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Home » Fortresses Over The Reich
[2.0] Fortresses Over The Reich: B-17F & B-17G
v1.1.1 / 01 jul 02 / 2 of 2 / greg goebel / public domain
* By the spring of 1942, continued improvement of the B-17 and combat
experience finally produced the first version of the Fortress that was
truly ready for war. The B-17F and the similar B-17G were built in large
quantities and bore the brunt of the daylight bombing campaign against
Hitler's Germany.
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[2.1] B-17F / FORTRESS OVER EUROPE
[2.2] XB-38 / YB-40 ESCORT FORTRESS
[2.3] B-17G / FORTRESS TRIUMPHANT
[2.4] FORTRESS ODDBALLS
[2.5] POSTWAR FORTRESSES
[2.6] FOOTNOTE: THE BOEING MODEL 307 STRATOLINER
[2.7] COMMENTS, SOURCES, & REVISION HISTORY
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[2.1] B-17F / FORTRESS OVER EUROPE
* More than 512 B-17Es had been ordered, but detail changes in Fortress
design driven by field experience accumulated to the point where the aircraft
was sufficiently different to be given a new designation, "B-17F".
The first B-17F rolled off the production line in April 1942.
The B-17F was hard to distinguish from a B-17E. The major visible external
changes were a single-piece conical Plexiglas plastic nose with a flat
bomb-aiming panel; wider Hamilton Standard paddle-blade propellers; and
revised engine cowlings.
However, the B-17F featured hundreds of internal changes. The most significant
were new fuel tanks added in the outer wing. These were referred to as
"Tokyo tanks" and provided an additional 4,165 liters (1,100
US gallons) of fuel. They extended range to 6,800 kilometers (4,220 miles),
though fumes escaping from the tanks proved an explosive menace and led
to the adoption of a venting system to get rid of the fumes.
Other important changes included self-sealing oil tanks, heavier landing
gear to handle the increased weight, and external bomb racks under the
inner wings. The B-17's limited bomb capacity had been the subject of
much legitimate criticism, and the bomb racks were intended to correct
that error by increasing the bomb load from the typical 1.8 tonnes (4,000
pounds) to up to 4.35 tonnes (9,600 pounds). Later modifications of the
external bomb rack scheme increased the maximum bombload to 9.4 tonnes
(20,800 pounds), but the external racks proved an exercise in futility.
They were rarely used except for special missions, as external loads imposed
significant performance penalties.
Many B-17Es had been modified in the field to accommodate one or two
12.7 millimeter machine guns firing out each side of the nose through
staggered Plexiglas panels to counter frontal attack. B-17Fs included
the nose guns as "standard", more or less, though there were
many variations on gun fit. Eventually, "cheek" windows that
gave a limited forward field of fire were fitted, with the left window
staggered ahead of the right to keep the two guns out of each others'
way in the cramped nose of the bomber.
In fact, the B-17F received a long series of small modifications with
successive production blocks. One of the significant improvements added
later in production were uprated GR-1820-97 Cyclone engines. In conjunction
with the paddle propellers, the new engines did much to preserve the Fortress's
performance, even with the creeping weight increases.
* The B-17F was put into large-scale production. The USAAF wanted as
many B-17Fs as they could get their hands on, and contracted for additional
manufacture of the bomber from Lockheed's Vega plant in Burbank, California,
and from Douglas's plant in Long Beach, California.
This scheme was known as the "BVD (Boeing-Vega-Douglas)" pool.
Boeing-built B-17Fs were designated as "B-17F-BO"; Vega-built
aircraft as "B-17F-VE"; and Douglas-built aircraft as "B-17F-DL".
B-17Fs were also designated by an additional block number suffix, such
as "B-17F-10-VE", but different block number ranges were assigned
to the different manufacturers, making the block number scheme too confusing
to be worth describing in detail here.
Modification centers were also established stateside and overseas to
add improvements as they were devised or were required by local circumstances.
* The B-17F was primarily allocated to the European theatre. B-17Es and
B-17Fs arrived in the UK in the summer of 1942 to provide the backbone
for precision daylight raids over Europe, though the B-17Es would be relegated
to training duties as the number of B-17Fs ramped up.
On 17 August 1942, the 8th Air Force performed the first strike of the
USAAF's daylight bombing campaign by attacking railyards at Rouen, France,
with 12 Fortresses under heavy escort by RAF Spitfires. Significant damage
was inflicted on the target, and only two bombers were damaged by flak.
Further raids into France went easily as well, but on 6 September the
Luftwaffe decided to fight back, and shot down two out of a formation
of 20 Fortresses. The tempo of the battle was beginning to pick up.
In November, two bomb groups were diverted to the 12th Air Force to support
the invasion of North Africa. This depleted Fortress units based in England,
but their numbers were quickly built back up. However, raids conducted
through the end of the year obtained poor results, characterized by confused
air operations and inaccurate bombing. The freeze-up problems that had
plagued the RAF's Fortress Is came back, though such difficulties were
eventually brought under control by procedures designed to keep aircraft
dry before take-off.
