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{{Short description|American WWII-era heavy bomber}} | |||
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{{Redirect|B-17|other uses|B17 (disambiguation)}} | |||
|name=B-17 Flying Fortress | |||
{{Redirect2|B-17 Bomber|B-17 Flying Fortress|the video games|B-17 Bomber (video game)|and|B-17 Flying Fortress (video game)}} | |||
|type=] | |||
{{Redirect|Flying Fortress|the film|Flying Fortress (film)}} | |||
|manufacturer=] | |||
{{Use American English|date=June 2018}} | |||
|image=Image:B-17_on_bomb_run.jpg | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}} | |||
|caption=USAAF B-17G-30-DL on a bomb run.</small> | |||
<!-- This article is a part of ]. Please see ] for recommended layout. --> | |||
|designer= | |||
{{Infobox aircraft | |||
|first flight=] ]<ref name="first flight"/> | |||
|name = B-17 Flying Fortress | |||
|introduced=1938 | |||
|image = File:B17 - Chino Airshow 2014 (framed).jpg | |||
|retired=1958, ] | |||
|image_border = | |||
|status=Flying | |||
|image_caption = A B-17G, '']'', performing at the 2014 Chino Airshow in ] | |||
|primary user=] | |||
|aircraft_type = ] | |||
|more users= | |||
|national_origin = United States | |||
|produced=1936-1945 | |||
|manufacturer = ] | |||
|number built=12,731<ref>Yenne 2006, p.8.</ref> | |||
|designer = | |||
|unit cost=$238,329<<ref>Bowers 1976</ref> | |||
|first_flight = 28 July 1935<ref name= "first flight" /> | |||
|variants with their own articles=]<br/>] | |||
|introduction = April 1938 | |||
|status = Retired; small number in service as ]s | |||
|primary_user = ] | |||
|more_users = ] | |||
|produced = 1936–1945 | |||
|number_built = 12,731<ref name= "Yenne.p8" /><ref>Angelucci and Matricardi 1988, p. 46.</ref> | |||
|developed_from = | |||
|variants = {{plainlist| | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
|developed_into = ] | |||
}} | }} | ||
The ] '''Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress''' was the first mass-produced, four-engine heavy ] ]. Developed by ] in 1936, it evolved through numerous ], B-17A to G. | |||
The '''Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress''' is an American four-engined ] aircraft developed in the 1930s for the ] (USAAC). A fast and high-flying bomber, the B-17 was used primarily in the ] and dropped more bombs than any other aircraft during ]. It is the ] of all time, behind the American four-engined ] and the German multirole, twin-engined ]. The B-17 was also employed in transport, anti-submarine warfare, and search and rescue roles. | |||
It was primarily used for the epic daylight ] campaign against German industrial targets during ] as part of the ] ] based in ] and the ] based in ] as well as participating in, to a lesser extent, the ]. | |||
In a USAAC competition, ] prototype Model 299/XB-17 outperformed two other entries but crashed, losing the initial 200-bomber contract to the ]. Still, the Air Corps ordered 13 more B-17s for further evaluation, which were introduced into service in 1938. The B-17 evolved through numerous ]<ref>Parker 2013, pp. 35, 40–48.</ref><ref>Herman 2012, pp. 292–299, 305, 333.</ref> but from its inception, the USAAC (from 1941 the ], USAAF) promoted the aircraft as a strategic weapon. It was a relatively fast, high-flying, long-range bomber with heavy defensive armament at the expense of bomb load. It also developed a reputation for toughness based upon stories and photos of badly damaged B-17s safely returning to base. | |||
The B-17 is one of the most significant combat aircraft ever built. Its legacy was as a bomber that epitomized its "flying fortress" accolade; the B-17 could deliver a devastating load, yet take a lot of punishment and keep on flying. It was loved by its crews for bringing them home despite extensive battle damage.<ref>''Pilot Training Manual for the B-17 Flying Fortress'' issued by by USAAF. Quoted on the section of . With examples; and </ref><ref>Browne 2001</ref><ref>General ], commander the ] during ] described the plane as "The best bomber which was ever built. She could handle extensive damage and still stay in the air.".</ref> | |||
The B-17 saw early action in the ], where it conducted air raids against Japanese shipping and airfields.<ref>Parker 2013, p. 41.</ref> But it was primarily employed by the USAAF in the ] component of the Allied ] over Europe, complementing ]'s ]s in attacking German industrial, military and civilian targets.<ref name="Carey Pointblank" /> Of the roughly {{Nowrap|1.5 million tons}} of bombs dropped on ] and its occupied territories by Allied aircraft, over {{Nowrap|640,000 tons}} (42.6%) were dropped from B-17s.<ref name= "Yenne.p46" /> | |||
At the start of 2024, ] remain in flying condition.{{Citation needed|reason=Do not add sources from SimpleFlying per WP:SIMPLEFLYING|date=June 2024}} About 50 survive in storage or are on static display, the oldest of which is '']'', a B-17D which was flown in combat in the Pacific on the first day of the United States' involvement in World War II. There are also several reasonably complete wrecks, such as underwater, that have been found. B-17 survivors gained national attention in 2022 in the United States, when one was destroyed in a fatal mid-air collision with another ] at an airshow. | |||
==Design and development== | |||
