What a shame.
@@mikewithers299 I moved back to Rome three years ago. The base is an office park now and a little used airport. There’s a B52 on display though - The Pride of the Mohawk Valley. Rome and Utica are still good towns to live in. Come on back! 😊
@JackKellyUSA my family is still there. I'm in construction and that industry was dying when I left there. Still love my home town though. I need to visit the base one day to see that bird. I love that buff
Spent 6 yrs in USAF as flightline jet engine mechanic on the BUFFs and KC135s 74-80. Thanks for this!
Glad you enjoyed it! I'm off to Seattle/PIMA/Dayton in a few months so more videos coming soon :)
Worked on this model of the B-52 from 1988 to 1990. Been a long time!
Absolutely amazing engineering long before they had computers worth the name. This was the same generation that put a man on the moon with slide rulers and created the SR-71 with similar equipment.
Also, amazing camera work an narration. Thank you, Paul!
I served on a B-52H. great aircraft!
Great video. It is hard to believe something like this was built only about 50 years after the first airplane flew.
When you design something right it can have a very long service life. With upgrades. A fantastic plane. Hats of to the design team.
Thanks for a great tour. What a beast! Boggles the mind to think that an air frame designed in the early 1950s will likely see service for a century. Those designers with their vision and slide rules really had the right stuff.
Boeing's engineers really knew what the heck they were doing that's for sure!! It still blows my mind that the B-52 was capable of constant flight with in-air refuelling for most of the cold war...
Appreciate how you kept the pace high, didnt need to fast forward or speed up the video!
You really only realise how ancient the plane is once you get inside. Even that G model looks archaic. A literal museum piece! It shows why the plane's still in service, because it's so basic and slow that it must be extremely cheap to use as a bomb truck.
Какой у Вас прекрасный музей! Все экспонаты в хорошем состоянии. Чистота. Стенды. Как будто бы только с полётов техника!👍👍👍
Некоторые приборы отсутствуют. Хотя у нас они вообще отсутствуют
I never fail to be blown away by the landing gear raise/lower and stowage on the B52. The gear folds up like some sort of origami trick with door edges diagonal to the line of the aircraft
My father was a Specialist mechanic for this plane. We followed it all over the world. I remember crew parties growing up were awesome.
That is how I remember the G model when I worked on them. We would remove all the control boxes so the electrical people could install upgrades. The pilot/ECM was "A" area, the bomb/nav area "B" area, thru the hatch/door was "C" area. Stories many. A painter once wondered what the handle on the over head hatch was for. Just heard a pop then a bang as it hit the concrete. Ran tests a couple of times when we did engine runs, very noisy. We would rope off and put warning signs when we did radar or ECM checks. It would never fail to walk out and find someone walked past the signs and would be working near a antenna. Very powerful transmitters. It was one of the dirtiest planes to work on but it was fun to work on.
My two favorite memories from those days was the time a bored ECMer wanted to see what the difference was between switching from a training mode to a war mode. As they flew over over Texas the plane engaged different civilian systems. He was transferred the next day. The other, we had just finished putting a B-52 back together and finished its test flight. The first Gulf War had started. The crew came and flew it home. They quickly flew it on a bombing mission in Iraq. The feedback was the ECM consoles lit up like a Christmas tree. They could see the SAMs and when they were being jammed. They thanked us for our work.
I've been through one of these several times when I was a kid, they had a decommissioned B-52 at the airport I lived near. Some kids would always put empty beer cans in the windows, and we'd go up into the craft to remove the trash left behind by them. amazingly cramped, but for a kid in their early teens was a wonderland of mechanical wizardry :D
sounds like orlando
The straight forward tour and explanation of everything is simply perfect. You clearly have an intimate knowledge of aviation! What a beautiful bird. Hard to believe the 52 will have almost 100 years of service when said and done
Why Can't American Civilian Manufacturer's make quality like this Anymore?! 737 Max and Boing Dream Lineer-10-15 Years at Best!
Thank you for the detailed walk-through. My Dad flew these in the Vietnam war.
