Hey everyone!
As an aircraft designer—even though my current projects are modern, my real passion and area of study is WWII aviation. That's why I often wonder if we focus too much on bomber payload capacity at the expense of survivability. The question is: Was the B-17 Flying Fortress truly limited by its internal structure compared to the Lancaster?
I saw an analysis claiming the Lancaster's massive 33-foot monolithic bomb bay made it superior, allowing it to carry 22,000lb Grand Slam bombs that the B-17 couldn't accommodate because of the central spar reinforcing its structure.
But I gotta disagree: I think the American decision to prioritize armor and heavy defense (the B-17's 13 .50-cal machine guns and structural toughness) was the more correct and pragmatic choice for deep-penetration daylight missions over Germany. Sacrificing defense and crew safety (like the Lancaster sometimes did on Grand Slam missions, stripping armor and turrets) for one single giant bomb isn't a sustainable long-term strategy. The B-17's combat box offered mutual defense that a lone Lancaster just couldn't match.
If you're curious, here's the video I found that makes the opposite argument (the one I, as a designer, am questioning):
View: https://youtu.be/24vBK2CBVM0
What do you guys think? Was the B-17 simply designed for a different kind of air war, or was the bomb bay design a huge structural mistake? Who won the battle of design philosophy?
As an aircraft designer—even though my current projects are modern, my real passion and area of study is WWII aviation. That's why I often wonder if we focus too much on bomber payload capacity at the expense of survivability. The question is: Was the B-17 Flying Fortress truly limited by its internal structure compared to the Lancaster?
I saw an analysis claiming the Lancaster's massive 33-foot monolithic bomb bay made it superior, allowing it to carry 22,000lb Grand Slam bombs that the B-17 couldn't accommodate because of the central spar reinforcing its structure.
But I gotta disagree: I think the American decision to prioritize armor and heavy defense (the B-17's 13 .50-cal machine guns and structural toughness) was the more correct and pragmatic choice for deep-penetration daylight missions over Germany. Sacrificing defense and crew safety (like the Lancaster sometimes did on Grand Slam missions, stripping armor and turrets) for one single giant bomb isn't a sustainable long-term strategy. The B-17's combat box offered mutual defense that a lone Lancaster just couldn't match.
If you're curious, here's the video I found that makes the opposite argument (the one I, as a designer, am questioning):
View: https://youtu.be/24vBK2CBVM0
What do you guys think? Was the B-17 simply designed for a different kind of air war, or was the bomb bay design a huge structural mistake? Who won the battle of design philosophy?
Last edited: