The Runways of Fire That Let WW2 Planes Land In Fog: FIDO
发布时间 2017-06-19 15:00:04 来源
摘要
Landing on a runway surrounded by fire might not sound like a good idea, but it's better than trying to land without modern instruments in thick fog. This was FIDO: "Fog, Intensive, Dispersal Of" (originally "Fog Investigation and Dispersal Operations"), the Royal Air Force's strange but brilliant scheme that saved thousands of air crew lives.
Unlike a lot of World War 2 experiments, this one not only worked, but was deployed around the country. It would have been used in peacetime, too, except for one rather big problem: petrol's really expensive.
SOURCES:
The War Illustrated, Volume 9, No. 210, Page 140: http://www.thewarillustrated.info/210/now-it-can-be-told-operation-fido-beating-airfield-fog.asp
The report of FIDO causing a thunderstorm is questionable (hence phrasing it as "a report"), but it's on page 113 of the Daily Telegraph Book of the Weather here: https://books.google.co.uk/books?isbn=0826471250
The oil price calculation's my own work, based on the prices as I recorded this!
Thanks to Tomek on camera: https://youtube.com/tomek
I'm at http://tomscott.com
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