Notes on Mtg, 25 Aug ‘51 and the odds on drone failure have been~/ 20%. Since this would have to be an entirely new control system in a plane modified for the purpose, one mist expect it to be even less reliable. Largely for these reasons, the idea of such an operation was dropped. Be Ship at Sea A combination of ships might be used, one with the bomb in it, another one for the instrumentation. (The idea of having the ship ina lagoon or beaching it alongside an island is regarded as essentially a land operation; it is therefore discussed in Par. 3, below.) . Again the advantage would appear to be operational, in that the bomb could be assembled on the Pacific coast, detonated almost wherever one chose. However, it is not quite that simple, since the shot must take place fairly close to land which has an air strip because of the sampling planes. It is also believed that the advantages of assembly in a West Coast navy yard have been overestimated, since this is a small part of the over-all job of conducting a test. Again, Table 3 points up the fact that most of the experiments are seriously jeopardized by such an operation. Anything which requires collimation is particularly unfortunate because of the ocean swell, and cables between the zero and instrumeotation ships would present a real problem. It is thought that the fall-out situation would not be materially changed, since the particle sizes resulting from land and ship material are probably not greatly different. One point is that an island might be saved by blowing up m ship instead, but this is not clear. The group agreed that the advantages of a ship at sea did not outveigh the disadvantages. C. Jand-Based Operation The idea of a beached ship vs a land shot was discussed at length. It would appear to be largely a matter of whether one wanted the shot at ,the edge of aland mass or further inland. f DELETED , DELETEN DELETED : Deck oF vos Curtiss handled Rosen's collimator, which weighed 28 tons, so there appears to be no problem there. From discussions with Potts, Burriss did not think there would be additional cryogeny problems one way or another. The planned is 9 m> total amount of hydrogen for which transport capacity is (weight ~ 1 ton) about & or5 m9 of thie the maximm which will probably be used (including that for cooling), the rest essentially for safety. , ' elTe 5

Select target paragraph3