Glad you enjoyed it :)
I worked on the buff for 14 years and I'm impressed by your knowledge about the plane. They are basic info but accurate. Thumbs up!
Great tour! Former USAF crash fire rescue member, I trained on Buff's at March AFB California in the early 70's. We had to crawl through a 'D' model ramp queen while wearing full bunker suits with breathing apparatus worn under them. It was hot cramped and a long way from nose to tail when you're on the inside. Nice to see a new G model with the fancy bells and whistles many of which came along after 'Nam. The early models had actual tail-gunners...
About 40 years ago I was part of a group who was given a tour of an active B52 at Loring AFB in Limestone, Maine. We were given an escorted tour of the cockpit and had the opportunity to walk under the B52 for the length of the bomb bay. MASSIVE. Back then, Loring was the second largest AFB in the world.
I was at Loring from 83-85 working ECM on B-52G's. It was large and it was very cold during the winter. One day we got down to 47 below zero (with wind chill). During the summer it was humid and somedays you climbed out of the plane feeling like you just took a shower (you needed one afterwards).
8:40: only 21 years between the first flight of the '52 and the Tiger Moth!
Great video, mate. I learned a lot!
Thanks for the neat video and reminder of what the inside of the G model looked like. I had the pleasure of one 72 hour flight in one in 1968. Long long flight.
Thanks so much for the detail , ECM'S ETC flair displacement position , this is everything a geek like me wants to see. !
Great job! I don't think I've ever seen such a comprehensive look at a B-52 before!
Cheers Ben! Yep there's a few videos on YT but they're much briefer and have less details
I was a Bomb-Nav Systems mechanic for the B-52 G models. 82-86 Loring AFB, Maine. The ECM Shop was right next door to ours at the 42 AMS Squadron. The ECM guys always bragged that they could throw out enough RF energy to shut down and or fry the electronics of a small city. I don't think they were exaggerating.
Thanks for the tour. Did anyone notice the lack of ailerons? The Wings spoilers did that job. The Wings tip was the pivot point, or the high point as the extended spoiler side dropped I do believe.
Glad to see a G model not scrapped. I worked them two years, and yes the brakes were re-pucked often. No fun to change in Northern Michigan in the winter.
KIS or Wurtsmith or Kincheloe?
@@roguedalek900 I was a KI late 80s, early 90s.
@@wschappell Oh yes, KI Siberia.
This brought back many memories as I was a crew chief on the G & H models between the years of 1979-1983. At Castle AFB in California. Great video!
I worked on this very bomber at Andersen AFB, Guam while assigned to the 43rd Avionics Maintenance Squadron from 1985-89. I even went to Darwin on temporary duty and rented a Moke and had a great time off duty there and managed not to lose money at a casino or be eaten by a croc. Great days. Cheers.
This is the sort of no-nonsense, knowledgable aircraft tour that we need - good on you!
Ditto👍👏
Not a bad tour, but he doesn't know RAM from vortex generators. Then he describes the air exhaust under the Stab as cooling air exhaust for the hydraulics from the slot in the vertical stabilizer. That slot is for the "Q" spring, which provides artificial feel for the flight controls. Brakes are poor? you obviously haven't been on board during landing! How about coming to a complete stop in 2600 feet? Been there. 8:16 your fuel vent leads to a surge tank of 50 gallons. When fuel expands due to high temps, it bleeds over to these tanks. Airflow in flight pushed it back to the main tanks. The primary vent for refuel was behind the aft gear forward of the access hatch to the 47 section. It was known as the "Fuse". I was a Crew Chief on D and H model BUFFs. The external tanks were not jettison able on G and H jets while they could be on D models. But that was purely because of the weight involved. A D model tank was about 20,000 lbs when full. They were never jettisoned just because they were empty, in fact they were usually the last fuel burned to maintain wing stability. OMG Water injection does NOT change RPM! It increases density of the air being burned, thus increasing thrust. I'm out. Please do more research before you mislead the masses into thinking you're an expert.
