"Balls 8" hangs up her wings...

balls8.jpg

(From Space.com)

NASA's big B-52B jet dropped more aircraft than bombs during an aerial career that spans nearly five decades, but hung up its wings for good this month.

The space agency officially retired the hulking, eight-engine jet plane, which served as an aircraft mothership for hundreds of experimental flights throughout the years, on Dec. 17.

First put into service by the U.S. Air Force to test bomb navigation systems, the B-52B - better known by its tail numbers 008 - began its career in June of 1955. By 1959 the aircraft became one of two airborne motherships for the X-15 program, clutching test aircraft close under one wing until reaching a desired altitude, then turning loose the experimental plane and its pilot.

With the end of X-15 program in 1969, the carrier aircraft served as the go-to mothership for any NASA test flight requiring air launch at the agency's Dryden Flight Research Center. It tested parachutes that would later be used on NASA's space shuttles and solid rocket boosters, and eventually dropped unpowered, wingless lifting bodies which proved gliding vehicles like the shuttle could return to Earth safely.

The aircraft's final flight - hoisting NASA's hypersonic X-43A test vehicle on a flight that would not only prove successful but propel the experimental scramjet aircraft at speeds of nearly Mach 10 - took place on Nov. 16, 2004.

This image shows NASA's B-52B in its early days under the space agency's employ. Taken from a chase plane in 1972, this image captures the moment just after an experimental lifting body has cut loose from the B-52B mothership and begun the flight away from its parent.

I know she's big and tall ( check out that old style B model tail), but let's make sure the old lady gets a proper place on display at a good museum. Man's first steps into space were made under the wing of this fabulous aircraft, and we should not forget what role she has played in the history of our species.


Posted @ December 21, 2004 02:09 PM | Current Events

Comments

That's not an "experimental lifting body" -- looks like a T38 chase plane to me.

Posted by: Kim Hill at December 22, 2004 12:07 AM

I concur. It was such a damn pretty picture that I didnt really care.

Posted by: Frank Martin at December 22, 2004 08:43 AM

I hope she doesn't end up in the desert, hacked to bits.

Posted by: RPD at December 22, 2004 10:11 AM

Frank,

Is that the B-52 that carried the name and nose art "The High And Mighty One"? I used to love looking at photos of that plane, back in the 1970s and I was a kid obsessed with the X-15.

Posted by: Ed Driscoll at December 22, 2004 02:36 PM

"Man's first steps into space were made under the wing of this fabulous aircraft, and we should not forget what role she has played in the history of our species."

Actually, the first steps into space were in the bomb bay of the B-50, piloted by Bob Cardenas, that dropped "Glamourous Glennis" into history.


(BTW: TypeKey tells me - The site you're trying to comment on has not signed up for this feature. Please inform the site owner.)

Posted by: Sharpshooter at December 22, 2004 08:51 PM

You are correct that the B-50 - Fertile Myrtle was the very,very first Naca mothership, but nothing dropped by her made it into space. Balls-8 dropped the x-15 which crossed the threshold.

I'm looking into the typekey issue, I appreciate the heads up...

Posted by: Frank Martin at December 22, 2004 09:01 PM