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| B-24 Liberator | ||
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Royal Canadian Air Force B-24 Liberator | ||
| Description | ||
| Rôle | Heavy Bomber | |
| Crew | 7-10 | |
| First Flight | 1939 December 29 | |
| Entered Servise | 1939 | |
| Manufacturer | Consolidated Aircraft Corporation | |
| Dimensions | ||
| Length | 67 ft 8 in | 20.6 m |
| Wingspan | 110 ft | 33.5 m |
| Height | 18 ft | 5.5 m |
| Wing Area | 1,048 ft² | 97.4 m² |
| Typical Weights | ||
| Empty | 52,200 lb | 23,678 kg |
| Loaded | 55,000 lb | 24,948 kg |
| Maximum Takeoff | 65,000 lb | 29,484 kg |
| Capacity | ||
| Powerplant | ||
| Engines | Pratt & Whitney R-1830 turbo-supercharged radials (4) | |
| Power | 1,200 hp | 895 kW |
| Performance | ||
| Maximum Speed | 290 mph | 467 km/h |
| Cruising Speed | 215 mph | 346 km/h |
| Combat Range | 2,100 miles | 3379 km |
| Ferry Range | 3,700 miles | 5953 km |
| Servise Ceiling | 28,000 ft | 8534 m |
| Rate of Climb | ft/min | m/min |
| Wing Loading | 52.5 lb/ft² | 256.14 kg/m² |
| Power/Mass | .0873 hp/lb | .1435 kW/kg |
| Armament | ||
| Guns | .50-calibre machine guns (10) | |
| Bombs | 12,800 lb | |
The Consolidated B-24 Liberator was produced in greater numbers than any other American combat aircraft. Designed as a heavy bomber, it served with distinction not only in that role, but also as a maritime patrol bomber (known as the PB4Y in U.S. Navy service) and as a heavy transport (where it was designated C-87 or C-109). After the B-17 Flying Fortress, it is commonly considered the most famous aircraft of World War II.
Like the equally successful North American P-51 Mustang, the Liberator was designed in a great hurry. In 1939 January, the U.S. Army Air Corps invited Consolidated to submit a design study for a bomber with greater range, higher speed, and greater altitude performance than the B-17 Flying Fortress, then the backbone of the Air Corps.
The contract for a prototype was awarded in March, requiring that it be ready before the end of the year. The design was simple in concept but advanced for its time. At about 70,547 lb (32,000 kg) maximum takeoff weight it was one of the largest aircraft of the time. It was the first American bomber to use tricycle landing gear instead of a tailwheel, and it featured very long, thin wings. Such a design had a high aspect ratio, for maximum fuel efficiency.
Compared to the B-17, the B-24 was shorter, had 25% less wing area, but a 6 foot (1.8 m) greater wingspan, and substantially greater carrying capacity. Where the B-17 used 9-cylinder Wright R-1820 Cyclone engines, the B-24 used twin-row 14-cylinder Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp radials. Both of these engines were 8 US gal (30 L) air-cooled radial engines of 1000 hp (746 kW).
Consolidated finished the prototype, by then known as the XB-24, and had it ready for its first flight with just two days to spare before the end of 1939. Seven more YB-24 development aircraft flew in 1940 and Consolidated began preparing production tooling. Early orders - placed even before the XB-24 had flown, included 36 for the U.S. Army Air Corps, 120 for the French Armée de l'Air, and 164 for the RAF. Most of the first production Liberators went to Britain, including all those originally ordered by the Armée de l' Air after France collapsed in 1940.
Initial Liberator deployment in 1941 March was with British Overseas Airways Corporation on trans-Atlantic transport duties. Soon after, equipped with primitive but functional ASV Mark II radar, it entered active service with RAF Coastal Command where its long range made it indispensable for anti-submarine patrols in the Battle of the Atlantic.
Later in 1941, the first Liberator IIs entered service. This model introduced the survivability features that were essential if the Liberator was to take up its design role as a bomber: self-sealing fuel tanks and powered defensive gun turrets. At the same time, Consolidated added a 2 ft 7 in (790 mm) plug in the forward fuselage to create more space for crew members and also (it is said) to make the airplane look better. Liberator IIs were split between RAF Coastal Command, RAF Bomber Command and British Overseas Airways Corporation. Two RAF squadrons deployed to the Middle East in 1942 became the first to use the Liberator as a bomber.
