Thunderbird Four
Here are the Canon Foundry facts about Thunderbird Four, all taken from the International Rescue Thunderbirds Agents’ Technical Manual written by Sam Denham (2012):
Dimensions
Length: 30 feet
Width: 11 feet
Weight: 16 tons
Performance
Underwater Speed: 160 knots
Surface Cruising Speed: 40 knots
Emergency Launch Speed: 30 knots
Maximum Operating Depth: 30,000 feet
Power
Power source: Twin atomic fusion reactors
Forward and Reverse Drive: 6 electrically driven reversible axial-flow turbine impellers
Main Turbo Drive: 2 axial-flow turbines providing forward thrust only
Emergency Launch Jets
- 4 vertical-thrust hover-jets
- 2 x 25 liquid fuel mini-rockets
Other Information
- Rear top nacelle steering vanes can be closed to form an airtight seal if necessary
- Atomic fusion generator powers auxiliaries and superheats air for surface jet engines and hover-jets
- Rear starboard nacelle steering vanes control surfacing and diving
- Inner nacelle bulkhead wall is watertight
- 2 topside airlock hatch doors
- Access door to pilot’s cabin is watertight
- Forward starboard vertical thrust hover-jet: if Thunderbird 2 is out of action, Thunderbird 4 can be launched from Pod 4 in its hangar on Tracy Island
- Starboard nacelle jet engine turbine: used for surface cruising and sealed watertight when Thunderbird 4 is submerged
- Fuel tanks contain rocket fuel
- Rockets are used to launch Thunderbird 4 from Pod 4 on the surface of the water or from the hangar
- Emergency airlock: telescopic system extends into cabin to provide a double-door airlock for emergency or additional access
- Armorglass topside viewport is strengthened with Formula C/31 and cahelium additives
- Main viewport provides 180-degree visibility for pilot, strengthened with Formula C/31 and cahelium
- Life-support unit has zyolithic crystal converter to eliminate the buildup of carbon dioxide in the cabin
- Pod re-entry docking clamp is electromagnetic
- Adjustment sprocket allows tool tubes to be raised enabling equipment to be substituted prior to a rescue operation
- If a missile is not loaded into the tool tube, a harpoon-drill can be fired. The drill is linked via tube to the auxiliary oxygen tanks and can be used to pump air into a downed submarine
- Multi-jointed laser cutter arm enables the arm to be used accurately
- Halogen lighting bar
- Optional grappling arm: depending on the rescue requirements, any of the rescue tools at the front of Thunderbird 4 can be substituted for specialized equipment prior to the launch, via the tool tube access panel
Information from the Thunderbirds Information Sheet:
Colour – Yellow with red markings
Length – 30 feet
Pilot – Gordon Tracy