The Strange Nuclear Attack Aircraft Coated with Gold
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 Published On Mar 21, 2024

Engineered by the visionaries behind the P-51 Mustang, the North American A-5 Vigilante was America’s answer to the call for a supersonic nuclear bomber to dominate the skies during the Cold War.

Epitomizing technological extravagance with its titanium-armored General Electric J79 turbojet engines, pioneering digital flight computer, and gold-plated engine bays, the Vigilante was a monumental gamble of raw speed and atomic devastation packed into a single 15-ton powerhouse of a warplane.

Blasting off carrier decks with a thunderous 17,900 pounds of thrust per engine, this nuclear deterrence aircraft rewrote the playbook on speed and strength. Measuring a striking 76-foot nose to tail with a 53-foot wingspan, it carved through the heavens at a blistering 1,400 miles per hour.

Equipped with advanced fly-by-wire controls, a bomb-navigation system integrated into the pilot’s HUD, and innovative features like adjustable engine intakes, the A-5 aimed to revolutionize Cold War aviation and show the world that thanks to America’s ubiquitous Carrier fleets, no target on Earth was beyond its cataclysmic reach.

Yet, its lavish gold plating and pioneering avionics also marked it as a potential financial sinkhole. Worse still, a radical shift in military strategy in the ’60s put the Vigilante’s very survival in jeopardy. Like the P-51 Mustang before it, the A-5 faced a critical crossroads: it either showed its worth or faced oblivion…

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