I used to work on this very aircraft when it was at Robins AFB, GA. OH, the memories this video brings back. I was an instrument systems tech and took care of all the instruments upstairs and some down on the lower level. The B-52G was the first aircraft I ever worked on, a fuel quantity problem as I recall. So sad that the rest of them were chopped up at the boneyard.
Absolutely! We're very lucky that this one has been preserved.
I had a client in Rancho Cordova, California, whose office was on the final approach of what was once Mather AFB. The B-52's would come in so low, they would rattle his building and you could practically see the pilots in the cockpit! It was such a trill! All the surrounding businesses were auto salvage yards so no one complained about the noise in those days.
Mather AFB was my first assignment working on the ECM systems on these monsters! I always felt sorry for the trailer park at the end of one end of the runway because of the noise!
I was with the 2nd SPS at Barksdale AFB. La in 1968. I was a security Guard with the B52 and KC135 aircraft. I remember so well standing around the aircraft through all kinds of weather. !
Wow, I visited this museum in 1996 when we visited family in Australia… Good to see that the museum takes good care of this beauty!
🇺🇸 🇦🇺 I served in Iraq with a lot of Aussies. That beautiful museum seems to be a fantastic space to honor that old buff. Nice video!
Cheers Jason. It's a great museum and getting this close to a B-52 was a huge honour
@@PaulStewartAviation as an Av Geek if I ever make it to Darwin I’ll include it on my itinerary. Thanks again for your videos.
@@jasonpayne1240 The markets on Mindil beach and in Parap are also top notch.
I was hoping you would show the fuel tanks at the end of the wings. My dad worked for the manufacturing company that built them , they are called tip tanks. The name of the company was Benson manufacturing in Kansas city Missouri. Dad passed 2 years ago bus I still remember his stories about building the tip tanks for the B52.
I was a crew chief from 71-73 19th OMS at McCoy first, then we moved to Warner Robbins because Disney wanted the whole airport. Did a bunch of Arc Light tours in Guam and Thailand. Each engine burned about a quart an hour, it was a PITA to fill the oil on top of the engine after a long flight on the dark camo painted wings when it was 100 degrees, loading the drag chute was the worst job, 2 guys had to walk it up a b-5 stand and muscle it into the hole then crank the door shut, I saw a lot of guys hurt doing this operation. If I remember correctly the chute weighed around 200 pounds. The tires were huge and heavy, there were about 50 bolts that held the aluminum wheel halves together, they were torqued to about 400 pounds, changing a tire was a workout, we had to rebuild the wheel bearings every time we changed a tire. The Ejection seats had a bunch of shotgun styled gunpowder charges in each seat. Changing these charges periodically really sucked, you were supposed to disassemble the door panels, but I figured out hot do do it with my very long arms reaching in by feel. I got caught doing this because my senior Msgt saw me at the BX and asked why I wasn't working on the ejection seats, I told him I was done and he said BS and accused me of forging the maintenance card. I had to show him how I did it and he had the TO manual changed. He said he wondered why I always volunteered to do this as everyone hated the job. We lived in tents in Guam, and we worked a 3 to 3 shift 7 days a week so everybody had some cool dark time to sleep, it felt like 150 degrees when the sun came out and cooked the tents. I used to get up and go sleep behind the concrete blast fences for some cool shade. When I got out I went to college on the GI bill, after working 12 hours a day 7 days a week for 2 years, college was so easy I would finish all my work during the week and had a job on the weekend, I remember everyone complaining about how hard school was, I would just laugh!
That's a great explanation Gregory, and amusing too - thank you!
I watched this with my mouth open...in awe....in confusion...just can't believe how amazing the details that are on this massive plane
Did radio maintenance on B-52 at Kinchloe AFB Michigan 1969. Primary radio was on the upper deck right behind the right hand seat. Radio weighed about 30 pounds and we had to carry it through the hatch and up that ladder to install a replacement. What was worse was that the secondary radio was in the tail. We had to climb in through the rear landing gear bay up to the catwalk and then crawl along the catwalk pushing the 30 pound radio ahead of us to get to the rear of the plane.
