투폴레프 투-4 불

투폴레프 투-4 불

국가소련
역할전략 폭격기
첫 비행1947년 5월 19일
내장847

사진 갤러리 투폴레프 투-4 불, The Tupolev Tu-4 (NATO reporting name: Bull) was a piston-engined Soviet strategic bomber that served the Soviet Air Force from the late 1940s to mid-1960s. It was a reverse-engineered copy of the American-made Boeing B-29 Superfortress.

소스: 투폴레프 Tu-4 불 위키

Tupolev Tu-4 Bull
사진 작가마틴 자할카, 루카스 틀라스칼
로컬라이제이션Unknow
사진35
대기,검색 투폴 레프 Tu-4 황소 사진 당신을 위해...

커피 사줘커피 사줘

Tupolev Tu-4 Bull
사진 작가Tu-4 '황소' 산책
로컬라이제이션Unknow
사진29

참고 항목:

World War II: The Definitive Visual History from Blitzkrieg to the Atom Bomb(DK Definitive Visual Histories) - 아마존 지도별 제2차 세계 대전 지도(DK History Map by Map) - 아마존


A Forced Leap into the Strategic Era

Tthe Tupolev Tu-4 (NATO reporting name: 황소) is famous not for its original design, but for being a near-perfect clone of the American Boeing B-29 Superfortress. During 1944, four B-29s made emergency landings in Soviet territory after raids on Japan. Despite being allies, Stalin ordered the aircraft interned and gave Andrei Tupolev a monumental task: copy the plane exactly, “bolt for bolt.” This project single-handedly propelled the Soviet aviation industry from the era of wood-and-fabric tactical planes into the world of pressurized, high-altitude strategic bombers.

Attribute Technical Specification (Tu-4)
역할 Strategic Heavy Bomber
승무원 11 (Pilots, Navigators, Gunner/Scanners)
First Flight May 19, 1947
동력 장치 4 × Shvetsov ASh-73TK 18-cylinder radial engines
Horsepower 2,400 hp (1,790 kW) each
최대 속도 558 km/h (347 mph)
레인지 5,400 km (3,355 mi) with 3,000 kg load
군비 10 × 23 mm NS-23 cannons in 5 remote-controlled turrets

Engineering: Metric Challenges and Improvements

  • The Metric Conversion: The hardest part of the project was converting the B-29’s imperial measurements to metric. Soviet aluminum sheets were rolled in metric thicknesses; if Tupolev used sheets that were slightly too thick, the plane would be too heavy. If too thin, it would break. Every single wire and rivet had to be recalculated.
  • Upgraded Firepower: While the B-29 used .50 caliber machine guns, the Soviets equipped the Tu-4 with 23mm cannons. These had a slower rate of fire but significantly more destructive power against intercepting fighters.
  • Engine Clones: The Shvetsov ASh-73 engines were not direct copies of the Wright R-3350, but rather a Soviet development that incorporated many of its features, including complex turbo-superchargers required for high-altitude flight.
  • Remote Turrets: The Tu-4 retained the B-29’s advanced central fire control system, where gunners sat at plexiglass stations and operated turrets via remote analog computers.

The First Soviet Nuclear Threat

  • RDS-1 Delivery: On October 18, 1951, a Tu-4 performed the first Soviet air-drop of a nuclear bomb (the RDS-3), officially making the USSR a nuclear power capable of strategic delivery.
  • Airborne Early Warning (Tu-4AW): Long after it was obsolete as a bomber, the Tu-4 served as a testbed for the first Soviet AWACS planes, featuring massive radar domes to detect incoming Western bombers.
  • Chinese “KJ-1” AEWC: Several Tu-4s were given to China. In the 1970s, the Chinese fitted one with a massive rotating radar dish and turboprop engines, creating the KJ-1. This aircraft still exists in the Beijing Aviation Museum.
  • Psychological Warfare: The Tu-4’s appearance at the 1947 Tushino Air Parade terrified the West, as it meant the USSR finally had the technology to strike American cities from Soviet bases.

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