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![]() "Calif Bill" wrote in message ink.net... "TOliver" wrote in message ... "Calif Bill" wrote ... Just this example tosses the whole argument. Better get the facts straight. Ike built the interstate highway system after he saw the autobahn in Germany during WW-11. When he was a mere junior officer, he had to take a convoy across the US. 1920's I think, and took about 3 months to do it. So for strategic purposes the interstate system was built, Adequate rebuttal unto this point at which you travelled far afield into the realm of urban legend..... with the requirement that every so many miles the highway had to be capable of being a landing field for airplanes. A great legend, much and well debunked over time, especially in alt.urban.folklore and at snopes, a tale which sounds good but is not really true, among other reasons because all them power poles and lines get in the way and barrow ditches are just not right for a/c (nor or the roadway underpinnings in all cases really stressed for the "big thumps" of landing heavy a/c). Get your facts straight before launching your anti-capitolism rants. You were right to respond to the knee deep BS of the previous poster, but stick to fact, not legend.....(and actually, the autobahn system probably had less to do with the interstate highway system than did the political alliance between the White House, Western and Southern Senators and Reps along with urban Congressfolk to whom the idea of federal funds - mostly from fuel taxes - for better highways was more than attractive. That military cargo could move along them was a great publicity justification, but about #10 on the actual priority list). The landing strips were part of the orginal spec. But put the landing strips in the context of 1952. You did not have C-5's and F18's. Other than F-86, it was mostly prop and C-130 cargo planes, with a lot of C47's. You do understand the concept "urban legend", vectored by apparently authoritative sources and swelling in size every time some journalist picks up the hoary tale? If you wish to continue the claim, you'll need to provide a cite (other than some of the popular fiction which continues to convey the concept) from a credible government or other source (construction company or whatever) providing some verification. If someone in Congress may have been impressed by the idea that they could hypothetically be so used, no reference exists in either legislation or specifications developed for the IHs. As for aircraft landing weights, C130s didn't arrive until well after the Interstates were well under construction, but their were any number of operational aircraft of the period with either high landing weights or high landing speeds or both..... B-47s, B-36s, C-74s, C-124s, C-69s, B-45s, ....the list of fast and/or heavy goes on. .....And if interstates were such good places for the military to use for emergency fields, don't you think they might occasionally have practiced the art? Never did, did they. It's a great tale, now almost a part of our cultural heritage, showing up in countless books and magazine articles, but simply untrue. Workable, perhaps, in some parts of the West, with long straight-aways and no power poles, etc., a look at most interstates reveals all too many curves and a notable lack of long straight stretches, and the wingtip-clipping barriers of all those side roads leaping over the highway. All those emergency airfields left from WWII operating bases provided Uncle Sam with an adequate supply of "Bingo"/divert runways. TMO |
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