The prototype B-17 was designed by a team of engineers led by E. Gifford Emery and ] and built at ]'s own expense.<ref name="299 Development"></ref> It combined features of the ] (another Boeing bomber in development) with proven features of Boeing's other aircraft.<ref>Salecker 2001, p.46.</ref> It first flew on ] ], as the Boeing '''Model 299''', with Boeing chief test pilot Les Tower at the controls.<ref name="first flight">Boeing.com 2006</ref> During a demonstration later that year at ] in ], the Model 299 competed with the ] and ] Model 146 for a ] contract to build a "multi-engined" bomber. At that time "multi-engined" generally meant two engines. The four-engine Boeing design displayed superior performance, but Army officials were daunted by the much greater expense per aircraft.<ref>Saleker 2001, p.48.</ref> Development continued on the Boeing Model 299 and on ] ], the Army Air Corps test pilots Ployer Hill and Tower took the Model 299 on a second evaluation flight. The crew forgot to disengage the airplane's "gust lock" — a device that held the bomber's movable control surfaces in place while the plane was parked on the ground; the aircraft took off, entered a steep climb, stalled, nosed over and crashed, killing the crew.<ref></ref><ref name="299 Development"/> Since the crashed Model 299 could not finish the evaluation, the Army ordered the two-engine Douglas B-18 Bolo.<ref name="299 Development"/> | |||
== Development == | |||
] | |||
Regardless, the USAAC had been impressed by the prototype's performance, and, in January ], the Air Corps ordered, alongside 99 B-18s, 13 '''YB-17'''s with a number of significant changes from the Model 299, including more powerful ]-39 Cyclone engines replacing the original Pratt & Whitney R-1690 radials. <!-- The main structural and flight control problems with the B-17 didn't get resolved until the redesign (after a U.S. California flight accident revealed the problems) with the introduction of a dorsal fin and secondary engine feedback instruments in the B-17 Flying Fortress Model E. The new dorsal fin greatly enhanced its flight characteristics and also its structural integrity. It was reputedly much easier to fly than its contemporaries, the ] and ].--> | |||
=== Origins === | |||
On ] ], 12 of the 13 YB-17s were delivered to ], Virginia, and used to help develop heavy bomber techniques.<ref name="Y1B-17"></ref> Their first mission, following lead navigator Lt. ], was to "intercept" the Italian ocean liner ''Rex'' 800 miles off the Atlantic coast and take photographs. The successfull mission was widely publicised.<ref></ref> The remaining YB-17 was used for flight testing.<ref name="Y1B-17"/> | |||
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| image1 =Boeing XB-17 (Model 299).jpg | |||
| image_caption1 = Model 299 ''NX13372'' | |||
| image3 =Boeing Model 299 crash.jpg | |||
| image_caption3 = Crashed Model 299 | |||
| image4 =Boeing Y1B-17 in flight.jpg | |||
| image_caption4 = Boeing Y1B-17 in flight | |||
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On 8 August 1934, the USAAC tendered a proposal for a multiengine bomber to replace the ]. The Air Corps was looking for a bomber capable of reinforcing the air forces in Hawaii, Panama, and Alaska.<ref name="Tate.p164" /> Requirements were for it to carry a "useful bombload" at an altitude of {{convert|10000|ft|m|abbr=on}} for 10 hours with a top speed of at least {{convert|200|mph|km/h|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Swan Mil p74" /> | |||
They also desired, but did not require, a bomber with a range of {{convert|2000|mi|km|-2|abbr=on}} and a speed of {{cvt|250|mph|kn km/h}}. The competition for the air corps contract was to be decided by a "fly-off" between Boeing's design, the ], and the ] at ] in ]. | |||
The first B-17s went into active service in ].<ref name="enter service"></ref> Prior to the ] relatively few B-17s were in use by the Army, but production quickly accelerated immediately afterwards, and the aircraft went on to serve in every ] combat zone. By the time production ended in May ], 12,731 aircraft had been built by ], ] and ] (a subsidiary of ]).<ref> Yenne 2006, p. 8. </ref> | |||
The prototype B-17, with the Boeing factory designation of Model 299, was designed by a team of engineers led by E. Gifford Emery and ], and was built at Boeing's own expense.<ref name="WoF p41" /> It combined features of the company's experimental ] bomber and ] transport.<ref name="Swan Mil p74" /> The B-17's armament consisted of five .30 caliber (7.62 mm) ]s, with a payload up to {{convert|4800|lb|kg|abbr=on}} of bombs on two racks in the bomb bay behind the cockpit. The aircraft was powered by four ] Hornet ]s, each producing {{convert|750|hp|kW|-2|abbr=on}} at {{convert|7000|ft|m|-2|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p291-2" /> | |||
==Operational service== | |||
] | |||
Richard Williams, a reporter for the ''Seattle Times'' coined the name "Flying Fortress" when the Model 299 was rolled out, bristling with multiple ] installations.<ref>Yenne 2006, p. 12.</ref> Boeing was quick to see the value of the name and had it trademarked for use. Aviation writer ] has reported that, among the combat aircrews that flew bombers in World War II, the B-17 was referred to as the "Queen of the Bombers." | |||
