Begin, Claude, SSgt

Avionics Maintenance
 
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Current Service Status
USAF Veteran
Current/Last Rank
Staff Sergeant
Current/Last Primary AFSC/MOS
30171-Aircraft Electronic Navigation Equipment Maintenance Technician
Current/Last AFSC Group
Avionics Maintenance
Primary Unit
1967-1969, 30171, 2nd Combat Support Group
Previously Held AFSC/MOS
30151-Aircraft Electronic Navigation Equipment Repairman
Service Years
1960 - 1969
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Staff Sergeant

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 1963-1964, WB-50 Superfortress
From Year
1963
To Year
1964
   
Personal Memories
3960th CAMS Andersen AFB, Guam
42nd A&E Loring, Maine (SAC)
2nd A&E Barksdale AFB, LA (SAC)
305th A&E Bunker Hill AFB, Peru, Indiana (SAC)( Grissom AFB)
   
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 WB-50 Superfortress Details
 


Aircraft/Missile Information
The B-50, the last propeller-driven bomber delivered to the U.S. Air Force, made its initial flight on June 25, 1947. Basically an improved version of the B-29, this aircraft's large number of modifications caused its redesignation as the B-50. Between 1948 and 1954, B-50s served with the Strategic Air Command as medium bombers, and they were replaced by jet-propelled B-47s. Many were modified for support roles such as weather reconnaissance, crew training, photo-mapping and aerial refueling.

In 1953 the USAF decided to replace its aging WB-29 weather reconnaissance aircraft with modified B-50Ds. Stripped of their defensive armament, 36 B-50Ds were equipped for long-range weather reconnaissance missions with high-altitude atmospheric samplers, Doppler radar, weather radar and a bomb-bay fuel tank for extended range. Some WB-50 aircraft also flew missions to sample the air for radioactive particles indicating that the Soviet Union had detonated a nuclear weapon. The WB-50D aircraft accomplished special weather reconnaissance missions with SAC's 97th Bomb Wing until April 1955, when all WB-50s went to the Air Weather Service.

In 1963 the USAF started phasing out the WB-50Ds, and in 1965 the aircraft on display became the last WB-50D to be retired. It was delivered to the museum in 1968.

TECHNICAL NOTES:
Engines: Four Pratt & Whitney R-4360s of 3,500 hp each
Maximum speed: 395 mph
Range: 4,900 statute miles (without aerial refueling)
Ceiling: 36,700 ft.
Span: 141 ft. 2 in.
Length: 99 ft.
Height: 32 ft. 8 in.
Weight: 173,000 lbs. maximum
Serial number: 49-0310

   
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Last Updated: Nov 26, 2010
   
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  16 Also There at This Aircraft:
 
  • Bogle, Gerald, CMSgt, (1960-1983)
  • Callender, Raymond, SSgt, (1964-1968)
  • Dicello, Aaron, CMSgt, (1958-1985)
  • Downing, Gerald, SSgt, (1961-1981)
  • Lawerence, John, A1C
  • LEE, EUGENE, SSgt, (1955-1965)
  • Lutz, John P, A2C, (1962-1966)
  • Muscarella, Stephen, MSgt, (1960-1980)
  • Norcutt, Raymond, A1C, (1960-1967)
  • Sinclair, Jack, MSgt, (1952-1972)
  • Williams, Richard, A2C, (1960-1966)
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