cammerjeff
Staff Sergeant
Lockheed Vega in a striking paint scheme for an unsuccessful around the world attempt in 1933
source Civil Aviation – The Jive Bomber
source Civil Aviation – The Jive Bomber
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Lockheed Vega in a striking paint scheme for an unsuccessful around the world attempt in 1933
View attachment 851881
source Civil Aviation – The Jive Bomber
Lockheed Vega in a striking paint scheme for an unsuccessful around the world attempt in 1933
View attachment 851881
source Civil Aviation – The Jive Bomber
Woah woah woah gentlemen, I'm seeing B-15's and B-18s, and all sorts of fighter planes, but we're forgetting the Largest Interwar plane from any country.
The Douglas B-19. The Hemisphere Defender.View attachment 852015
Those turrets? They're not warts!!! D:Couldn't they at least airbrush out the warts?!
Nope, the two top turrets were not retractable. The back one is lower because its just a .50 cal machine gun and then the front is a 37 mm cannon and .30 cal machine gun. So the front bubble turret is just largerLooks like those warts are retractable from the way one sits higher than the other though if so I would have expected a flatter top like on the Blenheim.
Those turrets? They're not warts!!! D:
Interestingly enough, *had* the B-19 entered production, it's range and internal bomb load capacity, which was more than the B-29, would have made it a primary candidate for the "silverplate" program.
Keep in mind that had it gone into production in 1941, it would have had upgrades as happened with other types during the war.Speed of around 200 mph and service ceiling of 23,000 ft, would have made it "silver platter", I think, in 1945.
Keep in mind that had it gone into production in 1941, it would have had upgrades as happened with other types during the war.
As it was, the B-19 had a higher (un pressurized) ceiling than the Lancaster in 1941 but as we all know, the advance in tech during the war was incredibly fast.
Plus the need for ceiling/range/speed would have required pressurization and in the 1940s "pressurization" meant a cylindrical fuselage, which obviously the B-29 had but the B-19 didn't.Keep in mind as well that Silverplates were stripped of most defensive armament in order to perform the mission, both to lift and fly the bomb, and also to do the sharp turn to get the FooD. The B-19's thick wing will inhibit speed and that's not gonna be fixed without significant redesign. Now let's add turbosupercharging, more redesign there without much promise.
At a certain point, a design reaches its limits of modding. We see that in the P-40, the Me-109, the B-17, and so on. I doubt the B-19 could be modded to even do what a standard Lancaster could do -- much less a B-29, even less a Silverplate.
I have seen this claim many times in the past, however I think the origin of it is actually in a speculative two page art from page 67, 68, and 69 of X-Planes No:16The B-19 was a remarkable aircraft and it wasn't until the B-36 arrived that it was surpassed in size and range (barely).
Interestingly enough, *had* the B-19 entered production, it's range and internal bomb load capacity, which was more than the B-29, would have made it a primary candidate for the "silverplate" program.
I'm assuming you meant "silver splatter". If so, I hate you for thinking that up first.Speed of around 200 mph and service ceiling of 23,000 ft, would have made it "silver platter", I think, in 1945.
Second only to the 299 (et al) in gorgeousity