(Download a higher resolution picture by clicking on any
picture below.)
Castle Air
Museum near Atwater, California hosted Open Cockpit Days over the
weekend of May 25-26, 2002.
I took the
opportunity to climb inside the forward crew compartment of their
Convair RB-36H, 51-13730.
Flight
deck. The left seat was occupied by the aircraft commander. The
pilot's seat is on the right. There was no co-pilot. Throttle
controls for the reciprocating engines are located on the center
pedestal. The throttle controls for the jets are on the overhead
panel.
Aircraft
commander's station and pilot's station diagrams from the RB-36D
flight manual. The instrument layout is somewhat different in the
earlier models.
Forward cabin & camera
compartment arrangements diagram from the RB-36D flight manual
The flight engineers' station is directly
behind the pilots' seats and faces to the rear. Late model B-36s
had two flight engineers.
The radio operator's station is located behind
the flight deck. The hatch at lower left leads into the unpressurized
gun turret and radar bay between the forward crew compartment and
the camera compartment.
The bombardier's station is located on the
lower deck. The large circular panel is optically flat glass for
aiming bombs visually. Late in the career of the B-36, bomb
aiming was done primarily by radar.
The weather observer's station is located on
the right side of the lower deck.
The radar navigator's station is located on the
left side of the lower deck.
Link to a display of
the restoration of this RB-36H.
Link to the Castle Air Museum home page.
Dennis Jenkins has produced another large B-36 book: Magnesium Overcast.
Meyers Jacobsen has authored
another book about the Convair B-36 Peacemaker: A Photo Chronicle.
Convair B-36 : A Comprehensive History of America's
'Big Stick by Meyers K. Jacobsen. Mr. Jacobsen has been
compiling this history for at least a quarter of a century.
Warbird Tech: Convair B-36 Peacemaker . This volume by Dennis Jenkins contains a
surprising amount of information that did not get into "The
Big Stick".
The history of the efforts to preserve B-36J, 52-22827 at Fort
Worth is well documented in "B-36: Saving the Last Peacemaker"; Second Edition, an html
book on CD.
Go to the main Convair B-36 page.
Send a message to Brian.