- YB-40 Flying Fortress
infobox Aircraft
name =YB-40 Flying Fortress
type =Escort fighter
manufacturer =Lockheed-Vega
caption =
designer =
first flight = September 1942
introduced =29 May 1943
retired = October 1943
status =
primary user =United States Army Air Force
more users =
produced =
number built = 25
unit cost =
developed from =B-17 Flying Fortress
variants with their own articles =The
Boeing YB-40 Flying Fortress was a modification of theUnited States B-17 Flying Fortress bomber aircraft, converted to act as a heavily-armed escort for other bombers duringWorld War II . At the time of its development, long-rangefighter aircraft such as theP-51 Mustang were not yet available to accompany bombers all the way fromEngland toGermany and back.Development
Work on the project began in September, 1942 with the XB-40
prototype , built by Lockheed's Vega subsidiary. The first order of 13 was made in October 1942. A follow-up order for 12 more was made in January, 1943. The modifications were performed byDouglas Aircraft at theirTulsa, Oklahoma center, and the first aircraft were completed by the end of March, 1943.The aircraft differed from the standard B-17 in that a second dorsal turret was installed in the former radio compartment, just behind the bomb bay and forward of the ventral ball turret's location; the single 0.50-calibre (12.7 mm) Browning machine gun at each waist station was replaced by a pair of similar 0.50-calibre (12.7 mm) guns, with a mount for each pair of these being very much like the tail gun setup in general appearance; and the bombardier's equipment was replaced with two 0.50-calibre (12.7 mm) machine guns in a Bendix designed "chin" turret. The existing "cheek" machine guns (on the sides of the forward fuselage at the bombardier station), initially removed from the configuration, were restored in England to provide a total of sixteen guns, and the bomb bay was converted to an ammunition magazine. Additional armor plating was installed to protect crew positions. The aircraft's gross weight was some 4000 pounds greater than a fully-armed B-17. An indication of the burden this placed on the YB-40 is that while the B-17F on which it was based was rated to climb to 20,000 feet in 25 minutes, the YB-40 was rated at 48 minutes. Part of the decreased performance was due to the weight increase, and part was due to the greater aerodynamic drag of the gun stations.
Operational history
The YB-40's mission was to provide a heavily-gunned escort capable of accompanying the bombers all the way to the target and back. Overall the concept proved a failure because the YB-40 could not keep up with standard B-17Fs, particularly after they had dropped their bombs. Of the initial order of 13, one was damaged in a forced landing on the
Isle of Lewis en route to England, and the remaining 12 were assigned to the 92nd Bomb Group (H) and designated the 327th Bomb Squadron. Between May 29 and August 16, 1943, the YB-40 flew 14 of the 19 combat missions scheduled by the8th Air Force , although on the mission of June 26 all the YB-40s scheduled were unable to form up with the bombing squadron, and returned to base. Altogether of the 59 aircraft dispatched, 48sortie s were credited. Five German fighter kills and 2 probables (likely kills) were claimed on the 13 missions flown, and one YB-40 was lost, shot down byflak on theJune 22 mission toHüls , Germany. Tactics were revised on the final five missions by placing a pair of YB-40s in the lead element of the strike to protect the mission commander.One YB-40 of the second order, reflecting modifications requested during combat trials to lighten the aircraft, joined the 327th in October, 1943, but by then B-17G models were beginning to appear and the final YB-40 was not flown in combat. All the deployed YB-40s were returned to the United States and converted to training aircraft, as were 11 aircraft of the second order.
One of the most unusual stories involving the use of a YB-40 was to counter the efforts of an Italian
Regia Aeronautica pilot, Guido Rossi, who had begun to offensively fly a capturedP-38 Lightning fighter that had been forced to land, low on fuel, overSardinia in the spring of 1943. Rossi used the P-38 as a supposedly "friendly" aircraft to first draw in, then shoot down, crippled American aircraft. Lt. Harold Fisher, a USAAF bomber pilot who had been victimized by Rossi's still-American-marked P-38, was able to get the use of a YB-40 to try and turn the tables on the Italian pilot. On August 31, 1943, Rossi appeared in the sky in the general vicinity of the YB-40, and Fisher drew Rossi in with radio conversation. Eventually the Italian pilot became furious at one of Fisher's statements, and the attacking P-38 fell apart from the hail of bullets from the YB-40's guns. This event was documented in the pages of aviation authorMartin Caidin 's book "Flying Forts", about B-17 action in WW II Europe. [http://www.p-38online.com/phantom.html] , [http://forums.wildbillguarnere.com/index.php?showtopic=10565&pid=181679&mode=threaded&start=]Despite the failure of the project as an operational aircraft, it led directly to modifications conspicuous on the final production variant of the B-17, the B-17G:
*Chin turret (also incorporated on "final production" models of the B-17F aircraft)
*Offset waist gun positions
*Improved tail gunner station, usually nicknamed the "Cheyenne".
Operators
;flag|United States|1912
*United States Army Air Force pecifications (YB-40)
aircraft specifications
plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=prop
crew=10
length main=74 ft 4 in
length alt=22.7 m
span main=103 ft 10 in
span alt=31.6 m
height main=19 ft 1 in
height alt=5.8 m
area main=1,527 ft²
area alt=141.9 m²
empty weight main=54,900 lb
empty weight alt=24,900 kg
loaded weight main=72,134 lb
loaded weight alt=32,720 kg
max takeoff weight main=74,000 lb
max takeoff weight alt=34,000 kgengine (prop)=
Wright R-1820 -65
type of prop=turbosuperchargedradial engine s
number of props=4
power main=1,200 hp
power alt=895 kWmax speed main=292 mph
max speed alt=470 km/h
cruise speed main=196 mph
cruise speed alt=315 km/h
range main=2,260 mi
range alt=3,640 km
ceiling main=29,200 ft
ceiling alt=8,900 m
climb rate main= ft/min
climb rate alt= m/s
loading main=47.2 lb/ft²
loading alt=231 kg/m²
power/mass main=0.066 hp/lb
power/mass alt=0.11 kW/kgguns=14 (or more) × .50 in (12.7 mm) Browning M2 machine guns. Typically used 14-16, with room for up to 30.:
Location Rounds Nose 2200 Front top turret 2500 Aft top turret 3300 Ball turret 300 Waist guns 1200 Tail guns 1200 Total 10,700 References
*
*
*
* [http://home.att.net/~jbaugher2/b17_12.html Encyclopedia of American Aircraft]
* [http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/research/bombers/b3-89.htm USAF Museum article on YB-40]External links
* [http://home.att.net/~jbaugher2/b17_12.html Encyclopedia of American Aircraft]
* [http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/research/bombers/b3-89.htm USAF Museum article on YB-40]ee also
aircontent
related=
*B-17 Flying Fortress
*XB-41 Liberator sequence=
* B-37 - XB-38 - XB-39 - YB-40 - XB-41 - XB-42 - XB-43
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