more at
http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links
.html
US Navy Training Film MN-5083
Public domain film from the
National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_balloon
A fire balloon (風船爆弾 fūsen bakudan?, lit. "balloon bomb"), or Fu-Go, was a weapon launched by
Japan during
World War II. A hydrogen balloon with a load varying from a 12-kilogram (26 lb) incendiary to one 15 kg (33 lb) antipersonnel bomb and four 5 kg (11 lb) incendiary devices attached, they were designed as a cheap weapon intended to make use of the jet stream over the
Pacific Ocean and wreak havoc on
Canadian and
American cities, forests, and farmland.
The balloons were relatively ineffective as weapons but were used in one of the few attacks on
North America during World War II
...
Overview
From late
1944 until early
1945, the
Japanese launched over 9,
300 of these fire balloons, of which 300 were found or observed in the
U.S. Despite the high hopes of their designers, the balloons were ineffective as weapons: causing only six deaths (from one single incident) and a small amount of damage.
Japanese bomb-carrying balloons were
10 m (33 ft) in diameter and, when fully inflated, held about 540 m3 (19,
000 cu ft) of hydrogen. Their launch sites were located on the east coast of the main Japanese island of
Honshū.
Japan released the first of these bomb-bearing balloons on
November 3, 1944. They were found in
Alaska,
Washington,
Oregon,
California,
Arizona,
Idaho,
Montana,
Utah,
Wyoming,
Colorado, Texas,
Kansas,
Nebraska,
South Dakota,
North Dakota,
Michigan and
Iowa, as well as
Mexico and
Canada.
General Kusaba's men launched over 9,000 balloons throughout the course of the project. The Japanese expected 10% (around 900) of them to reach
America, which is also what is currently believed by researchers. About 300 balloon bombs were found or observed in America. It is likely that more balloon bombs landed in unpopulated areas of North America.
The last one was launched in
April 1945.
Origins
The balloon campaign was the fourth attack the
Japanese had made on the
American mainland. The fūsen bakudan campaign was, however, the most earnest of the attacks. The concept was the brainchild of the
Imperial Japanese Army's
Ninth Army's
Number Nine Research Laboratory, under
Major General Sueyoshi Kusaba, with work performed by Technical
Major Teiji Takada and his colleagues. The balloons were intended to make use of a strong current of winter air that the Japanese had discovered flowing at high altitude and speed over their country, which later became known as the jet stream.
The jet stream reported by
Wasaburo Oishi blew at altitudes above 9.
15 km (30,000 ft) and could carry a large balloon across the
Pacific in three days, over a distance of more than 8,000 kilometers (5,000 mi). Such balloons could carry incendiary and high-explosive bombs to the
United States and drop them there to kill people, destroy buildings, and start forest fires.
The preparations were lengthy because the technological problems were acute. A hydrogen balloon expands when warmed by the sunlight, and rises; then it contracts when cooled at night, and falls. The engineers devised a control system driven by an altimeter to discard ballast...
Fighters scrambled to intercept the balloons, but they had little success; the balloons flew very high and surprisingly fast, and fighters destroyed fewer than 20. Among the
U.S. units which fought the fire balloon was the
555th Parachute Infantry Battalion. The 555th suffered one fatality and 22 injuries fighting fires...
- published: 03 Oct 2012
- views: 18272