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45,000 to evacuate Koblenz, Germany, for defusing of WWII-era bomb
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I wouldn't want to be the EOD guy trying to diffuse this thing. I guess exploding it isn't an option because of the damage it would cause. The story said it would blow out windows in a 1/2 mile radius. |
They find dud bombs in Germany pretty much every day, but I've never heard of such a large one before.:o
I wonder how much stuff is still buried in the ground.:dead: |
EOD could either burn it in place or render it safe with an explosive tool.
If it has not gone off after almost 70 years of being affected by currents and other factors, it is unlikely to go off. From the crappy description (lack of) in the article, the bomb may be the AN-M56 light case bomb. It is the only one with an explosive load near 3,000 pounds (assuming the reporter knew what he or she was talking about. The only information in the various articles is the weight of the bomb. But the "weight" can mean different things. If if is an AN-M56, it is actually an American bomb used by the RAF so the technical information will be available to EOD. It may be equipped with both a nose fuze (M-102) and a base fuze (M-103), neither of which would give EOD much problem. Woot! Finally a reason I saved my EOD manuals. I knew they would come in handy one of these days! :O: The problem seems to be that it appears from the article that German civilian EOD will be working on this instead of military EOD. Quote:
Don't know if that will be a good idea. If they were smart, they would contract with British EOD to come over and render it safe. Brit EOD are pretty damn good :salute: What the need to do is find the people of the British Ordnance Collectors Network www.bocn.co.uk They would know if anyone would :yeah: |
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We dropped a lot of boomy things on Germany during our last disagreement. |
Imagine the bricks being Shat by the poor guys who have to defuse it
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I doubt it's an American bomb. 3000lb is the explosive content of one of the RAF's own "Cookie" designs - the AN M56 is actually a copy of it. There's no guarantee it's safe either. Several bomb disposal techs were killed defusing a similar-sized weapon in Germany a year or two ago.
Also, I suspect British EOD are rather more familiar with making safe German bombs, for obvious reasons, and I hate to think how desperate the German army would have to be before they got in touch with a load of ordnance collectors! |
Be nice if the press would publish a picture of the bomb. That would clear it up. :yeah: The key would be fins. :yep:
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http://www.welt.de/multimedia/archiv...V_1518921p.jpg
from what I read in the German papers, here is a similar one. It's what we call a "Luftmine" and it seems to be 1.800 kg (4.000 pounds) heavy. http://www.insuedthueringen.de/stora...-2247-1441.jpg Here is the "guy" with a yellow sign on it... http://lars-mueller.mobi/wp-content/...indgaenger.jpg another similar one... |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tallboy_(bomb) |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Slam_bomb |
Yeah, but I think Schroeder means that it's the largest UXB he's heard of.
I think we've found most of the presents from the Luftwaffe here, but some stuff crop up from time to time, one got dredged up by a fishing boat a few years back just offshore from here. Made a rather hefty bang when they detonated it. Half of the UXO around here though is British or American. :oops: |
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Hang on... found it - Quote:
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Yeah, Orford Ness was a bombing range through both the wars and then a OTH radar and Nuclear weapon casing stress testing facility after them.
And if that wasn't enough, the entire area on the south side of the river here was closed by the army and the villagers moved out during WWII and it was taken over as a testing range, where mock-ups of the Atlantic wall were built and Hobarts Funnys given the job of trying to break it. Enemy fire was provided by a cruiser sitting off the coast, although it did fire in the wrong direction once and shelled the town I live in which was still populated by civilians (and quite a few soldiers, and a couple of coastal guns). Fortunately no-one was killed but a house was demolished. So yeah, there's still a lot of stuff lying around here, but thankfully most of it has been cleared away over the years. |
That's a whole lot of boom. I'll never understand how guys on bomb disposal teams, or police bomb squads for that matter, think. My first instinct is to get as far away from explosives as possible. Thank goodness we've got people like them around. :up:
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