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BBC Cold War season
 

[Closed] BBC Cold War season

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Funny how they used to equate being Gay and Upper Class to being a Communist

Think it was more just looking at anyone who was considered a "wrong 'un' in one way being obviously a "wrong 'un" in any number of other ways. So, in the thinking of the day, of course left footers would be left footers. If you see what I mean!


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 11:12 am
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They were still flying U2's out of Akrotiri in Cyprus when I was there a few years ago. US air crew though I think.

They were never spoke about at all despite the noise they made at take off, I have heard an aircraft make a noise like it!


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 11:14 am
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Yes, I saw that description of the F4 flypast - I'm not surprised he was given a stern talking-to 😉


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 11:21 am
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Think it was more just looking at anyone who was considered a "wrong 'un' in one way being obviously a "wrong 'un" in any number of other ways. So, in the thinking of the day, of course left footers would be left footers. If you see what I mean!

There was also a big element of anyone in a position with access to sensitive information being 'open to blackmail' given that homosexuality was still illegal, and to many shameful, at the time.


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 11:46 am
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There was also a big element of anyone in a position with access to sensitive information being 'open to blackmail' given that homosexuality was still illegal, and to many shameful, at the time.

Very true. In fact, I think this may well [i]still[/i] be true. There are myriad rumours about certain senior politicians in the UK at the moment. OK, so there's no element of illegality nowadays, but the fact that someone in a position of power might want to keep it secret leaves them open to that very same blackmail potential.


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 11:52 am
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A good example from then:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Vassall

CFH - I think that if you viewed some of the more recent rumours along an 'operation yewtree' line of enquiry, you could very much see the potential for blackmail...


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 11:58 am
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But, but does being Gay and in the "service" of HMtQ really mean you are open to Blackmail, nowadays?? That doesn't seem to me to be a big deal. As for the Yewtree investigations, incriminations, finger pointing then yes, yes I can see that being a route for potential blackmail.. but would that ever get out?

As said, some good background knowledge there but I am looking forward to the next programme.


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 12:11 pm
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Bikebuoy - I think that if you have someone who is openly gay, then its clearly not a problem - it would clearly be much more of a problem if someone were keeping it secret from their wife and/or family.

Its worth commenting that the security services at the time very much prevented homosexuality being an absolute bar from service in a vetted post (as it was in Canada for example) and that the head of the department was able to make the call if in all the circumstances he felt there was no risk to security.

Regards Yewtree - its obviously hard to tell, there have been enough rumours about various politicians and people in power over the years that we'll probably never know the truth - there's certainly a lot of potential for all sorts of honeytraps and secretive goings on to have occurred, Elm guest house anyone?


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 12:21 pm
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if you have someone who is openly gay, then its clearly not a problem - it would clearly be much more of a problem if someone were keeping it secret from their wife and/or family

Agreed. It's the 'keeping it secret' rather than the actuality of being gay that's the issue here. Any time someone needs to keep something secret, there's potential for someone to hold that secret over them as pressure.

The higher the position, and the deeper the secret (or lie, depending on how you choose to view it), the greater the pressure.


 
Posted : 13/11/2013 12:23 pm
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Just watching "strange days" now. Not withstanding his WWII achievements, Churchill was a bit of an arse, wasn't he?


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 11:18 am
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Phantoms are cool, but RAF Phanotoms were cooler as they were re-engined with Rolls-Royce Avons, a far better powerplant than the US engines the others had.

The U2 was actually a re-winged F4 Starfghter and something the Skunkworks knocked up in a hurry, the later U2's had the stretched and more bulbous noses and I thought the black paint on the later aircraft was a radar absorbant paint?


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 12:43 pm
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Tomorrow, Friday 15th at 2100

As an 'Iron Curtain' fell across Europe, the jet bomber came to define how the Cold War was fought. Able to fly faster, higher and further than ever before, and armed with a devastating new weapon, Britain's V Force became the platform for delivering nuclear armageddon.

[img] [/img]

Love this picture! It captures that strange mix of glamour and threat that only that period of history could conjure up! Streamlined, elegant things, designed to kill. Mad period of history.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 12:58 pm
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^^^ ohhh good call Sir.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 1:04 pm
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This is THE one.

How to deliver a bucket of sunshine to the Commies!


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 1:28 pm
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Churchill was a bit of an arse, wasn't he?

Churchill was terrified of global communism and of Stalin.

Churchill wanted to attack the USSR in 1945. His argument was that we would of had to fight them at some point and we had all gear in Europe ready to go. The US also had nukes which is an obvious massive advantage.

However, the whole world was obviously very tired of war and nobody else was interested.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 1:47 pm
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Phantoms are cool, but RAF Phanotoms were cooler as they were re-engined with Rolls-Royce Avons, a far better powerplant than the US engines the others had.