At the same time, the Army began to take delivery of its first B-24As. Like the British, they used them as transports to begin with. Continued development work by Consolidated produced a handful of transitional B-24Cs with turbocharged engines, instead of mechanically supercharged engines; the turbocharged engines led to the flattened oval nacelles that would distinguish all subsequent Liberator models).
The first mass-produced model, the B-24D (or Liberator III in British servise) was introduced in early 1943; it had turbocharged engines and increased fuel capacity. Three more 0.50-calibre (12.7 mm) machine guns brought the defencive armament up to ten guns. At 59,524 lb (27,000 kg) maximum take-off weight, it was one of the heaviest aircraft in the world; only the British Lancaster and Halifax bombers were of comparable mass.
American B-24s first entered combat in 1942 June with a raid launched from Egypt. 13 aircraft flew against the German-occupied Romanian oilfields of Ploesti. The attack was described as ?unsuccessful? by the Army, but it alerted the defenders. When 177 B-24s attacked Ploesti again on 1942 August 1, 55 failed to return.
Liberator production increased at an astonishing rate through 1942 and 1943: Consolidated had tripled the size of their plant at San Diego and built a big new plant outside Fort Worth, Texas. More production came from Douglas in Tulsa, Oklahoma. North American was building a plant at Dallas, Texas. None of these were minor operations, but they were dwarfed by the vast new greenfield factory built by Ford at Willow Run near Detroit, which began operation in 1942 August. This was easily the largest factory in the United States, and the largest anywhere outside the USSR.
In 1942 April, the C-87 transport version of the Liberator entered production at Fort Worth. It had a large cargo door, no gun turrets, a floor in the bomb bay for freight, and side windows. As the year went by, Liberator squadrons deployed to all theaters: Africa, Europe, the Atlantic, India and the Pacific. In the Pacific, the B-24 was designated the standard heavy bomber to simplify logistics, replacing the shorter-range B-17, which had not distinguished itself against Japan.
In 1943, the model of Liberator considered by many the ?definitive? version was introduced. It was 10 inches (250 mm) longer, had a powered gun turret in the nose to reduce vulnerability to head-on attack, and was fitted with an improved bomb sight, autopilot and fuel transfer system. North American made the B-24G at Dallas, while those from the Consolidated, Douglas, and Ford factories were designated the B-24H. All five plants switched over to the almost identical B-24J in 1943 August. The later B-24L and B-24M were made to reduce weight, and differed mainly in the kinds of defencive weaponry they carried.
As the war went on, the complexity of servising the B-24 grew greater and greater. Since B-24s were made by a number of different companies, repair depots had to keep a large stock of many kinds of parts to supply on B-24 variants. Fortunately, in the Summer of 1944, this problem was eased a bit, when three plants stopped making B-24s, leaving only the Consolidated plant in San Diego and the Ford plant in Willow Run.
18,482 Liberators were completed before production ceased in 1945. In addition to the thousands (at the most, 6043) that saw service with the U.S. Army, the Royal Air Force flew about 2100 aircraft in 46 bomber groups and 41 squadrons, the Royal Canadian Air Force 1200 B-24Js, the U.S. Navy about 1000 PB4Y-1s (and almost 800 PB4Y-2 Privateers, which were derived from the Liberator), and the Royal Australian Air Force 275 B-24Js, B-24Ls, and B-24Ms. Two squadrons of the Royal South African Air Force, deployed in the Mediterranean Theatre, were B-24s.
1938 as an improvement on the B-17 Flying Fortress, at the request of the Army Air Corps. It featured a wing specially designed for a high aspect ratio, tricycle landing gear, and twin vertical stabilisers. It was ordred in 1939 March, and first flew on 1939 December 29. (×1)
| Related content | |
|---|---|
| Related Development | |
| Similar Aircraft | PB4Y Privateer -
C-87 Liberator Express - C-109 Liberator |
| Designation Series |
XB-21 -
B-22 -
B-23 -
B-24 -
B-25 -
B-26 -
XB-27
|
| Related Lists |
List of military aircraft of the United States - List of bomber aircraft |
| List of Aircraft | Aircraft Manufacturers | Aircraft Engines | Aircraft Engine Manufacturers Airlines | Air Forces | Aircraft Weapons | Missiles | Years in Aviation |