Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > B-24 Liberator


 

B-24 Liberator

Royal Canadian Air Force B-24 Liberator

Description
RôleHeavy Bomber
Crew7-10
First Flight 1939 December 29
Entered Servise 1939
Manufacturer Consolidated Aircraft Corporation
Dimensions
Length67 ft 8 in20.6 m
Wingspan110 ft33.5 m
Height18 ft 5.5 m
Wing Area1,048 ft²97.4 m²
Typical Weights
Empty52,200 lb23,678 kg
Loaded55,000 lb24,948 kg
Maximum Takeoff65,000 lb29,484 kg
Powerplant
Engines Pratt & Whitney R-1830
turbo-supercharged radials (4)
Power1,200 hp895 kW
Performance
Maximum Speed290 mph467 km/h
Cruising Speed215 mph346 km/h
Combat Range2,100 miles3379 km
Ferry Range3,700 miles5953 km
Servise Ceiling28,000 ft8534 m
Rate of Climb1,025 ft/min312 m/min
Wing Loading52.5 lb/ft²256.14 kg/m²
Power/Mass.0873 hp/lb.1435 kW/kg
Armament
Guns.50-caliber machine guns (10)
Bombs12,800 lb

The Consolidated B-24 Liberator was produced in greater numbers than any other American combat aircraft, and was used by most of the Allied air forces in World War Two. 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.

1 Development

Like the equally successful North American P-51 Mustang, the Liberator was designed in a great hurry. In 1939 January, the United States 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 Army 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 ratioIn aerodynamics, the aspect ratio is an airplane's wing's span divided by its standard mean chord (SMC). It can be calculated more easily, however as span squared divided by wing area: Piper PA-28 Cherokee USAF B52 bomber Aspect ratio is a powerful indica, for maximum fuel efficiencyFuel efficiency sometimes also referred to as fuel economy and commonly gas mileage in the United States, is a numeric measure often used to describe the amount of fuel consumed with regard to the distance travelled in a transportation vehicle, such as an.

Compared to the B-17, the B-24 was shorter, had 25% less wing area, but a 6 foot (1.8 m) greater wingspanThe wingspan (or just span of an airplane is the distance from the left wingtip to the right wingtip. For example, the Boeing 777 has a wingspan of about 60 m (200 feet). Planes with a longer wingspan are generally more efficient because they suffer less, and substantially greater carrying capacity. Where the B-17 used 9-cylinder Wright R-1820The Wright R-1820 Cyclone 9 was an engine widely used in American aircraft in the 1930s and 1940s. It was a single-row 9-cylinder air-cooled radial design. It had a displacement of 1,823 cubic inches (29. 9 liters); the bore and stroke were 6. Models R-18 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 United States 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.



Read more »

Non User