B-36 Peacemaker 360º flightdeck view

Holy Flight Engineer Station Batman......

If they had ever truly gotten those things nuclear powered it might have been simpler.

So, I wonder....enlisted FE's that worked on B-36s, AC-119Ks, and KC-97L planes in the USAF; did they get military competency Flight Engineer Reciprocating and Flight Engineer Turbojet from the FAA?
 
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Very cool link thanks!

There is a Peacemaker at the Offutt museum in town. It's amazing how these bombers make planes like the B17, B29, and yes even the B52 look small.
 
Had a chance to see one in Pima AZ...plane is just a monster. Did a hike up the Franklin Mountains in El Paso a couple weeks ago...there was one that went into the hillside there December 11,1953, there is also a plaque in memory of the nine servicemen who perished in the crash.
 
Very cool link thanks!

There is a Peacemaker at the Offutt museum in town. It's amazing how these bombers make planes like the B17, B29, and yes even the B52 look small.

Saw one at Castle in Merced and I was astounded at how huge the thing is. Hard to believe something that large and complex was capable of getting off the ground. Yes, it makes the -29 and -52 appear quite diminutive in comparison.
 
Could you imagine having to change all those clocks every time you cross a time zone?!? ;)

From one of our crew schedulers..."What's the Z time where you're at...?" :o
 
Awesome! One thing I don't understand. Why are there only gauges for engines 1 - 4 on the pilot's panel??
 
MikeD has it right. If you look at the diagram I posted above, you can see an access ramp from the nosewheel, similar to the B-29.

If I remember right there was a pressurized tube that would lead to the other areas of the plane as well. These areas would be like the radio operators station, crew quarters, and the tail section.
 
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