Monday, Jan. 31, 1944
Superfortress
Air Forces General "Hap" Arnold had said that the new superbomber, the Boeing B29, would make the Flying Fortress shrink to the size of a medium bomber. And that was about all the U.S. public knew about the B29, until last week.
Additional news did not come from the U.S. but from England. Flight, a trade magazine unbound by strict U.S. censorship, had given British readers some details of the secret weapon the U.S. is readying for battle.
The B29. recently named Superfortress, is a four-engined bomber and the biggest long-range bomb carrier the world has ever seen. By Flight's description it can lug a load of more than eight tons 1,000 mi. (i.e., a 500-mi. radius), can carry three tons 3,000 mi. Its wing span is 141 ft. (Fortress span. 100 ft.).
The Superfortress is powered by Wright 2,000-h.p. engines, has three-bladed propellers, cruises at about 250 m.p.h. at 25,000 ft. Flight says "it retains the general features of the Fortress, but it has a tricycle landing gear with double tires on each wheel. It needs them. Flight puts the fully loaded weight of the B-29 at between 50 and 60 tons--about twice the weight of a Fortress or British Lancaster.
Like all American bombers, the Superfortress is heavily armored and gunned (with .50-caliber machine guns). There is a chin turret in the nose, a ball turret in the belly, a turret atop the fuselage and one in the tail.
But the B-29 has a newfangled substitute for the drafty, buffeting waist positions from which Fortress and Liberator gunners fire at enemy planes. It has side turrets operated by remote control.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.