Convair B-36J Peacemaker

Convair B-36 Pacificador

PaísEua
TipoBombardeiro estratégico
Produzido1946–1954
Construído384

O Convair B-36 “Peacemaker” foi um bombardeiro estratégico construído pela Convair e operado exclusivamente pela Força Aérea dos Estados Unidos (USAF) de 1949 a 1959. O B-36 foi o maior avião de pistão produzido em massa já feito. Ele tinha a maior envergadura de qualquer aeronave de combate já construída, a 230 pés (70,1 m). O B-36 foi o primeiro bombardeiro capaz de lançar qualquer uma das armas nucleares do arsenal dos EUA de dentro de seus quatro compartimentos de bombas sem modificações na aeronave. Com um alcance de 10.000 mi (16.000 km) e uma carga útil máxima de 87.200 lb (39.600 kg), o B-36 foi o primeiro bombardeiro tripulado do mundo capaz de voar intercontinental sem reabastecimento.

Fonte: Convair B-36 Pacificador na Wiki

Convair B-36 Pacificador
FotógrafoVladimir Yakubov
LocalizaçãoMuseu Nacional da USAF
Fotos26
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FotógrafoBill Maloney
LocalizaçãoDesconhecido
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FotógrafoMichael Benolkin
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The Ultimate Heavyweight

O Convair B-36 Pacificador remains the largest mass-produced piston-engined aircraft ever built. With a wingspan longer than the Wright brothers’ first flight, it was designed during WWII to bomb Nazi Germany directly from the United States should Britain fall. By the time it entered service in 1948, it became the primary delivery vehicle for the Strategic Air Command’s nuclear arsenal. It was the only aircraft capable of carrying the massive 42,000-lb Mark 17 hydrogen bomb, serving as a terrifyingly large symbol of American power until the arrival of the B-52.

Attribute Technical Specification (B-36J)
Papel Strategic Intercontinental Bomber
tripulação 15 (including 2 relief crews for long missions)
Envergadura 230 ft (70 m) — The largest of any combat aircraft
Piston Engines 6 × Pratt & Whitney R-4360-53 “Wasp Major” (Pusher)
Jet Engines 4 × General Electric J47 turbojets (in two pods)
Maximum Speed 435 mph (700 km/h) with jets engaged
Combat Range 3,985 miles (6,415 km) with 10,000 lb payload
Max Bomb Load 86,000 lbs (39,000 kg)

Design Engineering: “Six Turning, Four Burning”

  • The Pusher Configuration: The B-36 used six massive R-4360 radial engines mounted backwards. This “pusher” arrangement reduced turbulence over the wings and improved cooling airflow, though it led to frequent engine fires due to carburetor icing in the intake ducts.
  • Jet Augmentation: Starting with the D-model, four J47 jet engines were added in pods near the wingtips. These were used for shorter takeoff rolls and high-speed dashes over the target. This led to the famous crew phrase: “Six turning and four burning.”
  • The Magnesium Skin: To save weight on such a colossal airframe, much of the fuselage skin was made of magnesium alloy rather than aluminum. This made the aircraft exceptionally light for its size but also meant it was highly flammable if it caught fire.
  • Communication Tunnel: Because the bomb bays were so large, they divided the pressurized crew compartments. To get from the front (cockpit) to the rear (gunner/bunk) stations, crew members had to lie on a wheeled trolley and pull themselves through an 85-foot long pressurized tunnel.

Legacy: The Giant That Never Fired a Shot in Anger

  • Strategic Deterrent: The B-36 never dropped a bomb in combat. Its mere existence was its mission—proving to the Soviet Union that the U.S. could strike any target on the globe without needing overseas bases.
  • The NB-36H Nuclear Test: One B-36 was modified to carry a live, shielding-protected nuclear reactor in its bomb bay to test the feasibility of nuclear-powered flight. It flew 47 times, though the reactor only powered itself, not the aircraft.
  • FICON Project: Due to its lack of speed, the B-36 was used as a “mother ship” to carry an F-84 Thunderjet fighter in its bomb bay. The fighter could be launched to defend the bomber and then re-attached in mid-air.
  • The Featherweight Program: Toward the end of its life, many B-36s were stripped of all defensive turrets and extra equipment to allow them to fly at altitudes above 50,000 feet, where early Soviet interceptors could not reach them.

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