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The Tallboy was a bomb developed by Barnes Wallis in 1944. It weighed five tonnes and was developed primarily in order to penetrate large concrete structures against which earlier, smaller bombs proved ineffective.
Most large Allied World War II aircraft bombs had very thin skins to maximise the weight of explosive which a bomber could carry. Barnes Wallis developed the Tallboy as a bunker buster. It was very aerodynamic with a tail which caused it to spin. This allowed it to break the sound barrier as it fell. It had a much thicker skin than the typical World War II bomb so that it would survive the impact of hitting a hardened surface. When dropped on compacted earth it would penetrate over 40 meters into the ground.
W. J. Lawrence wrote about the Tallboy bomb in his book, No 5 Bomber Group (1951)
It had to be dropped from a great height which limited its accuracy and the Lancaster bomber could only carry one at a time. It was used successfully at the Eperleques blockhouse, and also against the German battleship Tirpitz.
| Length | 6.35 meter (21 feet) |
| Diameter | 0.95 meter (38 inch) |
| Weight | 5,443 kg (12,000 lb) |
| Warhead | 2,358 kg (5,200 lb) "Torpex D1" (Torpedo) explosive |
| Number used | 854 |
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