The balloons used were surplus weather balloons of which the Navy had a stock of 100,000 all carefully stored in
French chalk. Using this surplus was important to the practicality of Operation Outward because white latex rubber from which they were made was an important war material that was in short supply. The balloons were about in diameter when inflated. They carried a simple timing and regulating mechanism that was based upon a design developed for
Operation Albino – a plan to use somewhat larger latex balloons as anti-aircraft weapons. At launch, a
slow-burning fuse was lit; its length was calibrated to the estimated time to arrive over German-controlled territory. At first, the balloon rose rapidly and expanded in size until an internal cord tightened, preventing further increase in altitude beyond by releasing some gas; the balloon would then begin a slow descent due to the hydrogen gradually leaking away. After a while, the slow burning fuse would release a bung in a can of mineral oil; as the oil slowly dripped out, the balloon's payload would lighten, arresting its descent. The same slow-burning fuse was also used to release the balloon's weapon. There were a number of payload designs designated:
wire,
beer,
jelly,
socks,
lemon, and
jam.
Wire About half of the Outward balloons carried the
wire payload. In the case of the
wire, the slow burning fuse would burn through the cord that held the trailing wire. The trailing wire consisted of about of diameter hemp cord with a breaking strength of . The hemp cord was attached to of diameter (
15 gauge) steel wire. Tests had revealed that the main reason for the trailing wire getting caught up in ground obstacles was "springiness" at the end of the wires; this was addressed by obtaining special straightened wire. At the same time as the trailing wire was deployed, a stopper on the canister of mineral oil was released so that it would assist in maintaining altitude by slowly dripping out and lightening the load on the balloon. It was calculated that the balloon should have a slightly negative lift of about so that the balloon would descend until a short length of the wire had its weight taken by the ground. The long length of hemp cord allowed the balloon to maintain an altitude of about which would reduce the chance of the balloon being becalmed in still air. The plan was that the wire tail would be dragged for about across the land and eventually encounter a high-voltage transmission line. A phase-to-phase short circuit would be initiated; during trials, arcs long were initiated by the wire. The arc would burn for some time before the transmission line protection operated; there was a good chance the circuit breaker would be damaged and the conductors might burn through due to arcing. This could cause a line to collapse and require repairs. German efforts to protect transmission lines from attack were unsuccessful: neither a new type of line conductor clamp nor different over-current protection settings had any useful effect.
Beer, jelly and socks Beer,
jelly and
socks were incendiary devices.
Beer consisted of a cylindrical metal container in diameter and long containing seven or eight half-pint bottles. Each bottle was a
Self-igniting phosphorus (SIP) grenade – it contained
white phosphorus,
benzene, water and a strip of raw
rubber, long, which dissolved and formed a layer. After a delay caused by a
slow burning fuse, the metal container was tipped open and its contents allowed to fall out. Around the neck of each bottle was a small metal sleeve that held a heavy ball about 1 inch (25mm) in diameter. The ball was attached to a strip of canvas; this ensured that when the bottles dropped they fell the right way round. The SIP grenades would spontaneously ignite on shattering.
Jelly were cans of incendiary jelly. Each cuboid can measured about and contained of jelly. A release mechanism and a fuse were provided; on ignition a fireball erupted with a radius of about .
Socks were long thin canvas bags of incendiary material each weighing about . Socks were packed with
wood wool, bound with wire and soaked in boiling
paraffin wax. Each Outward balloon could carry three socks. The bundle measured about . When dropped, socks formed a Vshaped sausage designed to catch in the crown of a tree. Fuses were inserted in each end of the device and it would burn from each end for 15 minutes. In 1941 the Royal Navy had a stock of 10,000 such socks already fused and ready to be used and another 20,000 bodies that could be brought forward as required.
Lemon and jam All the payloads that are clearly code named and described are either a trailing wire or an incendiary.
Small yellow bombs left over from
Operation Albino were also used and it seems likely that these are identified by one of these code words. It is possible that the other was used to drop leaflets – there are occasional, vague mentions of leaflet drops in the records. ==Deployment==