The USAAF spent much of this time refining their tactics and getting
organized, particularly under the inspiration of Colonel Curtis LeMay,
commander of the 305th Bomb Group. By December 1942, the USAAF had defined
an 18-plane bomb group formation, in which the bombers were organized
in six "vics", with one in the lead, two trailing to the right,
and three trailing to the left. The bombers were staggered vertically
from the top aircraft at right to the bottom aircraft at left. This formation
helped obtain tight bomb patterns while optimizing defensive firepower.
The lead bomber sighted for the formation. Earlier doctrine allowed bombers
to target and drop their bombs individually, but this disrupted the formation
and led to mid-air collisions. Formation structure would be enhanced through
the war, ultimately combining several formations into a "combat box"
that stretched through the sky.
* Through 1942, the Fortress raids had been restricted to France and
the Low Countries, and the bomber formations had been generally escorted.
On 21 January, 67 Fortresses raided a German target for the first time
in an attack on the U-boat construction yards at Vegesack.
The target was socked in and the Fortresses attacked Wilhelmshaven, their
secondary target, instead. Results were poor, but at least casualties
were light, with only three Fortresses shot down. Luftwaffe pilots were
a bit confused in dealing with the big and heavily-armed Fortresses and
didn't press their attacks. They would learn quickly.
Bad weather interfered with raids over the next few months, while the
defenders refined their tactics. On 17 April 1943, 115 Fortresses attacked
the Focke-Wulf plant at Bremen. 16 of the aircraft were shot down, and
48 of the rest were damaged to some degree.
This was an appalling rate of attrition, though Fortress gunners claimed
hundreds of Luftwaffe fighters shot down. Despite USAAF attempts to be
strict in accounting for such kills, the necessary confusion of an air
battle led to inflated claims that were almost a factor of ten greater
than reality. The gunners were claiming about five German fighters for
every Fortress shot down. In reality, the ratio was more like one German
fighter for every two Fortresses lost.
It is still hard to believe that the Luftwaffe found the Fortress, with
its heavy armament, an easy kill. The big bomber could take a lot of punishment,
and if its blazing turrets weren't all that likely to score hits, they
certainly made sure that a German pilot didn't waste any time in making
a pass and then getting out of range again.
* Few B-17Fs saw service in the Pacific theater. During the early part
of the war in the Pacific, the USAAF had realized that high-altitude strategic
bombing was not particularly useful in the war against the Japanese. The
targets were generally naval vessels or small ground installations, rather
than big cities, military bases, or industrial complexes. Low-level medium
bombers were much more effective.
Properly recognizing a moving ship from high altitude, much less hitting
it, was extremely difficult. During the battle of Midway in June 1942,
19 Fortresses operating from Midway Island performed 80 sorties to attack
Japanese shipping. They reported good results, but in fact they hit nothing.
This was fortunate, because one of the targets was a US submarine, which
was mistaken for a cruiser and reported as sunk after it dived.
By early 1943, the Japanese were being pressed back and bombing attacks
began on their large ground installations. High-altitude bombing became
useful, but the B-24 Liberator had longer range and so was preferred over
the B-17, which was needed in the European theater. The Fortress effectively
disappeared from the Pacific during 1943.
* The Fortress units that had been diverted from the 8th Air Force in
England to the 12th Air Force in Africa began operations from Algeria
on 16 November 1942. They were joined the following spring by additional
Fortress bomber groups. After the collapse of Axis resistance in Africa,
they performed raids on Sicily, preparatory to the invasion of the island.
Air operations for the 12th were easier than those for the 8th. The weather
was generally sunny, the ranges were shorter and fighter escorts were
the norm, and Axis air and anti-aircraft defenses were weaker.
After the invasion of Italy, bases became available on the Italian mainland
for bomber operations, and the new 15th Air Force was organized to operate
out of them. The 15th primarily operated B-24 Liberators, and its strength
in Fortresses never amounted to more than a fifth of the B-17s operated
by the 8th. The 15th Air Force was primarily focused on attacks against
targets in southern Europe, particularly the Ploesti oil fields in Romania.
The B-24 offered somewhat greater range and better bombload than the
Fortress. Unfortunately, the B-24 was also more vulnerable to combat damage
than the Fortress, and the B-17 was preferred more often than not by bomber
crews.
* 3,405 B-17Fs were completed in all. 2,300 were built by Boeing, Lockheed-Vega
built 500, and Douglas built 605.
There were a number of special conversions of the B-17F. The "F-9"
series were strategic reconnaissance aircraft, fitted with a varying arrangement
of from 6 to 10 cameras. Some 51 B-17F bombers were converted to F-9,
F-9A, or F-9B reconnaissance machines.
As with the B-17E, a few B-17Fs were converted to transport configurations.