They were Rolls-Royce Speys, an engine not originally designed for a military Mach 2 aircraft. On paper, the Spey was a better bet than the American, J79 and was a political sop to secure British aviation jobs in the face of a significant foreign order for jets. British Phantoms also had UK designed avionics and BAe SkyFlash missiles too.

In reality, British Phantoms were slightly slower and thirstier than US versions, because the redesigned rear fuselage caused greater drag. In 1982 after the Falklands conflict, the RAF received a number of US spec Phantoms (F4J I believe) complete with J79 engines and US avionics, many were based on the Falklands themselves as a deterrent to Argentina.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 2:05 pm
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Ah yes, I got my engines mixed up, but I thought they were better subsonic? and let's face it, these old crates were very limited at supersonic speeds and would have only spent short bursts at supersonic speeds and would struggle to hit Mach 2 let alone sustain it with external fuel tanks and ordinance fitted?


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 2:21 pm
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Saw this production line/factory floor photo for the first time today and had to share:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 2:22 pm
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I've just been reading about the RAF Phantoms, the Spey engine was one of Rolls Royce's poorer designs plus when fitted to the Phantom gave sub Mach 2 top speed due to the 20% larger intakes causing more drag. Serviceability initially was very poor, infact we struggled to keep up with up with our NATO commitments because of it.
The Spey originally took around five seconds to get into re-heat whereas the J79 took less than 2, a big difference when you are in trouble!
Pilots preferred the Lightning but the Phantom had better range and greater weapons capacity.
Have a read of "Phantom from the Cockpit - Flying the Legend" by Peter Caygill (99p on Amazon for the Kindle version)


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 2:25 pm
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Ah yes, I got my engines mixed up, but I thought they were better subsonic? and let's face it, these old crates were very limited at supersonic speeds and would have only spent short bursts at supersonic speeds and would struggle to hit Mach 2 let alone sustain it with external fuel tanks and ordinance fitted?

You're right - most jet fighters of the day cruised at subsonic speed and used afterburners for supersonic dashes. Anything hung off the wings hurt performance too and as someone else pointed out, the Spey was slow to spool up. RN carriers were equipped with Buccaneers, which were also fitted with the Spey (in S2 form) so some parts commonality with RN air defence fighters was useful too. The Spey equipped Buccaneer was a legendary plane - able to outrun pretty much anything at low level. Even a Lightning would struggle to keep up.

Pilots preferred the Lightning but the Phantom had better range and greater weapons capacity

The Lightning also had the ability - F6 excepted I believe - to supercruise; ie it didn't require an afterburner for the jet to travel faster than Mach 1, unique in it's day.

My old man designed bits of Lightnings and he told me that at one point the RAF apparently forbade Lightning pilots from engaging RAF Phantoms in mock-dogfights. A Lightning would comprehensively outfly a Phantom...for a few minutes at least, until the tank ran dry.

It was also quickly realised that the extra weight and drag of a Lightning's external fuel tanks ensured that they used much more fuel on takeoff and climb to altitude than a "clean" Lightning. They were often scrambled with the external tanks empty, to be refuelled once they were at cruising altitude.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 2:39 pm
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Well the Spey was a turbofan engine originally designed for a different application so was probably never suited to the Phantom, so to say it was a 'poor' design is not completely fair. More of an inappropriate application of the engine, still cool though. In a way it was an engine ahead of its time with it being a turbofan at a time where military jets were all turbojet engines, but now they're turbofans as with the EJ200 in the Eurofighter Typhoon.

Nothing wrong with political sops to secure British jobs. His do you think the yanks manage to keep their big industries going through the peaks and troughs of variable private demand? We could do with a bit more of it.

But we're no strangers to applying the wrong tools for the job even recently. In the first gulf war RAF Tornado GR1s struggled to get to altitude with full fuel and weapons payload severely limiting the capability of joint Missions with US F16s, But then again the Tornado was never intended to be a high altitude bomber, it was designed as a low level Cold War bomber.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 2:53 pm
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I love the Lightning.

There is a very strong whiff of British madness about the whole design.
The designers wrapped the smallest plane they could around the engines without really worrying about where the fuel would go

They even designed a rocket pack for it, just in case one day they needed even madder acceleration. It was never flown though. Apparently the Lightnings speed was considered sufficient without it.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 3:05 pm
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There is a very strong whiff of British madness about the whole design.

That's an understatement!

