B-17: Fortress in the Sky
By: Jim 'Twitch' Tittle
Date: 1999-08-09
From a humble 1934 beginning with the name of Project "A", to
Queen of the Sky, the B-17 cut a legendary profile in every theater of
operation it entered during World War II. The production for all B-17s was 12,677 planes, two thirds
that of the B-24 Liberator. The Lib could tote a heavier bombload and
was a bit faster. So what was so endearing about the B-17? She brought
her crews home.
It didn't matter if the vertical or horizontal stabilizer was gone or
if two engines were dead. It didn't matter if the nose was a mangled
mass of twisted metal. It didn't matter if huge holes were ripped in
the wings or fuselage. The Queen brought the survivors home.
Her uniquely rugged construction was the key. With a much thicker chord
and a wing area 40% larger than the B-24, plus larger surface areas of
all tail sections, she had greater lift and stability in all
situations. A class mate of my mother was a B-24 waist gunner over
Europe. "When you'd lose one engine everybody started sweating and
hoping another didn't go, 'cause the B-24 really didn't fly on two."
The Fortresses routinely returned on two fans. This not to say that no Liberator ever did, but it was less often.
THE NEED FOR FIREPOWER
After its baptism by fire in the Pacific, the "D" model showed its
flaw- a blind spot in the tail. Pilots would kick rudder in an "S" turn
to allow waist gunners to take turns firing at enemy fighters on their
tails. The "E" model solved this problem with a tail gunner and a
redesigned, larger vertical stabilizer. It began the "gunning up" which
culminated in the "G" model's thirteen .50 caliber machine guns.
Even without the tail gunner Saburo Sakai found early on that the best
way to down a B-17 was with a frontal attack. When the Eighth A.F.
began daylight raids in Europe the Luftwaffe soon discovered the same
tactic. The "E" began replacing the feeble .30s from the nose station
with .50s. And the new ball turret in the belly with two more fifties
was a job for smaller guys. Ten crew members now went aloft with a nine
or ten MG defensive armament. It weighed 54,000 lbs. The four Wright
Cyclone 1,200 HP engines could pull the "E" to 317 MPH maximum. By 1942
the "E" model was operational in every theater of the world. Forty five B17's supplied to RAF Costal Command had the 40mm
Vickers "S" cannon mounted in the nose for anti-sub work with 59
Squadron at Thorney Island. One B-17E had Allison V-12 liquid cooled
engines experimentally installed which boosted top speed to 327 MPH.
HOW MUCH?
Mid-1942 saw the "F" model on production lines at Boeing, Douglas and
Vega. It had minor improvements to the "E". Later batches had the extra
fuel cells in the wings known as "Tokyo Tanks," and more powerful
Cyclone GR-1820-97 engines with war emergency rating of 1,380 HP @
25,000 ft.
Generally a .30 caliber was installed in the nose but the .50 was
too, depending on the manufacturer. 500 rounds of .30 or 300 rounds of
.50 were carried. The waist gunners had 300 rounds and the dorsal
turret had 400 r.p.g.for the two .50s. 500 r.p.g. were available for
two more .50s in the ball turret, and two .50s in the tail had
565.r.p.g.
While a maximum bomb load was 9,600 lb., a typical mission over the
Reich carried 4,000-5,000 lb. to make a range of 1,400 miles. The
maximum feasible combat radius was about 800 miles. While it is universally known that B-17s "only" carried
4-5,000 lb. on a long range mission, a small number of the "F"" series
with the more powerful engines and external wing racks could carry a
maximum of 20,800 lb. for a short range!
"G" WHIZZ
The ultimate model of the Fortress was born in production in the summer
of 1943. To defend against head-on attacks a power operated chin turret
with two fifties sprouted from the sheet metal. With the cheek guns
sharing 610 rounds and the chin turret holding 365 rounds, the "G" was
the most heavily armed bomber aircraft in the sky with thirteen .50s.
The waist gunners now had 600 rounds each to deter Luftwaffe attacks
and the "Cheyenne" tail guns offered an increased field of fire. The "G" model had a wingspan of 103 ft. 9 1/2 in.; length 74
ft. 4in. Height was 19 ft. and the wing area was 1,420 sq.ft. It
weighed in at 72,000 lb. maximum overloaded from a mere 32,370 lb.
empty. The four Cyclone GR-1820-97 engines with war emergency rating
of 1,380 HP @ 26,700 ft. had General electric B-22 exhaust driven
turbo-superchargers. The "G" could reach a ceiling of 35,000 ft. Top speed was 300 MPH @ 30,000 ft. but maximum continious
speed was 263 MPH @ 25,000 ft. Climb rate was 900 ft./min. Carrying
2,810 U.S. gallons of fuel the "G" could haul 4,000 lb. of bombs 1,850
miles in 8.7 hours at 25,000 feet.
DORNIER Do 200
It is a little known fact that the Luftwaffe used captured Fortresses.
One unit, I/K.G.200, ferried, parachuted, and supplied secret agents.
The captured planes bore German insignia. In 1944 one group was
involved in constructing and maintaining secret fuel dumps in the
Western Desert. To simplify things and guard the secret, the B-17s were
designated as "Dornier Do 200s."
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