The "YC-108B" was another VIP transport in the style of Douglas
MacArthur's BATAAN, and the "XC-108B" was fitted as a tanker
and used to ferry fuel over the Himalayas on the "Hump" route
from India to China. Many other Fortresses were more informally stripped
down and used as transports during the war.
19 B-17Fs were supplied to the RAF Coastal Command, which designated
them "Fortress IIs", as mentioned earlier. They were used with
their Fortress IIA (B-17E) predecessors for antisubmarine patrol. They
were armed with depth charges, and many were later fitted with "Mark
III ASV (Anti-Surface Vessel)" radar, with "stickleback"
aerials along the fuselage spine and Yagi antennas underneath the wings.
The Fortress Mark II/IIAs proved capable at their role and were credited
with sinking 13 U-boats. They were eventually replaced in this role by
Liberators and Sunderlands, and were then put into service for weather
reconnaissance, where their high-altitude capabilities were a definite
asset.
In early 1944, 14 B-17Fs were transferred to the RAF from the USAAF 8th
Air Force to be converted into electronic warfare platforms of various
types. They were designated "Fortress II(SD)", where "SD"
stood for "Special Duty", and used as flight trainers for electronic
warfare variants of the later B-17G, or "Fortress III" as it
was called in RAF hands.
In November 1943, the Canadians acquired three B-17Es and three B-17Fs
that had been in service with American training units. These six aircraft
were used for transatlantic mail service.
BACK_TO_TOP
[2.2] XB-38 / YB-40 ESCORT FORTRESS
* Even as the Fortress was entering combat over Europe, the USAAF was
considering more improvements to the type.
Although the B-17 was fitted with a series of improved versions of the
Wright Cyclone radial engine, further effort on the Cyclone was obviously
facing diminishing returns. In the summer of 1942, the USAAF asked Lockheed-Vega
to modify a B-17E to use the Allison V-1710-89 engine. This was a supercharged
12-cylinder liquid-cooled inline engine, used in the Lockheed P-38 fighter.
The Allison engine offered 1,425 horsepower at altitude, substantially
more than the Cyclone.
The new aircraft was designated "XB-38". Work went slowly,
and the Allison-powered Fortress did not fly until 19 May 1943. The XB-38
featured long-nosed nacelles for the Allisons reminiscent of those on
the P-38, with the cooling radiators placed in the wing leading edge.
The XB-38 had a top speed of 526 KPH (327 MPH), but a lower service ceiling
than Cyclone-powered Fortresses.
The XB-38 only flew for about ten hours. On 16 June, one of the engines
caught on fire and the aircraft crashed, the crew successfully bailing
out. Two other XB-38s were planned, but the USAAF decided that the benefits
obtained with the Allisons were not sufficient to justify diverting delivery
of the engines for the P-38 and other fighter production. The XB-38 program
was cancelled on 12 August 1943.
* The need for long-range escorts to protect Fortress formations had
been a concern even before the 8th Air Force began its raids over Germany,
and in April 1942 the USAAF initiated studies into a "convoy protector"
or "escort Fortress" that would carry increased armament and
armor to take on attacking fighters.
The initial Fortress "gunship", the "XB-40", was
modified from a Boeing-built B-17F by Lockheed-Vega and first flew in
September 1942. The XB-40 bristled with 12.7 millimeter machine guns.
The Sperry ball turret and the Bendix ball turret were retained from the
B-17F, while the waist gun positions were increased to two guns each with
power boost, and the twin-gun tail position was given power boost as well.
A second Bendix turret was added over the radioman's position, and a
new Bendix "chin" turret was fitted under the nose, with the
bombardier controlling it from a sight in the Plexiglas nose. Armor was
added for engine and crew protection. The XB-40 could carry about 11,000
rounds of ammunition, about three times that of a regular B-17F.
Experience showed that the waist gunners tended to get in each others'
way, which could be dangerous as it could lead to accidents with their
oxygen lines. The waist positions were "staggered" to give the
gunners more room.
Flight tests at Wright Field suggested that the escort Fortress idea
had promise, and so 23 "YB-40s" were ordered, though only 19
were actually delivered. They were modified from Vega-produced B-17Fs
by the Douglas plant in Tulsa, with the first rolled out in February 1943.
YB-40s arrived in England in April 1943 for combat evaluation. The results
did not meet expectations. There were bugs and shoddy workmanship, but
most importantly the YB-40 was simply too heavy. It could follow bomber
formations well enough until they dropped their bombs, but then the bombers
could take advantage of increased speed and altitude bought by the reduced
weight. The YB-40 was still loaded down with guns and ammunition and couldn't
keep up with the formations on the way home. The program was cancelled
in July 1943.
Some YB-40s were sent back stateside and used for gunnery training as
"TB-40s". Although they were a failure, operational commanders
indicated that the Bendix chin turret and the staggered waist gun positions
were good ideas that should be incorporated into B-17 production.