The first flight of the Model 299 was on {{Nowrap|28 July}} 1935 with Boeing chief test pilot Leslie Tower at the controls.<ref name="first flight" /><ref name="Sal.p46" /> The day before, Richard Williams, a reporter for '']'', coined the name "Flying Fortress" when – observing the large number of machine guns sticking out from the new aircraft – he described it as a "15-ton flying fortress" in a picture caption.<ref>Freeman 1993, p. 8.</ref> The most distinctive mount was in the nose, which allowed the single machine gun to be fired toward nearly all frontal angles.<ref>. ''Popular Science Monthly'', August 1937.</ref> | |||
The first use of the B-17 (the B-17C) as the '''Fortress I''' in service with the RAF was against ] on ] ].<ref>Yenne 2006, p.23.</ref> By September, the RAF had lost eight to combat or accidents. They had also uncovered problems with flying it at high altitudes; at 30,000 ft they were unable to hit their targets, and temperatures were so low that the machine guns froze up.<ref></ref> | |||
Boeing was quick to see the value of the name and had it trademarked for use.{{NoteTag |1 = The 1 January 1938 ''Air Corps News Letter'' noted the Langley Field correspondent used the appellation "Jeep" to the B-17, which it objected to as "not befitting" the aircraft and adding, "Why not let the term 'Flying Fortress' suffice?" <ref>{{citation |url=http://newpreview.afnews.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-110421-039.pdf |title= Performances of B-17's invokes enthusiasm |work=Air Corps News Letter |volume= XXI |number= 1 |date=1 January 1938 |page=7 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150903213218/http://newpreview.afnews.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-110421-039.pdf |archive-date=3 September 2015 }}</ref> }} Boeing also claimed in some of the early press releases that Model 299 was the first combat aircraft that could continue its mission if one of its four engines failed.<ref>. ''Popular Mechanics'', October 1935.</ref> On {{Nowrap|20 August 1935}}, the prototype flew from Seattle to Wright Field in nine hours and three minutes with an average ground speed of {{cvt|252|mph|kn km/h}}, much faster than the competition.<ref name="NYTimes.299Record" /> | |||
For the ], the B-17 and other bombers were made effective at level bombing from high altitudes by the use of the then secret ], which was essentially a optical electro-mechanical gyrostabilized computer that computed input variables by the bombardier which determined the point in space at which the bombers ] type would be released to hit the target (A.P.) during daylight bombing missions and sorties. The bombardier essentially took over flight control of the bomber during the bomb run.<ref></ref> | |||
At the fly-off, the four-engined Boeing's performance was superior to those of the twin-engine DB-1 and Model 146. In March 1935 Army Chief of Staff General ] created ] and promoted lieutenant colonel ] to brigadier general to become the head of GHQ Air Force. MacArthur and Andrews both believed that the capabilities of large four-engined aircraft exceeded those of shorter-ranged, twin-engine aircraft, and that the B-17 was better suited to new, emerging USAAC doctrine.<ref name="Zamzow.33" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://media.defense.gov/2016/Mar/14/2001480192/-1/-1/0/0908GHQ.PDF|title=GHQ Air Force: This strange arrangement in 1935 split the Air Corps into two camps—but it led the way to an independent Air Force Page 64-66|work=Air Force Magazine|date=September 2008|access-date=January 3, 2024}}</ref> Their opinions were shared by the air corps procurement officers, and even before the competition had finished, they suggested buying 65 B-17s.<ref name="Tate 165" /><ref name="Zamzow.34" /> | |||
For this reason the ] strategy was to use daylight precision bombing of targets whereas ] resorted to nighttime area bombing. | |||
On 30 October 1935, a test flight determining the rate of climb and service ceiling was planned. The command pilot was Major ], Wright Field Material Division Chief of the Flying Branch, his first flight in the Model 299. Copilot was Lieutenant Donald Putt, while Boeing chief test pilot Leslie R. Tower was behind the pilots in an advisory role. Also on board were Wright Field test observer John Cutting and mechanic Mark Koegler. The plane stalled and spun into the ground soon after takeoff, bursting into flames. Though initially surviving the impact, Hill died within a few hours, and Tower on 19 November. Post-accident interviews with Tower and Putt determined the control surface ] had not been released.<ref name="Museum">{{cite web |url=http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=2478 |title=Model 299 Crash, 15 November 1935 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070516004104/http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=2478 |archive-date=16 May 2007 |access-date=18 February 2024 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> Doyle notes, "The loss of Hill and Tower, and the Model 299, was directly responsible for the creation of the modern written ] used by pilots to this day."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Doyle |first1=David |title=B-17 Flying Fortress, Vol. 1: Boeing's Model 299 through B-17D in World War II |date=2020 |publisher=Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. |location=Atglen |isbn=9780764359552 |pages=6–7}}</ref><ref name="Checks"/> | |||