When I saw the right navigator's seat on the lower deck it brought back memories. One night all the planes were headed out on a full alert drill. There was a broken headphone cable on the right side of the navigator's seat. The call me and another guy to go out to the flight line to fix it. While the plane taxied down to the other end of the runway I had to fix the wiring with the plane shaking and bumping. When I was done we were like two miles from where we got on and there was a maintenance truck to take as back the plane took off.
Never got in the air in a B-52 but at least I can say I had a ride in one.
My intro to BUFFs was swapping out the parachute and survival kit in the tail of a D model in 1976. I was the skinniest and could fit through the bomb-bay catwalk door into the tail section.
So cool, I've had a chance to see two of these. Very awe inspiring to stand under. The size and span of the wings is incredible. Thank you so much to everyone in the comments who served.
There's one at the airport I used to work at, Orlando International (MCO). It was a SAC base in the 60's, until Disney World showed up...LOL. The ammunition bunkers were still present when I retired a while back. We were told to that there were no nukes ever stored there, but I've heard old-timers say that's bunk. They asked me what good a SAC base would be with ready-use B-52s but no nukes? The sheer size of this bird is amazing. The skin was all wrinkled on the fuselage, which I'm guessing if from many aircraft cycles. Can't believe we're using these things for longer than I'll live!
I spent a humid day at the beginning of 2020 looking through this great museum. I walked around the B52 with one of the volunteers and he told me that, although the Buff was in a museum, it technically remained the property of the USAF. He recalled one day some American brass arrived from the airport and needed to remove parts from this airframe to be used on an in service aircraft. It was sort of like a having a handy scrapyard that someone else looked after for you.
Some parts were removed off a B-1A on display at an air museum in Colorado once. The parts were for an in service B-1B. The curator of the museum mentioned it in one of the museum’s videos.
One night we had to do a midnight raid on a static display B-52 to steal some parts in order to fix a grounded BUFF. My job was the lookout. The funny thing was the display was a B model and we needed the part for a H Model.
As far as I know, all displayed USAF Aircraft remain the property of the USAF. This is administered through the National Museum of the United States Air Force, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio.
An example of an aircraft that was on loan, determined not to be maintained and returned to the Museum, was the B-17, "Memphis Belle". It was on display at a couple of different locations and had suffered from years of neglect and vandalism. Museum staff determined the airplane was not being maintained and gave the City of Memphis, Tennessee the ultimatum of repairing the plane and safeguarding it, or returning it yo the Museum.
The Cjty was unable to provide the needed funds and location for the Memphis Belle's care and it was surrendered to the Museum.
The Belle was moved from Memphis Tennessee to WPAFB, Dayton via semi trucks. I live near Dayton and got to see with assembled large crowds the Nemphis Belle being transported along the highway. It was placed in the "Restoration Hangar" near the main Museum buildings and painstakingly restored.
There are a number of videos on RUclips about this. One is a documentary produced by ThinkTV of the Public Broadcast System.
@@oldfatandtired6406 That's interesting Mike. Further to my comment above, the volunteer I was talking to in Darwin observed that the upper fuselage and wings on the B52 were looking grubby and he remarked to me that part of their agreement with the USAF was that they had to keep any a/c clean and maintained. It costs a bit to get up and clean a big aircraft with all the health and safety concerns. We often forget that when we pay admission.
@@petertocher6845 It was fresh out of the paint barn and flown straight to Darwin. Theres a video of it out there somewhere about the prep and arrival .
My uncle told stories of going along the catwalk next to a nuclear bomb while in flight during a long patrol. I’d never seen that before; thanks so much!
Very well done mate! The B-52 came into the S.A.C. inventory in the early 1950's and we were at one of the S.A.C. bases when the KB-50's, B-29's and B-47's we're being phased out. Barksdale A.F.B. was a mixed piston engined and jet bomber base at the time. I can tell you some stories about those very scary times when we were just old enough to know our lives were in danger every day of being bombed. Kids I went to school with lost their Dad's in plane crashes and other accidents during training and alert exercises. We dreaded those deployment exercises! Scary times!