BACK_TO_TOP
[2.3] B-17G / FORTRESS TRIUMPHANT
* These good ideas appeared in the next and definitive version of the
Fortress, the "B-17G", of which more were made than any other
Fortress variant. The B-17G was basically a B-17F with the Bendix chin
turret and the staggered waist gun windows. Eventually, these waist gun
windows would be enclosed by Plexiglas panels.
Other changes were implemented as B-17Gs rolled off the production lines.
The ineffective upward-firing gun in the radio room was deleted. A new
tail gun position was designed, with power-boosted guns featuring a greater
range of traverse; a better reflector gunsight replacing the previous
ring-and-bead sight; and a larger space for the gunner, with bigger windows,
that offered improved visibility and extended back from the vertical tailplane.
This new gun position was called the "Cheyenne Tail", since
it was designed by the United Air Lines field modification center at Cheyenne,
Wyoming. It was retrofitted to many earlier B-17s at field modification
centers.
The Sperry upper turret was also changed during production to a similar
Bendix model that had a taller top. The new turret was more agile and
had better visibility. Finally, the hydraulically-operated turbosupercharger
regulators used on earlier Fortresses were replaced by electrically-operated
regulators, and then to an entirely new and improved turbosupercharger
that provided greater reliability and performance.
BOEING B-17G FLYING FORTRESS:
_____________________ _________________ ______________________
spec metric english
_____________________ _________________ ______________________
wingspan 31.6 meters 103 feet 9 inches
length 22.8 meters 74 feet 9 inches
height 5.85 meters 19 feet 2 inches
empty weight 15,400 kilograms 34,000 pounds
max loaded weight 25,400 kilograms 56,000 pounds
maximum speed 475 KPH 295 MPH / 255 KT
service ceiling 11,000 meters 36,000 feet
operational radius 1,290 kilometers 800 MI / 695 NMI
_____________________ _________________ ______________________
* The failure of the YB-40 highlighted the increasingly desperate need
for an adequate long-range fighter escort. Spitfires and USAAF P-47 Thunderbolts
didn't have the range. Although the P-38 Lightning had the endurance to
accompany the Fortress on long-range raids, it was not well suited to
high-altitude combat and was not adequate for the escort task.
Fortress raids over Germany into that summer continued to grow in size.
235 Fortresses attacked a rubber plant at Huls in the Ruhr on 22 June
1943. Due to diversionary tactics, their losses were relatively light
and results of the raid were satisfactory.
On 17 August 1943, the anniversary of the first Fortress raid, 147 Fortresses
attacked the Messerschmitt plant at Regensburg, followed by a raid by
230 Fortresses on the ball-bearing plant at Schweinfurt. The result was
a disaster. 60 B-17s were lost in combat. The first wave went on to land
in Tunisia after its attack, and of those that landed there, 55 were too
badly damaged to return to England. Bombing results were equally dismal.
Fortress gunners were credited with destroying 148 German fighters. In
reality, they only shot down 25.
The 8th Air Force recuperated for a few weeks, rebuilding strength with
the new B-17Gs arriving from the US. Then on 6 September 1943, 338 Fortresses
attacked Stuttgart, or at least tried to. The target was completely socked
it and the Luftwaffe savaged the raiders. 30 Fortresses were lost and
no worthwhile damage was done to the target.
To address the weather problems, the USAAF was acquiring help in the
form of British electronic wizardry. The gear included a short-range navigation
system named "Gee"; a long-range radio-beacon navigation system
named "Oboe", and a ground mapping radar named "H2S";
later upgraded to the slightly better American variant known as "H2X".
H2S/H2X proved useful, allowing "bombing through overcast"
attacks if the target could be identified by major landscape features,
such as river bends and confluences. H2S was originally fitted in a bathtub
in the nose of the Fortress, to be replaced by with H2X in a retractable
radome in the same position, with the H2X finally moved to replace the
ball turret installation.
On 27 September, the USAAF conducted a raid on Emden, with some of the
formations led by Fortresses equipped with H2S. These "pathfinders"
dropped smoke markers on the target, with the plumes of these markers
serving as aiming points. Eventually, all Fortress bomber groups would
have their own radar-equipped pathfinder B-17s using H2X or improved electronic-bombing
systems.
* By this time, a Fortress was only expected to last 11 missions before
being destroyed. This meant that the statistical chances of a B-17 crewman
surviving a 25 mission tour were poor. Some improvements in survivability
were being obtained, however, with new technology such as "Carpet",
a system to jam German anti-aircraft control radars.
These improvements weren't enough. On 14 October 1943, the USAAF raided
Schweinfurt again, using 291 Fortresses. By this time, the Luftwaffe had
refined their tactics to a peak of efficiency, and the defense was intense,
large scale, and well planned.
The Luftwaffe used stubby 21-centimeter rockets to blast apart the B-17
formations, and then attacked Fortresses individually without having to
fly through a hornet's nest of massed machine guns. 60 B-17s were shot
down, five more crashed in England, and 12 were junked after landing,
for a total loss of 77 aircraft. Another 121 received repairable damage.
