Neat snippet of information regarding a re-use of war surplus material for its day. But, didja see the dumb-arse comment from the retard who'd commented on the article he or she read from a half-century ago? Here's the text verbatim:
"How did the builder of this pool ensure that chemical residue left inside the wing, such as trace levels of lead, not reach the little kid? I know gasoline was leaded back in those days,but I am not sure about aircraft gas. Though I would guess it was, because metallurgy on aircraft engines weren't much better than automobiles.
Even if the risk is minute, I am not risking my child health, because I am too cheap to buy a $20 wading pool."
This is precisely the kind of mentality we have today that prohibits surplus material from ever reaching the public sector, whether it be KC-130 airframe parts to something as mundane as vehicles, tents or clothing.
The collective thought is that there's gotta be some sort of risk factor associated with surplus material that'll involve some degree of remuneration, perverse innovation, contamination, infestation and no doubt it may lead somehow, someway, or quite possibly to, "procreation..." I mean, it's gotta be in there somehow, right?
I am sure if we investigated dumb-arse and his or her comments closely enough we could no doubt track it back to the very contamination of beef right after WWII. I myself had seen where a cattle rancher outside of Kingman AZ used cut-down B-17 and B-24 fuel cells removed from scrapped planes to water cattle, and I bet some bright scientist could determine that said letter writer's granny or grampy might have had a hamburger in 1948 that came from this very area, explaining the mental retardation passed generationally and mass hysteria over potential for contamination. Hay-suez Ke-rist. What a friggin' individual of questionable judgement.
Neat story - thanks for sharing - and dumb-arse comments from John Q. public nonewithstanding. Geez. Now way in heck you'd ever be able to propose re-use of surplus materiel with today's generation...
Should I post the neat little article as written in a 1948 issue of Popular Mechanics showing how to make a sport diving breathing system out of old bomber oxygen bottles and an airplane breathing regulator, or need I fear reprocussions from some dip-sh-X-t trial lawyer for reprinting something from the public domain?
Just curious...
