few-good-sites.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Place Your Link :> Add Article   
 
 

Kenya - Paradise For The Perfect Wedding And Honeymoon

Kenya will provide you with a fairy tale wedding packing. Be it a jungle wedding among the lions or ... - Felix Koskei
 

Outdoor Activities Available In Denver

This article lists and describes many of the activities available for recreation in the Denver area. - Albert Lennon
 

Where to Find Lodging and Accommodation in Whistler, BC

This article deals on the topic of where and what to look for when you want good lodging and accomad ... - Vinodh Pushparaj
 
 

Flying From Heathrow Is Not Necessarily Quicker ? A Personal Viewpoint

London Heathrow airport is becoming so busy now and from two flights in 2006 to Nice, France the del ... - Philip Suter
 

Travel To Deep Space By Sitting At Your Computer

We now have access to the most unbelievable pictures imaginable: galaxies, nebulae and millions of s ... - Jesse S. Somer
 
 

  Site Home › Travel & Vacation › Air Travel & Airlines
   
 

The B-24 Liberator Bomber

   
Author: Michael Russell
 

Consolidated Aircraft won the original contract from the US Army Air Corps in 1939 to build a bomber that could exceed the performance of the B-17. Their prototype, the XB-24 first flew in December 1939. Slightly smaller than the Flying Fortress, it had four 1,200-hp Pratt & Whitney R-1830-65 Twin Wasp turbocharged radial piston engines which enabled it to fly farther with a bigger bomb load than the B-17.

Of seven service-test YB-24s, six were sent to the Royal Air Force (RAF) in 1940 under the export designation LB-30A. Because they lacked turbosuperchargers and self-sealing fuel tanks, the RAF found them unsuitable for combat duty over Europe. Instead, they were stripped of their armament and put into service as transports on the Trans-Atlantic Return Ferry Service, which had been established to send air crews to Montreal to take delivery of American aircraft consigned to the British war effort.

Flying for the Army Air Corps as the B-24 and the U.S. Navy as the PB4Y-1, the plane also saw service in the Royal Air Force where it was known simply as the Liberator. There was also a transport version known as the C-87, one of which was Winston Churchill's personal aircraft, carrying him to historic meetings at Moscow and Casablanca, among other locations. Before the last one was retired from Air Force service in 1953, the plane was produced in variations ranging through type M. The various model numbers were often the result of minor changes, like the relocation of internal equipment, but one major revision, the conversion of the standard Navy B-24 (PB4Y-1) to the PB4Y-2 Privateer, involved a significant rework that exchanged the familiar twin tail for a single tall tail fin and rudder combination. It also had a stretched forward fuselage that placed the pilot's compartment well in front of the un-turbocharged Pratt & Whitney R1830-94 Twin Wasp engines.

One of the features that distinguished the B-24 from the B-17 were its tricycle landing gear, the first installed in a heavy operational aircraft. Other features were the mid-mounted, high-lift Davis wing that achieved 20 percent less drag than conventional airfoils of the time, twin tail fins, oval-shaped engine cowlings necessitated by the mounting of turbosuperchargers, unique roll-up bomb bay doors that reduced drag considerably when open and a fully retractable ventral machine gun turret. The B-24 was also the first to employ Hamilton hydromatic quick-feathering three-blade propellers.

With an empty weight of 36,500 lbs (an empty B-29 was almost double that weight), the B-24H/J could takeoff with 71,200 lbs (full fuel load and 12,800 lbs of bombs). Its length was 67 ft, wing span 110 ft and height stood at 18 ft. At 25,000 ft its cruising speed was 215 mph, top speed was 290 mph. It had 10 12.7 mm (50 calibre) machine guns in nose, upper/ventral ball turrets and tail turret and lateral positions.

While designed as a heavy bomber, the B-24 experienced more than 100 modifications and conversions for such assignments as photography, mine laying and cargo hauling (including a C-109 fuel tanker version that flew "the Hump" to refuel B-29s operating out of forward bases in China). More than 18,000 B-24s were built during WWII, more than any other American aircraft. Given its abilities and "convert-abilities", the numbers make perfect sense. However, a post war attempt to combine portions of the B-24 and PB4Y-2 with a new fuselage to create the Convair Model 39 airliner was not a commercial success, with only one prototype being built.

Of the many thousands of B-24s and derivatives built, only three remain airworthy (Two B-24Js and one LB-30), all in the United States.

The B-24 flew with a crew of 10 and numerous famous personalities flew in them. Jimmy Stewart was a B-24 pilot, as was Joe Kennedy whose PB4Y exploded in flight over England. Others who served as B-24/PB4Y pilots were Tyrone Power, Lloyd M. Bentsen, George McGovern and Robert Altman, the producer/director. Walter Matthau was a radioman/gunner and served under Jimmy Stewart. Robert Stack was a B-24 gunnery instructor.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
First Visit impressions of Morocco
 
Some Ship Wrecks We Have Known
 
Travel to Sacred Sites and Religious Shrines - What Happens If I Feel Nothing Special?
 
Midwest Airlines
 
How to Stay Fit While Traveling
 
Shape Up and Ship Out
 
The Ultimate Traveler's Day Dream Come True
 
Keral Gold
 
Changing of the Guard in London - How to Get Great Photos
 
Have You Considered Staying in a Bed and Breakfast?
 
 
 
Get 3 way links
 
 

Education & Reference

 

Self Management

 

Creative Arts

 

News & Media

 

Internet & Computers

 

Technology & Science

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Property & Estate

 

Indoor Games

 

Teens & Kids

 

Business & Companies

 

Online Shopping

 

Travel & Vacation

 

People & Society

 

Investment & Finance

 

Policies & Law

 

Relationship & Lifestyle

 

Jobs & Careers

 

Drink & Food

 

Family & Home

 

Entertainment

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Fitness & Health

 
Site Home :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use  
Copyright © www.few-good-sites.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.