• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Holy explosive bats Batman!

Queasy

Moderator<br>Console Gaming
Link O' Hilarity
Now I know why they call 'em the Greatest Generation. What other group would have the moxie to turn bats into trained bomb-droppers?

The idea behind World War II's Project X-Ray "was that a bomb-like canister filled with bats would be dropped from high altitude over the target area," says Murdoc Online. "The bats would be in a sort of hibernation, but as the bomb fell (slowed by a parachute) they would warm up and awaken."

At the appropriate altitude, the bomb would open and over one thousand bats, each carrying a tiny time-delay napalm incendiary device, would flutter away and roost in various nooks and crannies, many of them in extremely flammable wooden Japanese buildings.

The napalm devices would go off more or less simultaneously, and thousands of little fires would start at the same time. Many of them would grow into large fires, and the ability of the Japanese firefighters to contain them would quickly be overwhelmed...

Seems to me, as outrageous as it sounds, that it could have worked... In fact, one afternoon while demonstrating the napalm devices, several bats woke too early in the lab, flew off, and ended up burning down the brand-new but uninhabited Carlsbad Auxiliary Army Air Base in New Mexico. Really.


Of course, this is the era of warrior-thinkers that came up will all sorts of so-crazy-it-might -just-work schemes -- items like paper bombs, plague-filled subs, and aircraft carriers made of ice.

The October 1990 edition of Air Force magazine has a hilariously detailed rundown of the whole bat bomb episode. And Defense Tech Dad Tom Shachtman covers all sorts of WWII-era military research follies in his book Laboratory Warriors: How Allied Science and Technology Tipped the Balance in World War II.

 
Didnt we do that same thing pretty much anyway? I remember reading something about how the US would start just boatload of little fires on the homes of the Japanese, not using bats though. The men would try to put them out, but it was hopeless.
 
Originally posted by: tRaptor
Didnt we do that same thing pretty much anyway? I remember reading something about how the US would start just boatload of little fires on the homes of the Japanese, not using bats though. The men would try to put them out, but it was hopeless.

Bombers + Napalm = DIAFKTHXBYE.

Wasn't so much a boatload of little fires as a half dozen firestorms.
 
Originally posted by: EyeMWing
Originally posted by: tRaptor
Didnt we do that same thing pretty much anyway? I remember reading something about how the US would start just boatload of little fires on the homes of the Japanese, not using bats though. The men would try to put them out, but it was hopeless.

Bombers + Napalm = DIAFKTHXBYE.

Wasn't so much a boatload of little fires as a half dozen firestorms.

B-29s + B-17s + night + no escort + incendiary bombs + 90% wood buildings = firestorm
 
Back
Top