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America's Nuclear Arsenal

A U.S. Air Force technician looks over the nose cone of a Peacekeeper Intercontinental Ballistic Missile at an open silo in Eastern Wyoming. A battery was being changed after it's ten-year life had run its course. Intense maintenance schedules are performed on the U.S. missile fleet to keep it in a state of readiness despite the end of the cold war. The 80 foot-tall, 196,000-pound missile fits in a cylinder like a piston, allowing crews to gently raise and lower it with only 30 pounds per square inch of air pressure. The missile was raised a few feet to allow access to bolts.

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Filename
Missiles_03.jpg
Copyright
© Kevin Moloney, 1997
Image Size
5617x3783 / 8.7MB
Contained in galleries
Wyoming
A U.S. Air Force technician looks over the nose cone of a Peacekeeper Intercontinental Ballistic Missile at an open silo in Eastern Wyoming. A battery was being changed after it's ten-year life had run its course. Intense maintenance schedules are performed on the U.S. missile fleet to keep it in a state of readiness despite the end of the cold war. The 80 foot-tall, 196,000-pound missile fits in a cylinder like a piston, allowing crews to gently raise and lower it with only 30 pounds per square inch of air pressure. The missile was raised a few feet to allow access to bolts.