Before the advent of long-range ] escorts, B-17s had only their ] ]s to rely on for defense for the bombing runs over Europe. To address this problem, the United States developed the bomb group formation, which evolved into the staggered ] formation where all the B-17s could safely cover any others in their formation with their machine guns, making a formation of the bombers a dangerous target to engage by enemy fighters.<ref></ref><ref></ref> However, the use of this rigid formation meant that individual planes could not engage in ]: they had to always fly in a straight line which made them vulnerable to the German ] ]. Additionally, German fighter planes later used the tactic of high-speed strafing passes rather than engaging with individual aircraft to inflict maximum damage with minimum risk. As a result the B-17s' loss rate was up to 25% on some early missions (60 of 291 B-17s were lost in combat on the fourth ]<ref>Caiden 1960</ref>) and it wasn't until the advent of an effective long-range fighter escort—the ]—that the B-17 became strategically potent. | |||
] formation to concentrate defensive machine gun fire.]] | |||
The crashed Model 299 could not finish the evaluation, thus disqualifying it from the competition.<ref name="Zamzow.34" /> While the Air Corps was still enthusiastic about the aircraft's potential, Army officials were daunted by its cost;<ref name="Sal.p48" /> Douglas quoted a unit price of $58,200 ({{inflation|US-GDP|58200|1935|r=-3|fmt=eq}}{{Inflation/fn|US-GDP}}) based on a production order of 220 aircraft, compared with $99,620 ({{inflation|US-GDP|99620|1935|r=-3|fmt=eq}}{{Inflation/fn|US-GDP}} ) from Boeing.<ref name="Francillon Doug p201-2" /> MacArthur's successor, Army Chief of Staff ], canceled the order for 65 YB-17s and ordered 133 of the twin-engined Douglas B-18 Bolo, instead. Secretary of War ] in October 1938 decided that no four-engine bombers, including B-17s, would be purchased by the War Department in 1939.<ref name="Tate 165" /><ref name="Zamzow.34" /><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.airandspaceforces.com/article/rise-of-the-air-corps|title=Rise of the Air Corps|work=Air & Space Forces Magazine|date=May 12, 2022|access-date=January 3, 2024}}</ref> | |||
The B-17 was noted for its ability to absorb battle damage, still reach its target and bring its crew home safely. Wally Hoffman, a B-17 Pilot with the 8th Air Force during WWII said "The plane can be cut and slashed almost to pieces by enemy fire and bring its crew home."<ref>Hoffman 2006</ref> Its toughness more than compensated for its shorter range and lighter bomb load when compared to the Consolidated ] or the British ] heavy bombers. Stories abound of B-17s returning to base with tails having been destroyed, with only a single engine functioning or even with large portions of wings having been damaged by flak.<ref></ref> This durability, together with the large operational numbers in the ] and the fame achieved by the ], made the B-17 a significant bomber aircraft of the war. | |||
{{blockquote|The loss was not total... But Boeing's hopes for a substantial bomber contract were dashed.|Peter Bowers, 1976<ref name="Bowers1976.p37">Bowers 1976, p. 37.</ref>}} | |||
=== Initial orders === | |||
The plane's extreme durability and powerful defensive arcs led the Luftwaffe to develop a number of innovative (and costly) methods of combating the bomber. Late in the war, the ] saw the most (proportional) success against B-17s. However this success did not come from gun-to-gun combat. While the Me 262 could fly extremely fast, it had to slow down to accurately aim its guns, placing the fighter in the crosshairs of the B-17's guns. Instead, Me 262s would engage at long distances, firing masses of unguided rockets at the B-17 formations. While this tactic was successful it came too late in the war. By the time this technique was proven, there were too many B-17s and too few Me 262s to make a real difference. The number of B-17s lost to Me-262s using this tactic was low. | |||
] plant in ], October 1942]] | |||
Despite the crash, the USAAC had been impressed by the prototype's performance, and on {{Nowrap|17 January}} 1936, through a legal loophole,<ref name="Erickson"/><ref name="Meilinger" /> the Air Corps ordered 13 YB-17s (designated Y1B-17 after November 1936 to denote its special F-1 funding) for service testing.<ref name="Zamzow.34" /> The YB-17 incorporated a number of significant changes from the Model 299, including more powerful ]-39 Cyclone engines. Although the prototype was company-owned and never received a military serial (the B-17 designation itself did not appear officially until January 1936, nearly three months after the prototype crashed),<ref name="Bowers1976.p12" /> the term "XB-17" was retroactively applied to the ''NX13372's'' airframe and has entered the lexicon to describe the first Flying Fortress. | |||
The design went through eight major changes over the course of its production, culminating in the B-17G, differing from its immediate predecessor by the addition of a chin ] with two ] ]s under the nose. This eliminated the B-17's main defensive weakness in head-on attacks. | |||
