Was the B-29 Superfortress a Failure? (1 Viewer)

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At 22,000lbs, its not as if they can be dropped separately either, is it?

That on top of the penalties you describe, makes its difficult to imagine a sensible operational reason for carrying two Grand Slams. I suspect this was primarily and engineering challenge and a propaganda opportunity.
They were intended to be used against hardened Japanese positions but the war ended before they could be used.

Nothing "propeganda" about it.
 
Well who knows when they might have become operational with the USAAF given that the Tallboy tests only started in Feb 1945. That photo dates to 1946 IIRC.

For Operation Olympic the RAF Special Missions Wing of Tiger Force was expected to be in place on Okinawa. That comprised 9 and 617 Lancaster quadrons equipped with Tallboy. IIRC proposed targets included the rail tunnel between Kyushu and Honshu completed in 1942.
 
They were intended to be used against hardened Japanese positions but the war ended before they could be used.

Nothing "propeganda" about it.
I'm very much aware of the point and purpose of a grand slam bomb.

But why for the sake of Pete carry two? Given they're mounted to either side of the centreline of the aircraft, you'd have to release both at the same time which (along with being potentially catastrophic I would have thought in the case of one hanging-up) seems more than a *just a little* redundant. And if the don't both drop at precisely the same moment, you're also going to throw the trim of the aircraft (to put it mildly!) and put accuracy way off - and that was one of the fundamental merits of the bomb.

Why not carry one, faster and further (and more safely and effectively) ? Because the twin bomb-bays of the B29 demand external carriage under the wings?

Carrying two for a total of 44,000lbs probably brings the B29 down in performance to the range and speed of a Lancaster carrying a tallboy, which, given I've not been previously aware of extensively hardened Japanese positions looks like a massive case of over-egging the pudding.

I think EwenS's post illustrates the issue perfectly:

"Well who knows when they might have become operational with the USAAF given that the Tallboy tests only started in Feb 1945. That photo dates to 1946 IIRC."

To me this smacks of doing something to prove it could be done, but probably after the practicalities of whether it was the best way had ceased to be important.

Its interesting to note that the B36 went on to be tested carrying two T12s. I might have a dig about there to see the whys and wherefores - and hw well it worked out in practice.
 
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This photo that has appeared many times has always puzzled me. With two Grand Slams totalling 44,000lb aboard, just how much fuel was it carrying? And therefore what was its potential range? Were they even filled with explosives or sand ballast or effectively just aerodynamic test shapes?
I dont know the answer but what I do know is it took an age to put the explosive a bucket full at a time in and allow it to cool, according to wiki there were 4,200Kg of explosive in the Grand Slam's 10,200 total weight. Below pics of the bombs before explosive and tail added.
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Tallboy(12,000lb.) tests - Feb 1945 - In time to be of use during the war.
Grand Slam(22,000lb.) tests - 1946? - Post-war testing?
That's about the measure of it regarding B29 carriage.

Of course both were used operationally by the RAF in Europe.
 
Could it be that teh B-29 testing two Grand Slams in 1946 had upgraded engines of ~2,800hp, compared to the wartime production B-29s with 2,200hp engines?

That is a 27% increase in power.
 
Tallboy(12,000lb.) tests - Feb 1945 - In time to be of use during the war.
Grand Slam(22,000lb.) tests - 1946? - Post-war testing?
Read the official report I posted in post #239. Tests STARTED in Feb 1945. The report was dated 30 JUNE 1945 and recommended training of a special unit to drop them and modifications to future aircraft conversions. So no way were they going to be capable of being used by the USAAF in a WW2 ending as historical in Aug 1945. It would have been 1946 before they could have been deployed.
 
I believe development of the U.S. version of the Tallboy, the T-10 (which was further developed into the M121), was started in late 1944 - the VB-13 "Tarzon" started in February 1945.
By Oct 1944, US Tallboy monthly production had reached 110, rising to 150 per month by the end of the year with more in 1945. I'm not sure when it started. Production methods were different in the USA. Without US production the squadrons would have run out of bombs to drop.

In total 835 Tallboys were aimed operationally at targets in WW2, plus 8 more dropped accidentally inbound / outbound from the target plus 29 jettisonned or abandoned plus 7 in aircraft shot down without dropping them. Total ependiture 879 plus a few for trials. By just 2 squadrons.

Grand Slam cases were ordered from the USA in Sept 1944 and were expected to start arriving in the UK by the end of the year. After much chopping & changing 200 were ordered in the USA and 25 at home. All were to be filled in Britain.

40 Grand Slams were aimed at targets and 2 jettisoned. Total 42 plus trials weapons. The first operational drop was on 14 March 1945.
 
I recall reading about the U.S. versions of the Tallboy/Grand Slam bombs in Bill Gunston's book (don't remember the title, but I'll search for it) and he covers development of the T-10, T-12, T-14 and their derivatives in pretty good detail.
 
I recall reading about the U.S. versions of the Tallboy/Grand Slam bombs in Bill Gunston's book (don't remember the title, but I'll search for it) and he covers development of the T-10, T-12, T-14 and their derivatives in pretty good detail.
Not sure how much development was left for the US to do. Construction methods were changed to ease mass production. IIRC British manufacturers had difficulties welding the steel thicknesses involved in making these bombs.

Links to T-10 here.
A note in the US Bombs and Fuses manual of 1945.
"The T-10 is the American designation for the British 12,000lb D.P. (Deep Penetration) 'Tallboy' bomb"

And T-14
Again from the linked manual
"The T-14 is American designation for the British 22,000 lb D.P. 'Grand Slam'

Now the 12,000lb VB-13 Tarzon and the 44,000lb T-12 Cloudmaker were US developments.

