Picture of the day

"A little off the top, please..."

An Ensign (and the ship's carpentery crew) have a crappy day:

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And undignified end for a pretty aircraft...

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https://www.urbanghostsmedia.com/2014/12/raaf-f-111-bombers-buried-swanbank-landfill-australia/

Australia’s Defunct F-111 Bomber Fleet Buried in the Swanbank Landfill

November 2011 was a rough month for aviation enthusiasts in Australia. Over the course of four days from the 21st to the 24th, the Royal Australian Air Force elected to bury 23 of its retired F-111 strike jets that hadn’t been selected for preservation. This article details their final mission – via low loader to the Swanbank landfill outside Ipswich, Queensland.

Thiess Services spokesman Darren Willson said the RAAF first contacted the waste management company regarding some “sensitive bits of equipment they wanted to get rid of. Then it came to light a few months later that it was the F-111s.” (See full video below).

Of 43 General Dynamics F-111C and G variants delivered to Australia by the United States over the decades, eight crashed and a handful have been preserved on bases and in museums. The remaining 23 were earmarked for disposal to honour the terms of the original contract and ensure that any sensitive parts didn’t fall into the wrong hands.

After months of planning, the stripped out hulks of Australia’s once awesome low-level, medium bombers were trucked into the Swanbank landfill. The RAAF had considered scrapping the airframes but decided that burial would be cheaper than recycling, though certainly less environmentally friendly.

Devoid of wings, tails and other components, the buried aircraft were little more than gaunt, empty shells. Neatly stacked side-by-side in interlocking rows, pits were dug to accommodate the planes’ still-extended undercarriages. The space between each F-111 hulk was then infilled with earth and rubbish.

To many enthusiasts and military historians, it was an undignified end for the mighty bomber fondly known as ‘the Pig’. As more debris is piled on top, the abandoned aircraft hulks will be compacted down.

The Swanbank landfill was selected due to its waste management expertise and ability to handle and process highly sensitive materials. For security reasons the Pigs’ location will be recorded and GPS coordinates noted (unlike the Lockheed Have Blue technology demonstrators).

As Thiess’ Alex Smith reported: “the disposal is much more than just a simple burial. the airframes will eventually be deep beneath the landscape and a permanent record of their precise location will ensure they are never disturbed.”

Super Hornets beware, should the F-35 ever land in Australia…

 
Did RAAF ever had acces to US nukes or carried out excersizes using them? To me burial of airframes suggest that or some other radioactive contamination.
 
Did RAAF ever had acces to US nukes or carried out excersizes using them? To me burial of airframes suggest that or some other radioactive contamination.

The RAAF never had access to nuclear weapons, but their F-111G fleet were formerly nuclear capable Strategic Air Command FB-111As, so they were scrapped in order to maintain treaty compliance.
 
Only partly. Homing torpedoes were still in their infancy for most of the war, but they did exist.
Don't make a visually appealing subject like most of the equipment shown here.
 
Only partly. Homing torpedoes were still in their infancy for most of the war, but they did exist. Don't make a visually appealing subject like most of the equipment shown here.

Even gyro controlled, 'straight running' torpedoes claimed submarines during the war, so you wouldn't even need to necessarily depict acoustic homing torpedoes to recreate a scene like this. The point I was making was that the creator of the model apparently was trying to depict a scene from the movie U-571.
 
Why don't they recycle the aluminum in those old airframes? Piss-poor attitude on recycling, eh? Could turn the money into the CRF and help with the debt. Just sayin...
 
Why don't they recycle the aluminum in those old airframes? Piss-poor attitude on recycling, eh? Could turn the money into the CRF and help with the debt. Just sayin...

The article mentions that it was cheaper to bury them than to try and recover the aluminum... Probably to do with all the paperwork involved with assuring disposal, a fleet worth of inspectors to watch the planes being melted down, etc.
 
FIDO 685 pound air-dropped acoustic torpedo. 100 pound warhead.

Just before America’s official involvement in World War II, Fido was born. It took a while for Fido to be ready to serve, though. Only 4,000 were fielded – down from a planned 10,000 — largely because Fido was so effective.


Technically Fido’s designation was as the Mk 24 Mine, but this torpedo was unique in that it could sniff out enemy submarines.


According to UBoat.net, Fido’s “nose” consisted of four hydrophones placed at equidistant points around the body of the Mk 13 aerial torpedo. These gave the torpedo steering directions as they detected the skulking submarine and guided the torpedo to a direct impact on the hull. That’s when a 100-pound high-explosive warhead would do its job. The result should be a sunken enemy submarine.

Fido could go at a speed of 12 knots and its batteries would last for 15 minutes. It could be dropped from up to 300 feet high by planes going as fast as 120 knots. Submarines could increase their speed to try to outrun it, but their batteries would run out very quickly, forcing them to the surface, where they’d be sitting ducks to American guns. If they didn’t go fast, the torpedo would catch them.

Fido was used on anything from a TBF Avenger to the PBY Catalina. It took a little less than a year and a half for Fido to make it from the drawing board to its first enemy kill. Fido claimed 33 Axis submarines in the Atlantic (32 German, one Japanese), and four more in the Pacific (all Japanese).
 
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An A-10 Thunderbolt II assigned to the 39th Air Base Wing, Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, receives fuel over Iraq from a KC-10 Extender, Nov. 29, 2017
 
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