| 
 | Path: news.nzbot.com!not-for-mail From: Miloch <Miloch_member@newsguy.com>
 Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
 Subject: Re: This Is What USAF Bomber Pilots Would Wear During a Nuclear Apocalypse - PLZT googles.jpg
 Date: 28 Feb 2017 22:25:58 -0800
 Organization: NewsGuy - Unlimited Usenet $23.95
 Lines: 46
 Message-ID: <o95phm0av4@drn.newsguy.com>
 References: <o95ioh08m@drn.newsguy.com> <sqocbch74ua1ttkle540rc0qe3r9rfaltg@4ax.com>
 NNTP-Posting-Host: pe8ffea1af75141868223436f8533b03510159d024dc14f7a.newsdawg.com
 User-Agent: Direct Read News 5.60
 X-Received-Body-CRC: 3164022116
 X-Received-Bytes: 2744
 Xref: news.nzbot.com alt.binaries.pictures.aviation:5529
 
 In article <sqocbch74ua1ttkle540rc0qe3r9rfaltg@4ax.com>, not my real pseudonym
 says...
 >
 >On 28 Feb 2017 20:30:09 -0800, Miloch <Miloch_member@newsguy.com>
 >wrote:
 >
 >>more at
 >>http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/7975/this-is-what-usaf-bomber-pilots-would-wear-during-a-nuclear-apocalypse
 >>
 >>During a nuclear exchange, as B-52H and B-2A pilots make their way to and from
 >>their targets, flashes from nuclear detonations would have the ability to
 >>temporarily blind them, making flying their aircraft impossible. This
 >>intermittent blindness could last two minutes during the day, or up to ten
 >>minutes at night. Different countermeasures were developed during the Cold War
 >>to counter this physiological reality. These included constructing thermal
 >>curtains to cover the B-52's windows, along with a television camera and FLIR
 >>system that, along with the BUFF's instruments, allow pilots to continue on
 >>their mission without external visibility. Polarized Lead Zirconium Titanate
 >>(PLZT, pronounced "plizzit") flash blindness goggles are also used for the same
 >>purpose, and they look as otherworldly as can be.
 >>
 >>PLZT goggles attach to the pilot's helmet and are interfaced with a igloo
 >>cooler-like control and power supply unit (see the whole system here). The
 >>system works to detect dramatic and fast changes in light. When that a happens,
 >>a circuit is broken. This triggers the goggles to quickly turn opaque. Once the
 >>light has returned to normal the goggles will turn translucent again.
 >>Flightgear.dk does a great job at describing this unique and somewhat obscure
 >>system and its genesis in great detail:
 >>
 >>more at
 >>http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/7975/this-is-what-usaf-bomber-pilots-would-wear-during-a-nuclear-apocalypse
 >
 >Yeesh.  All it needs is the 'clank!' as he whacks it into the bulkhead
 >of the Millennium Falcon...
 
 
 Of course the atomic flash will prolly set fire to his Van Heusen cotton shirt
 but that's another story.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 *
 
 
 | 
 
 |