Edit:- the T-10 & T-14 even continued to use British fuzes.
 
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The B-29 was the first bomber able to deliver the strategic effects the bomber advocates dreamed of.
It was the first bomber with the performance and bomb load to able to be used to smash cities at will.
Nothing was the same after B San.

The B-29 did that from a long range, up to 2,000 miles combat radius.
 
The monitoring of the fall out from the Krakatoa eruption showed there were strong winds in the upper atmosphere, and there were various reports pre WWII but it was not until post WWII the key data was determined. Like if they were seasonal, the average speeds, altitudes and so on.
It took a considerable amount of high-altitude observation thru balloons and aircraft to determine where they are at specific times.

WW II over Japan with the huge numbers of aircraft operating at the altitudes where they are, was a massive eye-opener about the jet streams.

Jet streams are not everywhere at once, probably only about 10% of the world at any one point in time, and they steadily move about to different places.
 
The RAF in-flight refuelling efforts had nothing to do with the atom bomb project. This was to aid the RAF's Tiger Force; its effort to supply bombers against Japan in the final months of the war once the war ended in Europe. Tiger Force was not going to be ready at least until the very end of 1945, but the atom bombs put an end to its use. It's worth noting that the Lancaster was never seriously considered for the mission, not by the Americans and no evidence exists the British put anything into place to support it. As mentioned above, the Lancaster was suggested as the only aircraft that could carry the Thin Man internally of existing bombers back in 1943. It was not stated anywhere that it was under consideration for the mission. This suggestion in a paper by Ramsey in 1943 has subsequently morphed into a desire to use it as the carrier aircraft through the magic of the internet, which is entirely fictitious. The Americans were adamant that the carrier aircraft was going to be the B-29 from the outset, despite whatever discussions Ramsey had with Chadwick. Ramsey did propose that Lancasters be used for trials owing to the lack of B-29s in 1943, but this was turned down and not actioned. Subsequent supply of the Silverplate B-29s negated this at any rate.
In-flight refueling was in its infancy in WW II, and tests used the probe-and-drogue method.

Mature post-WW II refueling systems relied on dedicated tanker aircraft with booms.

In-flight refueling wasn't ready for prime time for strategic missions in WW II. At least not in 1945. Maybe in 1946 or 1947 if the war lasted that long.
 
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I'm very much aware of the point and purpose of a grand slam bomb.

But why for the sake of Pete carry two? Given they're mounted to either side of the centreline of the aircraft, you'd have to release both at the same time which (along with being potentially catastrophic I would have thought in the case of one hanging-up) seems more than a *just a little* redundant. And if the don't both drop at precisely the same moment, you're also going to throw the trim of the aircraft (to put it mildly!) and put accuracy way off - and that was one of the fundamental merits of the bomb.
Why not? The U.S. had more ordnance than they knew what to do with. Give them two for the price of one.

At Iwo Jima USN destroyers were using 40 mm AA against handful-sized groups of enemy foot soldiers out in the open.

Just one example of many.
 
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No they didn't! Mature refuelling systems after the war were all hose systems, with the looped hose having a short period of use in the West (persisting in the USSR till the mid 60s), but hose and drogue systems were mature long before booms showed up!!
Ok, but per this article the British and the Americans did little with air refueling in and before WW II other than testing and proposing --
. . . . .
Excerpt:
Though refueling did not play an operational role in World War II, the Army Air Forces finally did see its potential and continued to experiment with new planes and equipment. By 1948, General Spaatz made air refueling the highest priority for the new Air Force and took advantage of the latest refueling technology the British had churned out. Using the British loop-hose refueling system, the Air Force and Boeing produced 40 KB-29M tankers and 40 B-29 receivers for the newly created Strategic Air Command (SAC). The SAC leadership made the decision that all new bombers in the future would have inflight refueling capabilities.
 
Ok, but per this article the British and the Americans did little with air refueling in and before WW II other than testing and proposing --
. . . . .
Excerpt:
Though refueling did not play an operational role in World War II, the Army Air Forces finally did see its potential and continued to experiment with new planes and equipment. By 1948, General Spaatz made air refueling the highest priority for the new Air Force and took advantage of the latest refueling technology the British had churned out. Using the British loop-hose refueling system, the Air Force and Boeing produced 40 KB-29M tankers and 40 B-29 receivers for the newly created Strategic Air Command (SAC). The SAC leadership made the decision that all new bombers in the future would have inflight refueling capabilities.
B-50s and KB-50s also used the looped hose, to good effect when Lucky Lady II flew non-stop around the world in 1949. The flying boom system is inferior in the most part because it is limited to one aircraft at a time, unlike hose systems. Both systems have their problems, with hose & drogue relying on the skill of the pilot ("Do NOT chase the drogue, but follow the markings on the tanker") and the boom system relying on the skill of BOTH pilot and boom operator with a rigid connection opposed to a flexible connection for hose systems. On balance the hose drogue system is superior, but not by much.
 
The B-29 had problems sure but considering that it was rushed into service it's not surprising. It was far from a failure though, it was the only bomber in the US inventory that could reach the Japanese home islands and it was the bomber that ended the war. Its kill ratio was also better than the P-51's. Now sure the quality of Japanese pilots from '44-'45 was questionable but this is a bomber and not a fighter.
 

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