Between 1 March and 4 August 1937, 12 of the 13 Y1B-17s were delivered to the 2nd Bombardment Group at Langley Field in Virginia for operational development and flight tests.<ref name="Swan Mil p75" /> One suggestion adopted was the use of a ] to avoid accidents such as that which befell the Model 299.<ref name="Meilinger" /><ref name="Checks2" />{{NoteTag|The idea of a pilot's checklist spread to other crew members, other air corps aircraft types, and eventually throughout the aviation world. ''Life'' published the lengthy B-17 checklist in its 24 August 1942 issue.<ref>. ''Life'', 24 August 1942.</ref>}} In one of their first missions, three B-17s, directed by lead navigator ] ], were sent by General Andrews to ] {{convert|610|mi|km}} off the Atlantic coast.<ref name="Zamzow.47" /> The mission was successful and widely publicized.<ref name="Maurer" /><ref name="USAF Rex" /> The 13th Y1B-17 was delivered to the Material Division at Wright Field, Ohio, to be used for flight testing.<ref name="Y1B-17" /> | |||
===Postwar history=== | |||
Following World War II, the B-17 was declared obsolete and the Army Air Force retired most of the fleet. Flight crews ferried the bombers back across the Atlantic to the United States, where the majority were melted down and sold for scrap. The ] ] had B-17 Flying Fortresses, (called '''F-9'''s at first (F=Fotorecon), later '''RB-17'''s) in service from 1946 through 1951. A number of B-17s survive in museums and at airports. About a dozen of these still fly, visiting airports or performing in airshows. Most of these survivors are surplus or training aircraft, which stayed in the U.S. during World War II. However, there are a few exceptions. | |||
A 14th Y1B-17 (''37-369''), originally constructed for ground testing of the airframe's strength, was upgraded by Boeing with exhaust-driven General Electric ]s, and designated Y1B-17A. Designed by ], engine exhaust gases turned the turbine's steel-alloy blades, forcing high-pressure air into the Wright Cyclone GR-1820-39 engine supercharger.<ref>{{cite web |url = https://aviationshoppe.com/manuals/wwii_aircraft_superchargers/wwii_aircraft_turbosupercharger.html |title = World War II – General Electric Turbosupercharges |website = aviationshoppe.com |access-date = 8 June 2017 |archive-date = 8 October 2019 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191008054906/https://aviationshoppe.com/manuals/wwii_aircraft_superchargers/wwii_aircraft_turbosupercharger.html |url-status = dead }}</ref> Scheduled to fly in 1937, it encountered problems with the turbochargers, and its first flight was delayed until {{Nowrap|29 April}} 1938.<ref name="Donald" /> The aircraft was delivered to the Army on {{Nowrap|31 January}} 1939.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p293-4" /> Once service testing was complete, the Y1B-17s and Y1B-17A were redesignated B-17 and B-17A, respectively, to signify the change to operational status.<ref name="Wixley p23" /> The Y1B-17A had a maximum speed of {{cvt|311|mph|kn kph}}, at its best operational altitude, compared to {{cvt|239|mph|kn kph}} for the Y1B-17. Also, the Y1B-17A's new service ceiling was more than {{convert|2|miles|m}} higher at {{convert|38000|ft|m}}, compared to the Y1B-17's {{convert|27800|ft|m}}. These turbo-superchargers were incorporated into the B-17B.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Caidin |first1=Martin |title=Flying Forts: The B-17 in World War II |date=1968 |publisher=Bantam Books |location=New York |isbn=9780553287806 |pages=80, 95–99}}</ref> | |||
] ]] | |||
The "]," which flew 25 missions over Europe before touring the United States to advertise ], was preserved in ] from 1948 to 2003. The "Memphis Belle" was transported to ] in October, 2005, for restoration and eventual display at the ] there. The restoration is expected to take eight-ten years. <ref>USAF National Museum 2006</ref> | |||
Opposition to the Air Corps' ambitions for the acquisition of more B-17s faded, and in late 1937, 10 more aircraft designated B-17B were ordered to equip two bombardment groups, one on each U.S. coast.<ref name="B-17B" /> Improved with larger flaps and rudder and a well-framed, 10 panel ] nose, the B-17Bs were delivered in five small batches between July 1939 and March 1940. In July 1940, an order for 512 B-17s was issued,<ref name="Pop1" /> but at the time of the ], fewer than 200 were in service with the army.<ref name="Meilinger" /> | |||
"The Swoose," the only surviving example of the narrow-tailed B-17s of the A, B, C and D series, flew combat missions in the ] before being converted to an unarmed transport/flying command post used in Australia by Lt Gen. ], commander of Allied air forces in the ]. It returned to the United States with Brett in 1943. The oldest surviving B-17 in the world, "The Swoose" is presently in storage at the Smithsonian Institution's Silver Hill ("Paul E. Garber" Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility in Suitland, Maryland. As of 2000, the Smithsonian was planning to restore her. Col. ], commanding officer of the 463rd Bombardment Group at the Celone Airbase near Foggia,Italy and the father of actress ](b. ] ]), carried the Swoose name forward from the original Swoose (which he flew in the Pacific prior to being named CO of the 463rd), naming the B-17G he flew with the 463rd ''Swoose II''.<ref>The Swoose 2006</ref> The 463rd BG was thereafter known as the "The Swoose Group." The name, "Swoosie" was a derivative of Kurtz's original name for his B-17, which he referred to as a "half-swan, half-goose."<ref>Brennan 2006</ref> | |||