14 October became known as "Black Thursday". Unescorted daylight
precision bombing was simply unworkable, and the USAAF was forced to abandon
serious attacks on Germany until long-range escorts were available.
They didn't have too long to wait. By December, Merlin-powered P-51 Mustangs
were arriving in England, and with drop tanks these excellent fighters
could accompany the Fortresses deep into Germany.
Also in December 1943, the USAAF began the practice of dispensing "chaff",
or strips of aluminum foil, to confuse German radars. Although the Germans
would develop some countermeasures, chaff was nevertheless an effective
defensive measure. Chaff was dispensed by Fortress crews through chutes,
or simply issued to the waist gunners in packets for them to throw out
the waist gun windows.
8th Air Force activity remained relatively low for the rest of the year
as the weather deteriorated, though in January 1944 the 8th performed
a series of raids on V-bomb sites in the French Pas-de-Calais.
In late February 1944, however, the Fortresses came back to Germany with
a vengeance and with escorts. During the USAAF's "Big Week",
from 20 to 25 February, the bombers raided aircraft manufacturing plants
all over Germany.
The raids seriously disrupted German aircraft production, and in particular
delayed German plans for the manufacture of their new jet aircraft. 226
B-17s and B-24s were lost, which was severe by absolute standards but
low in comparison with the 3,800 sorties performed. 28 fighter escorts
were lost.
On 4 March, the USAAF went to attack Berlin for the first time. Bad weather
intervened, and a recall order was sent, but one wing of 29 B-17s failed
to get the word and continued. Part of the escort force stayed with them
to protect them. The B-17s hit Berlin using a radar pathfinder and were
attacked by the Luftwaffe on the way home. 23 Mustangs were lost, but
only five Fortresses.
On 6 March, the USAAF tried to hit Berlin again with a force of 561 B-17s
and 249 B-24s. They were protected by Thunderbolts, Lightnings, and Mustangs
working in relays. The result was something of a fiasco. The bomber streams
became disorganized, ran into intense flak and fighter opposition, and
56 B-17s and 17 other USAAF aircraft were lost. This mission was characterized
by some of the wildest air battles of the war.
The USAAF refined their tactics and went back to Berlin three more times
in March. Later that spring, the focus shifted to attacks on communications
centers and in particular oil production, with 935 8th Air Force bombers
attacking oil plants on 12 May. To the south, the Italy-based 15th Air
Force was hitting Ploesti in Rumania. German fuel production fell to a
trickle, and by the end of summer 1944, the Luftwaffe was hard-pressed
to get fighters in the air.
By October, the Luftwaffe had lost too many of their experienced pilots
in air combat, and the lack of fuel meant that training new ones was increasingly
difficult. The Germans increasingly were forced to rely more heavily on
anti-aircraft guns for defense. Flak was less effective than fighters
in destroying bombers, but bomber crews often preferred to deal with fighters,
since they could shoot back at them. In some cases, guns and armor were
removed from combat B-17s and replaced with "flak curtains",
which were laminated plates sewn into canvas to stop low-velocity shrapnel.
USAAF bomber losses fell off to the point where a tour of duty was increased
to 30 and then to 35 missions. Raids on Germany grew in intensity. On
22 February 1945, for example, 1,411 bombers hit communications centers
all over Germany, bombing from relatively low altitudes of about 3 kilometers
(10,000 feet). Even though the Germans were now flying their new Messerschmitt
262 fighter against the USAAF, only one bomber was lost in air combat
on that day, while four others were brought down by flak.
The 8th Air Force raided Berlin for the last time on 18 March 1945, using
1,327 heavy bombers. Although the Luftwaffe flew up to 50 Me-262 jet fighters
against them, Allied air superiority was almost absolute, and only eight
bombers were lost to the fighters. Flak shot down 16 more bombers, and
damaged 16 others that were forced to land in Russian-held territory.
On 16 April 1945, the USAAF high command decreed that there were no more
strategic targets worth bombing, and the air war shifted to tactical support.
The 8th Air Force performed its last raid of the war on 15 April 1945
on the Skoda munitions plant in Pilsen.
* More B-17Gs were built than all other models combined, with a total
of 8,680 out of 12,731 Fortresses built of all types. 4,035 B-17Gs were
built by Boeing, while 2,395 were built by Douglas and 2,250 by Lockheed-Vega.
The very last B-17 was delivered from the Lockheed-Vega plant on 29 July
1945.
10 B-17Gs were converted to photo-reconnaissance configuration as "F-9Cs".
They would be redesignated "FB-17G" and then "RB-17G"
after the war.
Leveraging off British technology, 12 B-17Gs were converted to the air-sea
rescue (ASR) role as the "B-17H". There were variations in the
configuration of this type, but most commonly they had all armament removed,
the chin turret replaced by search radar, and a parachutable Higgins A-1
lifeboat strapped under the fuselage. The Higgins boat was 8.2 meters
(17 feet) long, weighed 1,360 kilograms (3,000 pounds), and had twin engines
plus survival kit. It would be dropped on triple parachutes, and on hitting
the water would toss out lines on small rockets to help those in the water.
