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XB-43 Jetmaster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

XB-43 Jetmaster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

XB-43
Type Bomber
Manufacturer Douglas Aircraft Company
Maiden flight 1946-05-17
Number built 2

The Douglas XB-43 was a jet powered development of the XB-42, replacing the piston engines of the XB-42 with two General Electric J35 engines of 4,000 pounds-force (17.8 kN) thrust each. Despite being the first American jet bomber to fly, it suffered stability issues and the two prototypes spent several years testing engines.

The first prototype took flight on May 17, 1946 at Muroc Army Air Base. Douglas delivered the second prototype, designated YB-43, in April 1948. That aircract was nicknamed Versatile II and flew until it was turned over to the Smithsonian Institution in 1954. It now rests in the Smithsonian's Paul Garber Facility in Suitland, Maryland.

[edit] History

Army Air Forces (AAF) leaders in the Air Materiel Command began to consider the possibilities of jet-propelled bombers as far back as October 1943. At that time, Douglas Aircraft was just beginning to design a promising twin-engine bomber designated the XB-42. Reciprocating engines powered this airplane but they were buried in the fuselage, leaving the laminar-airfoil wing clean of any drag-inducing pylon mounts or engine cowlings. The airframe appeared ideally suited to test turbo-jet propulsion. Douglas confirmed the feasibility of the concept and the AAF amended the XB-42 contract in March 1944 to include the development of two turbojet-powered XB-43s.

The Douglas design team convinced the Army that modifying the XB-42 static test airframe into the first XB-43 was a relatively straightforward process that would save time and money compared to developing a brand-new design. Douglas replaced the two Allison V-1710 engines with a pair of General Electric (GE) J35 turbojets, then cut two air intakes into each side of the fuselage, aft of the pressurized cockpit. Removing the propellers and drive shafts freed enough space for two long jet exhaust ducts. Without the propellers, there was no chance of striking the blade tips on the runway and the bottom section of the vertical fin disappeared, too. Douglas compensated for the loss of yaw stability by enlarging the upper vertical fin.

As Douglas predicted, the work itself was not overly complex but almost two years were required to ready the airplane for flight. The end of World War II caused a general slow-down within the aircraft industry and GE was late delivering the engines. When they were at last installed and tested on the ground, one of the units failed catastrophically. Compressor blades exploded through the engine casing, damaging the surrounding airframe, and injuring a ground technician. Another seven-month delay ensued for repairs. America's first turbojet bomber finally flew from Muroc Army Air Base on May 17, 1946, piloted by Douglas test pilot, Bob Brush, and engineer Russell Thaw.

Douglas Aircraft was keen to mass-produce the new bomber and the AAF considered ordering 50. The company was poised to roll out as many as 200 B-43s per month in two versions: a bomber equipped with a clear plastic nose for the bombardier, and an attack airplane without the clear nose and bombing station but carrying 16 forward-firing, .50 caliber machine guns and thirty-six 5-inch rockets. Nothing came of these plans. The AAF was already moving ahead with a new bomber, the North American XB-45 Tornado, designed from the outset for turbojet power and promising a quantum leap in every category of performance. There was too much of the propeller and not enough of the turbojet embodied in the basic design of the Douglas bomber.

Caught in a momentous technological shift, the XB-43 contributed to developing procedures for flying the new jet bombers, and it gave yeoman service testing new turbojet engines. Douglas completed the second airplane, AAF serial number 44-61509, in May 1947 and delivered it to Muroc Air Force Base, California, in April 1948. The AAF soon replaced one J35 turbojet engine with a General Electric J47. AAF personnel named the airplane Versatile II. When the clear plastic nose began to crack from variations in temperature at high and low altitudes, mechanics fashioned a more durable replacement made from plywood. To keep it flying, the U. S. Air Force cannibalized parts from the first XB-43 after it was damaged in February 1951. Versatile II flew more than 300 hours until its retirement in late 1953.

[edit] Specifications (XB-43)

General characteristics

  • Crew: 3
  • Length: 51 ft 5 in (15.7 m)
  • Wingspan: 71 ft 2 in (21.7 m)
  • Height: 24 ft 3 in (7.4 m)
  • Wing area: 563 ft² (52.3 m²)
  • Empty weight: 22,890 lb (10,382 kg)
  • Loaded weight: 40,000 lb (18,144 kg)
  • Powerplant:General Electric J35-GE-3 turbojets, 4,000 lbf (17.8 kN) each

Performance

Armament

  • Guns: none (Planned attack variant was to have 8x.50cal guns in solid nose, but this was never installed)
  • Bombs: 8,000 lb (3,600 kg)

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