Sunday 19 September 2010

Vulcan

We're off to the Battle of Britain air show in an hour or two, at what used to be called RAF Kemble, but is now boringly called 'Cotswold Airport', for some reason known only to the businessman who owns it.

On the way back from Cornwall yesterday, we had just got on to the M4 at Bristol, when we were treated to an overhead display by this Vulcan bomber (I know it was this one, because it is the only one left flying in the world, and was recently restored at a cost of £6 million) which swooped and dived at a height of about 800 feet over the heads of us drivers. I slowed right down to watch it - and to avoid causing a multiple pile-up with everyone else. It looked beautifully agile.

The Vulcan was designed to carry a single nuclear bomb in the 1950's, so - like many weapons - it's beauty is tinged with darkness. The last time Vulcan bombers were used was in the Faulklands conflict against Argentina, where one was used to destroy the runways of the islands. Thankfully, only conventional high explosives were used then.

A few years ago, a friend of mine actually bought a complete Vulcan bomber, which was parked up on an island in the Southern Hemisphere. He paid a few thousand pounds for it, and his plan was to dismantle it for scrap - there is a lot of precious metal on board these things apparently - gold and platinum, as well as high-grade aluminium. He would have made about £40,000, were it not that the island's authorities would not allow him to scrap it there, in situ. He looked into putting it onto floatation devices and towing it back to here, but that would have cost about the same as he would have made.

As far as I know, it lies there still. Maybe the locals are using it as a chicken coop now?

7 comments:

  1. Welcome back Tom. Hope you are rested. olive

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  2. I first saw a Vulcan when I was about 10. The wretched machine flew about 6 ft above my head, and the noise was unbelievable!

    When I was teaching in Sussex one of my pupils was Anthony Verdon-Roe, grandson or great-grandson of the manufacturer. Nice lad; very bright.

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  3. We've just got back from the air show in Gloucestershire, and the same team of Hurricane, Spitfire and Lancaster Bomber flew back from London just to entertain us as flew over Westminster today, to entertain the Pope et al. Very moving. Tonight, we will watch the dvd of 'The First of the Few', made just after the war.

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  4. I'm glad the show was good! Battle of Britain - 70 years ago - long time. All those young men on your header photo! It was for them wasn't it!

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  5. Slight correction - First of the Few was made in 1942.

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  6. I trip over my words every time I do. What I meant to say was that the whole show was in honour of the ones who gave everything and didn't make it and in honour of the ones who gave everything and did. Sorry it didn't come out like I intended

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  7. Yes, I know Moll, I was too busy correcting my dates. 55000 Bomber Command alone were killed in WW2. Tour of duty: 30 sorties. Life expectancy average: 7 sorties.

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