Development of the B-17H began in 1943, but a lack of available bombers
delayed service introduction until March 1945. Several B-17Hs were sent
to the Pacific during the last months of the war, and also performed ASR
duties during the Korean conflict. These aircraft were redesignated "SB-17G"
after WW II. The US Coast Guard received 30 B-17Gs upgraded to this configuration
after the war, and designated them "PB-1G".
The US Navy also operated 31 B-17Gs, including one B-17F that had been
upgraded to B-17G standards. These were used for anti-submarine patrol
as the "PB-1". There were variations in configuration, but after
the war they were generally fitted with AN/APS-20 radar in a large radome
under the bomb bay, and used for airborne early warning as the "PB-1W".
85 B-17Gs ended up in RAF hands, and as mentioned earlier were mostly
used for electronics warfare missions as the "Fortress III(SD)".
The electronics gear fitted varied considerably, but a baseline configuration
included a Monica Mark IIIA tail-warning receiver; a Jostly Mark IV VHF
jammer; four Airborne Grocer air-intercept jammers; Gee and Loran navigation
systems; and H2S radar installed in a fairing that replaced the chin turret.
By the terms of Lend-Lease, at the end of the war the British had to
return all gear provided by the Americans or scrap it. The Americans had
more Fortresses than they knew what to do with and didn't want them back,
so the British scrapped theirs.
BACK_TO_TOP
[2.4] FORTRESS ODDBALLS
* So many Fortresses were built that it was inevitable that a few were
put to unusual uses. The bombers tended to get beat up after a long number
of combat missions, and such "war weary" Fortresses were put
to use as hacks, flying ambulances, target tugs, or "lead ships",
which were brightly-painted aircraft that simply flew around to allow
bombers to form up around after takeoff.
War-weary Fortresses, sometimes called "Weary Willies", were
also put to use as "BQ-7" radio-controlled flying bombs in "Project
Aphrodite". These aircraft were stripped of armament, filled with
9 tonnes (20,000 pounds) of explosive, and fitted with radio control.
They were to take off with a pilot and copilot, who directed them toward
the target and bailed out. The unpiloted BQ-7s were to then be directed
to the target by a controller aircraft. The top of the cockpit of the
BQ-7 was cut open to make bailing out easier.
The BQ-7s were intended to be used on V-weapon sites in northern France.
They were a dismal failure, with few of the handful of missions performed
ending in success. One BQ-7 is said to have crashed after takeoff and
blasted a crater 30 meters (100 feet) in diameter, while another one broke
lock and circled around in English skies for an hour while the flight
controllers frantically tried to rope it back in.
* A handful of B-17s ended up in German hands, with most cannibalized
from Fortresses that had crash-landed over occupied Europe. One, however,
landed in Denmark intact, with the crew believing they had landed in Sweden
until German soldiers arrived to inform them of their error.
Many of these aircraft were used in technical evaluations to determine
the B-17's vulnerabilities, and to train German interceptor pilots in
tactics. Some were said to have been used to "ghost" B-17 formations,
relaying their position and course to German air-defense controllers.
Interestingly, several Fortresses were assigned to the Luftwaffe special
operations squadron KG 200, and used to drop agents as far away as Ireland
and Iraq. These aircraft were given the cover designation of "Dornier
Do-200". They were not used for deception, the Luftwaffe just didn't
have a better long-range carrier available.
* One of the most obscure users of the Fortress was the USSR. Late in
the war, RAF and USAAF bombers that had been damaged in raids over the
Reich would put down in Soviet-controlled territory rather than try to
make it back to Western bases, and in April 1945 the Red Air Force issued
a directive to its units in the field to report the location of any aircraft
of its Western Allies that were in Soviet hands.
The Soviets found about 162 aircraft, including 73 B-17s and an equal
number of B-24 Liberators. The Fortresses and Liberators that were in
the best condition were returned to the USAAF, but a number were retained
as interim heavy bombers until the USSR completed its reverse-engineering
of Boeing B-29 Superfortresses that had fallen into their hands in Siberia.
The B-29 was to go into production in Soviet state factories as the "Tupolev
Tu-4", which would be given the NATO codename "Bull".
The Red Air Force crews had no training in flying the American bombers,
and their maintenance crews had neither training nor proper spares. Many
of the aircraft had been damaged, which is why they had ended up in Soviet
hands to begin with, and their original crews had often trashed vital
items such as bombsights, radar, and radios after they landed. However,
the Soviets proved ingenious at keeping them flying, and in fact Red Air
Force crews were delighted with the B-17's handling, comparing it to a
"swallow" and the nimble PO-2 biplane trainer. In contrast,
they called the B-24 "Iron", in reference to its sluggish takeoff
characteristics and lumbering handling.
