Copyright 2010 by Brandon Cope
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Consolidated B-24 Liberator heavy bomber
The B-24 Liberator was the second of America's wartime heavy
bombers, entering production in June 1941, with over 18,000 eventually
being built. While it was more versatile than the more famous B-17
Flying Fortress (p.W:DF85) it was not as popular. The B-24 could fly
father, faster and higher than the B-17 and do it with a greater load.
However, the B-24 was a harder plane to fly and was not nearly as
resistant to battle damage; in particular it's smaller wing was
relatively easy to destroy for a plane it's size. Despite this, the
B-24 had a slightly lower loss rate than the B-17.
The B-24 was extensively used in the Pacific and Asia, where it's
long range (for patrols over the ocean) and high altitude (for flying
The Hump in the China-Burma-India theatre) were assets. Aside from it's
role as a long range strategic bomber, it was also used for photo
reconnaissance, maritime reconnaissance, antisubmarine and transport
roles. The British used a few to supply SOE agents and resistance
movements in Europe.
The Liberator had four engines mounted on a high wing and had two
distinctive "barn door" rudders. It also used tricycle landing gear.
The belly turret was fully retractable, but affected stability
negatively when extended. The -J model entered production in 1943 and
addressed a vulnerability to frontal attacks by adding a nose turret.
Some 6,700 were built.
The B-24J has a crew of ten: Pilot, co-pilot,
navigator/radio-operator, bombardier and six gunners (ventral, dorsal,
nose and tail turrets, two hand aimed waist guns). The dorsal and
ventral turrets were capable of full rotation, the nose and tail
turrets were partial rotation. The Liberator uses 161 gallons of
aviation fuel per
hour at routine
usage.
Subassemblies: Heavy Bomber chassis with Good
streamlining +5, Heavy
Bomber
Wings +4, 4¥Small AFV Engine Pods +3, 2¥full rotation Medium
Weapon turrets +1, 2¥partial rotation Medium Weapon Turrets +1,
three retractable wheels +2.
Powertrain: 4¥895-kW aerial HP turbo-supercharged
gasoline
engines [Pods] with 4¥895-kW props, and 2,814-gallon self-sealing
fuel tanks [Wings and Body], 4,000-kw batteries
Occupancy: 10 CS Cargo: 20.
Armor
All: 3/5
Pilot/Co-Pilot/bombardier/navigator: B +0/30
Dorsal/Ventral Turret Gunners: FB 0/+30
Nose/Tail Gunners: F 0/+30
Waist Gunners: RLB 0/+30
Armament
2¥Long Aircraft HMG/Browning M-2 [Tur#1-4:F] (400 rounds each) *
Long Aircraft HMG/Browning M-2 [Body:R,L] (400 rounds each)
10¥500-lb bombs [Body:U]
* linked to fire as pair in each turret
Equipment
Body: Large radio receiver and transmitter, backup driver
option, precision navigation
instruments,
IFF, autopilot, advanced bombsight, 8,800-lb bomb bay. Wings: 4,000-lb hardpoint each. Turrets: Universal mounts
Statistics
Size: 64'x110'x18' |
Payload: 12 tons |
Lwt: 28 tons |
Volume: 1,840
|
Maint.: 20 hours |
Price: $101,900 |
HT: 9.
HP: 1,100 [body], 413 [each wing], 150 [each pod], 75 [each
turret], 100 [each
wheel]
aSpeed: 300
|
aAccel: 4
|
aDecel: 10
|
aMR: 2.5
|
aSR: 2
|
Stall: 105
|
Design Notes
Design speed was 310 mph. The historical speed has been used, as well
as the actual wing area (1,048 square feet). Wing cost, weight and HP
was divided by two. Loaded
weight was decreased by 5.5%. Historical cost was $298,000.
aSR was reduced by 1. There should be a -1 to Piloting rolls for
precision flying, -3 if the belly turret is extended.
The stats above assume a 5,000-lb bombload and that the 450-gallon
auxiliary wing tanks are empty. Maximum bombload was 12,800 lbs and
maximum takeoff weight was 35.5 tons.