A total of 155 B-17s of all variants were delivered between {{nowrap|11 January}} 1937 and {{nowrap|30 November}} 1941, but production quickly accelerated, with the B-17 once holding the record for the highest production rate for any large aircraft.<ref name="Serling.p55" />{{NoteTag|Quote: "At the peak of production, Boeing was rolling out as many as 363 B-17s a month, averaging between 14 and 16 Forts a day, the most incredible production rate for large aircraft in aviation history."<ref>Serling, p. 55</ref> This production rate was, however, surpassed by that of the ]: at its peak in 1944, the ] plant alone produced one B-24 per hour and 650 B-24s per month.<ref name="Willowrun">Nolan, Jenny. {{webarchive |url=https://archive.today/20121204140927/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=73&category=locations |date=4 December 2012 }} ''The Detroit News'', 28 January 1997. Retrieved: 7 August 2010.</ref><!--end NoteTag-->}} The aircraft went on to serve in every World War II combat zone, and by the time production ended in May 1945, 12,731 B-17s had been built by Boeing, ], and ] (a subsidiary of ]).<ref name="Yenne.p6" /><ref>Herman, Arthur. ''Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II'', pp. 292–99, 305, Random House, New York, 2012. {{ISBN|978-1-4000-6964-4}}.</ref><ref>Parker 2013, pp. 35, 40–48, 59, 74.</ref><ref>Borth 1945, pp. 70–71, 83, 92, 256, 268–69.</ref> | |||
Another noteworthy combat veteran is "]," which flew 24 combat missions from England with the ] before being forced to land in Sweden in May, 1944. Sweden, which was neutral, interned the crew. About the same time, a deal was made between the Swedish and US Governments to allow about 300 American crewmen to return in exchange for nine B-17Fs and Gs that had landed intact in Sweden. Seven of these were converted by ] Aircraft into airliners that could take 14 passengers.<ref></ref> | |||
{{blockquote|Though the crash of the prototype 299 in 1935 had almost wiped out Boeing, now it was seen as a boon. Instead of building models based on experimental engineering, Boeing had been hard at work developing their bomber and now had versions ready for production far better than would have been possible otherwise. One of the most significant weapons of World War II would be ready, but only by a hair.|Jeff Ethell, 1985<ref name="Pop1" />}} | |||
== Design and variants == | |||
] | |||
{{Main|List of Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress variants}} | |||
"Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby" became SE-BAP, flying for SILA, an airline that eventually became a part of ] (SAS). In December 1945, it was one of two B-17s sold to the Danish Air Lines (DDL), and flew as OY-DFA "Stig Viking" to June 1947. The B-17 was subsequently transferred in March 1948, to Danish Army Air Corps as DAF 672, and in December, 1949, to the ]. Then from October, 1952, to the Royal ] as ESK-721, it finally retired a year later. In all its service time in the Danish military, her nickname was "Store Bjørn." After two years in storage, she was sold as F-BGSP to IGN, ], a French ] company based in ] outside Paris. Last flown in July 1961, the remains of the plane were donated to the ] in 1972. A restoration was undertaken between 1978-1988 at ], ] and the bomber can be seen today at the ] in ], ]. The Museum has announced that when the "Memphis Belle" restoration is complete, it will replace "Shoo Shoo Shoo Baby" as the museum's B-17 exhibit. | |||
] | |||
It has also been recently discovered that the B-17G at the ] in ], ] was delivered to the ] and most likely flew combat missions over ] and in the ] (which was confirmed by battle damage found after the plane was paint stripped during restoration). The exact details of that plane's service, though, are not yet known. | |||
{| class="wikitable floatright" style="text-align:center; width:25em" | |||
As part of ], on ] ], two B-17s navigating and acting as mother ships, along with six ]s, were forced to land on a glacier in Greenland during a ferry flight to the UK. None of the crews were lost. By the 1990s, these eight aircraft had been buried under more than 250 feet of ice. The recovery effort located the lead B-17 to find it crushed; subsequently, one of the P-38s was recovered and restored as "Glacier Girl."<ref></ref> | |||
|+ Production numbers | |||
! Variant | |||
! Produced | |||
! First flight | |||
|- | |||
| Model 299 || style="text-align:right;| 1 || 28 July 1935<ref name="first flight" /> | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| YB-17 || style="text-align:right;| 13 || 2 December 1936<ref name="Bowers Boeing p292" /> | |||
|- | |||
| YB-17A || style="text-align:right;| 1 || 29 April 1938<ref name="Donald" /> | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| B-17B || style="text-align:right;| 39 || 27 June 1939<ref name="Bowers boeing p294" /> | |||
|- | |||
| B-17C || style="text-align:right;| 38 || 21 July 1940<ref name="Bowers Boeing p295" /> | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| B-17D || style="text-align:right;| 42 || 3 February 1941<ref name="Swan Mil p76" /> | |||
|- | |||
| B-17E || style="text-align:right;| 512 || 5 September 1941<ref name="Bowers Boeing p297" /> | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| B-17F (total) || style="text-align:right;| '''3,405''' || 30 May 1942<ref name="Bowers Boeing p299" /><ref name="Swan Mil p78" /> | |||
|- | |||
| B-17F-BO || style="text-align:right;| 2,300 || <ref name="Bowers Boeing p299" /> | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| B-17F-DL || style="text-align:right;| 605 || <ref name="Bowers Boeing p299" /> | |||