One of the oddities of the matter was that Soviet officials, with the
humorlessness and peculiar prudery that often seems to afflict ruthless
dictatorships, were indignant at the lurid nose art on the bombers, and
ordered the "filthy pictures" removed or painted out. The big
American bombers were in principle used as part of heavy bomber units,
but their main purpose was to give the Red Air Force experience in flying
such types of aircraft preparatory to flying the Tu-4. The B-17s remained
in service until 1948, when the Tu-4 began to arrive at operational squadrons.
* A number of damaged or lost Fortresses landed in neutral Switzerland
and Sweden during the war and were interned. The Swiss evaluated ten of
the interned Fortresses but did not make serious use of them. The Swedes,
in contrast, returned most of their Fortresses after the war, but were
sold nine of them at a bargain price and rebuilt them into a fairly clean
airliner configuration, with a longer nose and seats for 14 passengers.
One of these airliners was used by Denmark.
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[2.5] POSTWAR FORTRESSES
* After the end of World War II, most of the Fortresses were scrapped,
but a good number were operated in various roles for at least a decade
after the war, and many are still flying as precious "warbirds".
The Israelis managed to get their hands on three unarmed B-17s and used
them in the war of independence in 1948. Machine-gun mounts were improvised
and an artillery sight was fitted into the nose. They performed a number
of raids during that year, with whatever bombs the Israelis could scrape
up. These were the last shots fired in anger by the Fortress.
A number of Fortresses were converted to transports in the postwar period
and designated "CB-17". Some of these were fitted luxuriously
and used as VIP transports, under the designation "VB-17". Fortresses
used for training were designated "TB-17", and those assigned
to weather reconnaissance were designated "WB-17".
The US Navy PB-1W early-warning aircraft have already been mentioned,
as has the B-17H / SB-17G air-sea rescue aircraft. The SB-17G served well
into the 1950s. Brazil and Portugal both operated SB-17G variants in the
postwar years. Chile operated a few B-17Gs for search and rescue duties,
while Dominica and Bolivia each had a handful of B-17Gs that were configured
as bombers but used for a variety of duties.
Although the BQ-7 flying bomb drone had been entirely unsuccessful, after
the war Fortresses were modified as radio-controlled drones, with the
designation "QB-17G". A number of other Fortresses were modified
as manned "DB-17G" drone directors. The QB-17G was far more
satisfactory than the BQ-7, and was used to collect atmospheric samples
from the nuclear-bomb test at Eniwetok Atoll in July 1946, as well at
later weapons tests into the early 1950s. The QB-17Gs also served as aerial
targets through the 1950s, with the last of these drones shot down in
1959.
Echoing the experience of the Luftwaffe's KG 200 during the war, in the
1950s the CIA operated a number of unarmed black-painted B-17s over Indochina
and, through the assistance of the Nationalist Chinese, mainland China.
Little is known about their missions, but they were likely used for agent
drops and intelligence-gathering.
Fortresses were also used for a variety of test programs, such as launch
platforms for early missiles such as the "JB-2 Loon", which
was a US-built V-1 "buzz bomb".
Three B-17Gs were modified to be used as engine test platforms, with
a piston or turboprop engine fitted into the nose. The B-17's cyclones
were retained. Engines tested included the Pratt & Whitney XT-34 turboprop,
which provided 5,500 horsepower, and the Wright XT-35 turboprop, which
provided 5,000 horsepower. These engines were powerful enough to keep
the B-17 flying with all other engines shut down and their propellers
feathered.
* B-17s were also popular in purely civilian roles after the war. TWA
operated one as an executive transport in the immediate postwar years,
and many were modified as fire-bombers and pesticide sprayers.
The increasing cost of spares and maintenance finally ended the service
of the B-17 in these roles in the 1980s, but enough Fortresses survived
to make them a reasonably common warbird. Many were restored to their
armed configuration, and roughly a dozen are flying. These include the
Confederate Air Force's SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY and TEXAS RAIDER, the Lone
Star Air Museum's pristine THUNDERBIRD, the EAA's ALUMINUM OVERCAST, and
others such as MISS ANGELA, SALLY B, CHUCKIE, NINE-O-NINE, FUDDY DUDDY,
SHADY LADY, and MEMPHIS BELLE.
While some of these aircraft have the names of famous Fortresses, very
few of these survivors actually saw combat. Work continues on restoring
more old Fortresses to their wartime glory.
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[2.6] FOOTNOTE: THE BOEING MODEL 307 STRATOLINER
* While Boeing was working on the Model 299, the company was also considering
a four-engine airliner using many of the same design elements of the bomber,
with the concept originally designated "Model 300". The effort
suffered a setback in 1936, when United and American Airlines decided
to work with Douglas to build the four-engine DC-4 airliner, but PanAm
and TWA were still interested in the Boeing machine, and in fact PanAm
even provided funding to Boeing for development.
