Model Airplane News November, 1940 Douglas B-19 Superbomber Model Airplane News Cover Art for November, 1940 by Jo Kotula Click to Enlarge The Douglas XB-19 was the largest bomber aircraft built for the United States Army Air Corps (until the B-36 in 1946.) It was originally given the designation XBLR-2 (XBLR- denoting Experimental Bomber, Long Range). Douglas B-19 Superbomber Click to Enlarge Here is what a reporter for Time Magazine wrote about the unveiling of the B-19: "...
Finally, one day last week, the B-19 was ready to roll. In Douglas Aircraft Co.'s huge hangar alongside the field at Santa Monica, Calif., workmen had taken down the curtain behind which they had riveted and shaped her body these past three years. The doors rumbled open. Her enormous wings outstretched, the B-19 was shoved to the door, carefully rolled out. What the crowd of onlookers saw was the biggest airplane ever built—not a flying super-powered trunk lid like the late Russian Maxim Gorky, with engine piled on engine to make up for rough design, but a flying machine as sleek and carefully designed as a Spitfire. Rolling through the door the B-19 looked even bigger than she had in the hangar. To get her out, they had had to deflate her tires and weight her tail, so that the nose wheel of her tricycle landing gear was off the ground. Even then her rudder barely cleared the top of the door. And no wonder. For standing in take-off position, the top of her rudder is more than 42 ft. above the ground, higher than an ordinary three-story building... The truth is somewhat less-than-whelming The purpose of the XB-19 project was to test the flight characteristics and design techniques associated with giant bombers. Douglas Aircraft Company strongly wanted to cancel the project, because it was extremely expensive. Despite advances in technology that made the XB-19 obsolete before it was even completed, the Army Air Corps felt that the prototype would be useful for testing. Its construction took so long that competition for the contracts to make the XB-35 and XB-36 occurred two months before its first flight. The plane finally flew on June 27, 1941, more than three years after the construction contract was awarded. After completion of testing, the XB-19 served as a cargo carrier until it was scrapped in 1949. Here is a video of the rollout of the Douglas B-19 Superbomber: Click Here for more information about the Douglas B-19 Superbomber. Click to go back and select another cover. | |||||||
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