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Vulcan 607, Book Review
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Vulcan 607 by Rowland White, is one of many good books to cover the events of the Falklands War. This book benefits from the support of key individuals in the RAF and also the benefit of hindsight. Published after the war, much information is now available that was not in the immediate aftermath.The book covers the preparation for the Black Buck raids by RAF Vulcan bombers against the Argentinian forces on the The pilot training is covered, night flying, in-flight refuelling and low level bombing, although the latter was replaced by a medium level attack mode for the mission. The crews had not been trained for ten years in conventional bombing, instead purely operating with a practice 400kiloton nuclear bomb. Pin point accuracy, needed to cut a runway with conventional bombs, was not required with nuclear weapons. The crews had to prepare against western air defence assets such as Rowland missiles and Orelikon cannon, rather than the Warsaw Pact equipment they were used to. The activities on Ascension Island are interesting, with the US Colonel in charge of the facilities at Wideawake airfield being given instructions to help the British with whatever they needed, but not to get caught ( Shrike Anti-radar missiles were fitted to a later Black Buck mission by a team ‘with American accents who purported to be South African’). The first Black Buck mission had Vulcan 607 as the reserve bomber, but when the primary plane had to turn back soon after take off with a minor technical fault, Martin Withers and his crew became the mission team. The return flight south was supported by a Nimrod and 13 Victor tankers, and the complex in-flight refuelling assumptions, options and problems are described in detail in the book. The total flight lasted 15 hours 45 minutes and was the longest bombing mission in history. It successfully cut the runway at |