The Model 300 design evolved into the "Model 307 Stratoliner",
with the first aircraft performing its initial flight on 31 December 1938.
The Model 307 could be essentially described as a B-17C mated a new fuselage,
with a streamlined, whale-like shape similar to that of the Curtiss C-46
Commando.
The Stratoliner had a crew of pilot, copilot, flight engineer, and two
attendants. It could carry 33 passengers in normal seating, or could be
converted to nine reclining seats and 16 sleeper berths. The Model 307
was powered by civil Wright Cyclone GR-1820-G-102 engines, with 1,100
horsepower each for takeoff and driving constant-speed variable propellers.
Although the initial Stratoliner was to be delivered to PanAm, it crashed
during a flight demonstration on 18 March 1939, with all 13 on board killed.
Boeing promptly changed the design to feature a new, taller vertical tailplane,
similar to that which would be featured on the B-17E.
BOEING MODEL 307 STRATOLINER:
_____________________ _________________ _______________________
spec metric english
_____________________ _________________ _______________________
wingspan 32.61 meters 107 feet
length 22.66 meters 74 feet 4 inches
height 6.34 meters 20 feet 10 inches
empty weight 13,610 kilograms 30,000 pounds
loaded weight 19,050 kilograms 42,000 pounds
max speed at altitude 395 KPH 245 MPH / 215 KT
service ceiling 7,985 meters 26,200 feet
range 3,845 kilometers 2,390 MI / 2,080 NMI
_____________________ _________________ _______________________
Nine more Stratoliners were built and delivered in 1940. Three were bought
by PanAm, with the designation "S-307", and six by TWA, with
designation "SA-307B". Howard Hughes wanted to buy a Model 307
for a round-the-world flight, but was told he would have to wait until
the TWA deliveries were completed. He got around this obstacle by the
simple measure of buying TWA and taking control of the first Stratoliner
to be delivered to the airline. This aircraft was fitted with extra fuel
tanks and P&W R-2600 Twin Wasp engines, receiving the designation
"SB-307B", but war intervened and the flight didn't happen.
In December 1941, the TWA Stratoliners were impressed into the USAAF as
VIP transports, painted olive drab and given the designation "C-75",
though they were actually operated by TWA under military contract. They
were returned to civilian service in July 1944 and were upgraded to the
"SA-307B-1" configuration, with B-17G wings and horizontal tailplane,
1,200 horsepower Cyclones, and a new electrical system derived from the
B-29 Superfortress. Cabin pressurization was deleted and internal partitions
were removed to increase accommodation to 38 seats.
Hand-me-down TWA Stratoliners were operated for a time in the postwar
period by the French Aigle Azur airline on the Indochina route. Only one
Stratoliner survives today. It was refurbished by volunteers at Boeing
in Seattle in the early 1990s and is formally the property of the Smithsonian
National Air & Space Museum, to be delivered to the museum's Dulles
Airport Annex when it opens in 2003. The aircraft was ditched in Puget
Sound in March 2002 after a fuel-system failure, but it was raised and
repaired.
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[2.7] COMMENTS, SOURCES, & REVISION HISTORY
* The Fortress is an aircraft that, possibly sadly, I have taken for granted
much of my life. I knew about it when I was little, and even recollect
one time when I was in college some decades past whiling away tense moments
before an exam by fantasizing about the drone of a Fortress formation
with Focke-Wulfs screaming through it, guns blazing.
I have seen Fortresses a number of times, I'm not sure how many. Not
many years ago, one flew over my house in Loveland, Colorado, its Cyclone
engines rumbling. Sometimes life hands you one for free.
* Sources include:
GREAT AIRCRAFT OF WWII, by Alfred Price & Mike Spick, Chartwell Books,
1997.
B-17 FLYING FORTRESS, by Roger Freeman, 1983, from THE GREAT BOOK OF
WORLD WAR II AIRPLANES, Zokeisha Publications.
AMERICAN WARPLANES OF WORLD WAR II, David Donald editor, Airtime Publications,
1995.
BRITISH WARPLANES OF WORLD WAR II, Daniel J. Marsh editor, Airtime Publications,
1998. The short chapter on the Fortress in this book was very useful for
clearing up the otherwise confusing history of the Fortress in British
service.
BOEING AIRCRAFT CUTAWAYS by Mike Badrocke & Bill Gunston, Barnes
& Noble, 2001. This book had some nice materials on the Model 247
and Model 307.
"B-17 Flying Fortress: Queen Of The Skies", by William M. Hess,
WINGS OF FAME, Volume 6, 1997, 38:103.
"Russia's US Bomber Force" by Vladimir Ratkin, COMBAT AIRCRAFT,
January 2002, 87:89.
* Revision history:
v1.0 / 01 jul 99 / gvg
v1.1.0 / 01 may 02 / gvg / Added Model 247 & 307 info, cosmetic changes.
v1.1.1 / 01 jul 02 / gvg / Added info on B-17 in Soviet service.
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