|- | |||
| B-17F-VE || style="text-align:right;| 500 || <ref name="Bowers Boeing p299" /> | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| B-17G (total) || style="text-align:right;| '''8,680''' || 16 August 1943 <!--- what is this?---<Osborne, Story, page 98/>----> | |||
|- | |||
| B-17G-BO || style="text-align:right;| 4,035 || | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;"|| | |||
| B-17G-DL || style="text-align:right;| 2,395 || | |||
|- | |||
| B-17G-VE || style="text-align:right;| 2,250 || | |||
|- style="background:#f5faff;" | |||
| Total || style="text-align:right;| '''12,731''' || | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" font-size: 70%| B-17s were built at Boeing Plant 2, Seattle, Washington (BO), Lockheed-Vega, Burbank, California (VE) and Douglas Aircraft, Long Beach, California (DL)<ref>Yenne, Bill, ''B-17 at War'': p. 16; Zenith Press; 2006: {{ISBN|978-0760325223}}</ref> | |||
|} | |||
The aircraft went through several alterations in each of its design stages and variants. Of the 13 YB-17s ordered for service testing, 12 were used by the 2nd Bomb Group at Langley Field, Virginia, to develop heavy bombing techniques, and the 13th was used for flight testing at the Material Division at Wright Field, Ohio.<ref name="Y1B-17" /> Experiments on this aircraft led to the use of a quartet of General Electric turbo-superchargers, which later became standard on the B-17 line. A 14th aircraft, the YB-17A, originally destined for ground testing only and upgraded with the turbochargers,<ref name="flightinter" /> was redesignated B-17A after testing had finished.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p293-4" /><ref name="Wixley p23" /> | |||
"My Gal Sal" (41-9032), a B-17 from another ferry flight in Operation Bolero that was forced to ditch, has also been recovered. It is being restored to a static configuration in ].<ref></ref> | |||
As the production line developed, Boeing engineers continued to improve upon the basic design. To enhance performance at slower speeds, the B-17B was altered to include larger ]s and ].<ref name="Bowers boeing p294" /> The B-17C changed from three bulged, oval-shaped gun blisters to two flush, oval-shaped gun window openings, and on the lower fuselage, a single "bathtub" gun ] housing,<ref name="Bowers Boeing p295" /> which resembled the similarly configured and located ''Bodenlafette''/"Bola" ventral defensive emplacement on the German ]P-series medium bomber. | |||
Several B-17s and other World War II bombers were converted into ]. Other B-17s saw extended and valiant service as converted aerial tankers used for fighting forest fires in the western United States.<ref>. Accessed ] ].</ref> | |||
While models A through D of the B-17 were designed defensively, the large-tailed B-17E was the first model primarily focused on offensive warfare.<ref name="flightinter" /> The B-17E was an extensive revision of the Model 299 design: The fuselage was extended by {{convert|10|ft|m|abbr=on}}; a much larger rear fuselage, vertical tailfin, rudder, and horizontal stabilizer were added; ];{{NoteTag| During the crash investigation of ], it was found that two B-17s had already spun from lack of directional stability. British combat experience with the B-17 was also showing the need for a tail gunner. Boeing was not willing to add a turret because they did not want to disrupt the clean aerodynamics. The inadequate directional stability exposed by two spin incidents and a crash, brought about a redesigned vertical stabilizer and dorsal fin. A compromise for the tail turret resulted in handheld tail guns. The combination created a successful design. Not only were defensive needs solved, but the improved lateral stability made precision high altitude bombing possible.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.thisdayinaviation.com/tag/boeing-model-307-stratoliner/ |title=Boeing Model 307 Stratoliner |website=Archives – This Day in Aviation |access-date=2021-06-19}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.b17queenofthesky.com/variants/prototype.php?id=10&tle=B-17E |website=B-17 Queen of the Sky |title=B-17E page |access-date=2021-06-19 |archive-date=21 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210621212650/http://b17queenofthesky.com/variants/prototype.php?id=10&tle=B-17E |url-status=dead }}</ref>}} the nose (especially the bombardier's framed, 10-panel nose glazing) remained relatively the same as the earlier B through D versions had; a ] electrically powered manned dorsal ] just behind the cockpit was added; a similarly powered (also built by Sperry) manned ventral ] just aft of the bomb bay – replaced the relatively hard-to-use, Sperry model 645705-D<ref>B-17 Erection and Maintenance Manual 01-20EE-2</ref> remotely operated ventral turret on the earliest examples of the E variant. These modifications resulted in a 20% increase in aircraft weight.<ref name="flightinter" /> The B-17's ] ] Cyclone 9 engines were upgraded to increasingly more powerful versions of the same powerplants throughout its production, and similarly, the number of machine gun emplacement locations was increased.<ref name="WoF p56-7" /> | |||
==Variants/design stages== | |||
{{main|B-17 Flying Fortress variants}} | |||