From what my father has told me of the Lightning's development, there was a lot of even more insane ideas floating around - a swing wing variant for use by the Royal Navy, bolting on the American Genie nuclear tipped air to air missile, a strike version fitted with an advanced cannon capable of attacking tanks and numerous air to ground missles. The Saudi versions were a somewhat sanitized development of the strike Lightning plans.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 8:22 pm
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It's worth a trip to Cosford to oggle them all

[img] http://www.russellb.co.uk/Pics1/Cosford130712/P1000716.jp g" target="_blank">http://www.russellb.co.uk/Pics1/Cosford130712/P1000716.jp g"/> [/img]
[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 8:59 pm
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The Lightning was built to match a specification requirement issued by the MOD (or whatever they were called at the time..), all it had to do was get into a missile firing position after intercepting the target ( a Russian aircraft carrying nuclear weapons) as quickly as possible, there was no real requirement at the time for to be able to make multiple passes or even recover to base. Just like the V force, they were on a one way ticket.
The Lightning did what it was required to do exceptionally well (apart from the number lost due to engine fires!). it was when the requirement changed (ICBM's etc) that the Lightning really struggled as they tried to adapt it to do things it was never designed to do.


 
Posted : 14/11/2013 9:14 pm
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all it had to do was get into a missile firing position after intercepting the target ( a Russian aircraft carrying nuclear weapons) as quickly as possible

Kind of...if EE had followed the specification to the letter, we'd have ended up with something like an F104 Starfighter, all acceleration and performance with almost no agility whatsoever. The Lightning had a substantial amount of wing area and was certainly no slough when it came to a turning dogfight.

the Lightning really struggled as they tried to adapt it to do things it was never designed to do.


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 12:22 am
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Right oh, chaps. Preflight checks?
Testicles, spectacles, wallet and watch? Jolly good.
Kick the tyres, light the fires. First one up is leader.

Chocks away at 2100hrs!


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 9:38 pm
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SCRAMBLE!


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 10:01 pm
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"...like a homesick angel..........." 😀


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 10:14 pm
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Rusty, agreed! That was glorious poetry!


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 10:18 pm
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Woohoo - red flag!

edit - pah, barely even mentioned the fact that we ran the spams ragged 🙁


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 10:25 pm
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Lightning!


 
Posted : 15/11/2013 10:35 pm
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ninfan - Member

Woohoo - red flag!

edit - pah, barely even mentioned the fact that we ran the spams ragged

TBH I think there is room for a whole channel on aviation, so much footage is out there waiting for us hungry viewers 🙂


 
Posted : 16/11/2013 12:39 am
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Sad to see the Woodford Vulcan rotting away. 🙁


 
Posted : 16/11/2013 9:31 am
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There used to Discovery Wings but it shut down five years ago now I think.


 
Posted : 16/11/2013 9:50 am
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great to see Khrushchev's grandson offering a Russian/Soviet perspective on things, tempering the potential jingoism and simplistic "red peril" presentation with some nice observations. Terrific series, though I agree Dominic Sandbrook could have done with turning the mugging-to-camera down a notch or seven.


 
Posted : 16/11/2013 9:33 pm
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Archive footage is great, interviews are pretty good too. Dominic Sandbrook is the weak link, doesn't seem to be adding any value.


 
Posted : 16/11/2013 10:18 pm
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03j9f3w

The Looking Glass War. Tonight at 2100.


 
Posted : 19/11/2013 9:01 pm
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Does anyone know when the submarine programmes start? Can't view any of the links on my work computer.


 
Posted : 19/11/2013 10:44 pm
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Some what skipped over just how close the Cuban Missile crisis was to armageddon.


 
Posted : 19/11/2013 10:47 pm
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Anyone watch the Storyville on [url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b03j450y/Storyville_20132014_The_Spy_who_Went_into_the_Cold_Kim_Philby_Soviet_Super_Spy/ ]Kim Philby[/url]?

Found it all very depressing, an alcoholic who seemed to completely neglect his family.

Wouldn't be surprised if SIS directly tipped him off, just wanted rid of him.


 
Posted : 19/11/2013 10:51 pm
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Bump

BBC 2 now


 
Posted : 26/11/2013 10:01 pm
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Best one so far I reckon, I really enjoyed that.


 
Posted : 26/11/2013 11:10 pm
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On the aircraft subject my old boss who was ex RAF used to say the the reason the world was round was so that the Jaguar could take off.

Was a bit disappointed with tonight's as no mention of Ronald Raygun and his barmy Star Wars idea making the Soviets realise that they couldn't outspend the West on arms along with the terrible financial toll Chernobyl caused assisting in the break up of the USSR


 
Posted : 26/11/2013 11:19 pm
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Just watched part 3. The 80s sound track was brilliant, so many iconic hits.

Also, how many times did Dominic Sandbrook use the word 'Modernity'!


 
Posted : 27/11/2013 10:32 pm
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