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CONVAIR NX-2 CAMAL The Story Of The Secret Post WW2 Atomic Powered Bomber Plane

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The history of Convair NX2 Camal, a secret project to develop an atomicpowered bomber.
Convair's NX2 (designated Model 54 inhouse) proposed powering the subsonic, ultralong endurance jet bomber (about the size of a B52) with either Pratt & Whitney indirect air cycle nuclear engines or General Electric direct air cycle nuclear engines.

The U.S. Nuclear Propulsion Program (or Manned Nuclear Aircraft Program) began in May 1946. This after Fairchild Engine and Aircraft Corporation, received the first formal study contract. The objective, is to determine the feasibility of nuclear energy for the propulsion of aircraft. The Fairchild project known as the Nuclear Energy for Propulsion of Aircraft (NEPA) began at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, TN.

Work at Oak Ridge proved building a nuclear aircraft was feasible and defined the major approaches to the program. As a result, the Air Force and Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) joined forces in the Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion (ANP) Program. In 1951, they contracted with the General Electric (GE) Company at Evendale, Ohio to, “…develop a nuclear aircraft propulsion system through an exacting research, development, design and componenttest program on reactors, materials, shielding and an overall nuclear power plant.” 1

At the time, there appeared to be two design concepts for a “nuclear” aircraft: the DirectAirCycle and the Indirect. General Electric elected the DirectAirCycle2 due to the perceived simplicity, flexibility, adaptability, and ease of handling. General Electric quickly developed hightemperature, compact, lightweight reactors and shields required for aircraft flight. The GE Company also believed their new technology had applicability to aerospace and ground power systems. In the 1950s, nuclear reactors were approximately the size of two railroad cabooses stacked on one another, and the performance requirements for aircraft nuclear power plants were much more
schematic.

The objective of the ANP Program expanded to include the demonstration of nuclearpowered flight. Still, in 1952, the Air Force decided that direct nuclear cycle engine developments were progressing well and began construction of a power plant for the Convair B36 flight testing and targeted 1956 for the first flight. In 1953 the Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson abruptly canceled the B36 experimental flight program, Wilson, a skeptic, contended “that experimental “proofofprinciple” flights were worthless unless they were performed by a prototype for as an actual weapon systems.”4 The money slated for the project was for a weapons system so, the prototype requirements leaned in this direction.

Though the B36 experiment halted, Air Force leaders managed to keep GE’s direct cycle developments moving forward and Pratt and Whitney continued their progress. Pratt and Whitney used a pressurized water, indirect cycle engine which failed to progress (see below schematic). Pratt and Whitney changed gears and began working with Oak Ridge on a molten salt circulation fuel reactor, still using the indirect cycle nuclear turbojet concept. Pratt and Whitney remained behind GE in developments throughout the testing and experimentation.

Though Air Force leaders canceled developments for a B36 nuclearpowered aircraft, a Convair B36, designated as the NB536H and specially refitted to contain a fully operational nuclear reactor however, the NB36H did not use the reactor for propulsion.

In 1958, the Air Force introduced a new mission requirement in an attempt to keep the ANP Program alive. Known as CAMAL (continuous airborne alert, missile launching, and lowlevel penetration), it was a rehashing of a nuclear weapons system aircraft.8 During the summer of 1959, Dr. Herbert F. York, Director of Defense Research and Engineering in the Pentagon, and other Department of Defense research officials pushed a reorientation of the ANP Program project. These officials called for the development of a useful nuclear turbojet capable of installation in and flown on a Convair Model 54 (the NX2)

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