Up to 800 gallons of fuel in auxiliary tanks could be fitted in the
bomb bay if required.
Variants
The initial B-24A (1941) was primarily used by the British, who dubbed
it the Liberator I. It mounted a single Browning .303 MG (Aircraft LMG)
in each of the nose, dorsal, ventral and two waist positions (the
American planes mounted a single Browning .50-cal in the nose, belly
and both waist positions). Two .30-cal guns were also in the tail.
Maximum bombload was 4,000 lbs. Top speed was 293 mph. Some carried a
pack of four 20mm Hispano cannons (20mm Long Aircraft AC) under the
forward fuselage for anti-sub duties. Only 29 were built (20 of which
went to the RAF).
The Liberator II (1942) only served with the British. It mounted dorsal
and tail power turrets, each with four Browning .303's, as well as
single guns in the nose, ventral and both waist positions. Fuel tanks
were self-sealing. Top speed was 263 mph due to the increased drag of
the turrets. Some 140 were built.
The LB-30 (1942) were 75 planes similar to the Liberator II, but used
by the US (they were requisitioned from the British order after the
attack on Pearl Harbor). They saw operational use in Java, Panama and
the Aleutians early in the war. They differed from the Liberator II's
primarily in armament, mounted two Browning .50's in the upper turret,
two hand operated .50-'s in the tail and single .50's in the nose,
belly and waist locations. any were converted into unarmed transports;
29 were eventually returned to the British.
The B-24C (1941) added the turbo-supercharged engines of the lone
XB-24B and added self-sealing tanks. Powered turrets were installed in
the dorsal and tail positions, each with .50-cal Browning M-2's. It
retained the single nose, waist and ventral guns. Only nine were
built.
The B-24D (1942) was the first major production of the Liberator, with
2,738 being built. The armament was similar to the -C, but no ventral
or waist guns were initially provided. The 77'th plane added a ventral
turret with two guns; it was retractable and aimed via periscope.
However, the sighting system was highly unreliable and after 287 planes
the single ventral gun was reinstalled. Eventually, a manned ball
turret like that on the B-17E was installed for ventral defense. The
two waist guns were also later restored. During the production run, two
additional nose guns were installed, although the bombardier could only
operate one at a time. Bombload was increased to 8,800-lbs internal
with two 4.000-lb wing hardpoints. It introduced 450 gallon reserve
fuel tanks in the wings, but they could not be used directly -- the
fuel had to be pumped into a main wing tank.
The 801 B-24E's (1942) were similar to the late-model -D's, but the
ventral turret was replaced by a single machine-gun. Most were retained
as trainers and only a small number saw combat.
The B-24H (1943) were generally similar to the -D, except they
installed a powered nose turret (with two Browning .50's) in an effort
to defend against frontal attacks. 3,100 were built. 430 of the very
similar B-24G were built.
The B-24L (1944) was an attempt to save weight (while the plane's
weight had increased steadily, engine power had not(. The ventral
turret was replaced with two hand-aimed guns. The rear turret was
unpowered. Almost 1,700 were constructed.
About 2,500 of the B-24M (1944) were built, significantly differing
from the -G only in having an unpowered tail turret. Very few saw
service and a few built afer June 1944 had only one flight -- from the
factory to the scrap yard.
The F-7A & B were 178 aircraft modified to carry six recon cameras
(nose and bomb bay for the -A, all in the bay for the -B). Armament was
retained. Most were used in the China-Burma-India theatre.
The PB4Y-1 were "navalized" Liberators used by the US Navy for recon
and anti-sub duty. They were originally based on the -D, but production
included all the major land-based variants.
The C-87 (1942) was a transport version, carrying 25 men. The first 73
were converted from existing aircraft and an addition 287 were built
from scratch. The RAF received 24. The six C-87A's were "executive"
transports with only 16 seats.
The C-109 was a tanker version built from 208 existing -J and -L
airframes, intended to supply B-29's to be based in China (a need that
evaporated with the capture of the Marianas Islands). It was normally
unarmed and carried 2,900 gallons of additional fuel in eight fuselage
tanks..