The B-17 went through several alterations in each of its design stages and variants. Of the 13 '''YB-17'''s ordered for service testing, 12 were used by the 2nd Bomb Group of Langly Feild, Virginia to heavy bomber techniques. The 13th was used for flight testing at the Material Division at Wright Field, Ohio.<ref name="Y1B-17"/> Experiments on this plane led to the use of a turbo-supercharger, which would become standard on the B-17 line. When this aircraft was finished with testing, it was re-designated the '''B-17A''', and in April 1948 was the first plane to enter service under the B-17 designation.<ref name="Y1B-17"/><ref name="enter service"/> | |||
] | |||
As the production line developed, Boeing engineers continued to improve upon it. To improve performance, the original design was altered to include larger flaps. Most significantly, with the '''"B-17E"''' version the fuselage was extended by 10 feet, a much larger vertical fin and rudder were incorporated into the original design, a gunner's position in the tail and an improved nose were added. The engines were upgraded to more powerful versions several times. Similarly, the gun stations were altered on numerous occasions to enhance their effectiveness. | |||
The B-17F variant was the primary version used by the Eighth Air Force to face the Germans in 1943, and standardized the manned Sperry ball turret for ventral defense, also replacing the earlier, 10-panel framed bombardier's nose glazing from the B subtype with an enlarged, nearly frameless Plexiglas bombardier's nose enclosure for improved forward vision. | |||
] | |||
Two experimental versions of the B-17 were flown under different designations, the ] and the ].' The XB-38 was an engine testbed for ] liquid-cooled engines, should the Wright engines normally used on the B-17 become unavailable. The only prototype XB-38 to fly crashed on its ninth flight, and the concept was abandoned. The Allison V-1710 was reallocated to fighter aircraft.<ref name="Francillon Lock p213-5" /><ref name="WoF p66" /> | |||
By the time the definitive '''B-17G''' appeared, the number of guns had been increased from seven to 13, the designs of the gun stations were finalized, and other adjustments were complete. The G model incorporated all changes made in its predecessor, the '''B-17F'''. The B-17G is the final version of the B-17. In total, 8,680 were built with many examples converted for other missions such as cargo hauling, engine testing and ].<ref></ref> A number of B-17Gs were converted for use as search-and-rescue planes. Initially designated SB-17G, they were later redesignated '''B-17H'''.<ref></ref> | |||
The ] was a heavily armed modification of the standard B-17 used before the ], an effective long-range fighter, became available to act as escort. Additional armament included an additional dorsal turret in the radio room, a remotely operated and fired Bendix-built "chin turret" directly below the bombardier's accommodation, and twin 50 caliber (12.7 mm) guns in each of the waist positions. The ammunition load was over 11,000 rounds. All of these modifications made the YB-40 well over {{convert|10000|lb|abbr=on}} heavier than a fully loaded B-17F. The YB-40s with their greater weight, had trouble keeping up with the lighter bombers once they had dropped their bombs, so the project was abandoned and finally phased out in July 1943.<ref name="WoF 62-3,5" /><ref name="Francillon Lock p212" /><ref name="Bowers Boeing p307-8" /> The final production blocks of the B-17F from Douglas' plants did, however, adopt the YB-40's "chin turret", giving them a much-improved forward defense capability.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.b17queenofthesky.com/variants/prototype.php?id=12&tle=B-17F |title=B17 – Queen of the Sky – The B-17F |last=Lyman |first=Troy |date=12 May 2003 |website=Troy Lyman's B-17 Flying Fortress Site |access-date=24 June 2014 |archive-date=9 August 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140809192902/http://b17queenofthesky.com/variants/prototype.php?id=12&tle=B-17F |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
By the time the definitive B-17G appeared, the number of guns had been increased from seven to 13, the designs of the gun stations were finalized, and other adjustments were completed. The B-17G was the final version of the Flying Fortress, incorporating all changes made to its predecessor, the B-17F,<ref name="flightinter" /> and in total, 8,680 were built,<ref name="WoF p63-4" /> the last (by Lockheed) on {{Nowrap|28 July}} 1945.<ref name="Francillon Lock p211" /> Many B-17Gs were converted for other missions such as cargo hauling, engine testing, and ].<ref name="Bowers Boeing p286-7" /> Initially designated SB-17G, a number of B-17Gs were also converted for search-and-rescue duties, later to be redesignated B-17H.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p303-4" /> | |||
Late in the Second World War, at least 25 B-17s were fitted with radio controls, loaded with 20,000 lb (9000 kg) of high explosives, dubbed "'''BQ-7''' ] missiles," and used against ] pens and bomb-resistant ]s. Because few (if any) BQ-7s hit their target, the Aphrodite project was scrapped in early 1945.<ref></ref><ref> Boeing BQ-7 Aphrodite</ref> During and after World War II, a number of weapons were tested and used operationally on B-17s. Some of these weapons included "razons" (radio guided) glide bombs, and JB-2 Thunderbugs - the equivalent of the German ] Buzz Bomb. | |||
Late in World War II, at least 25 B-17s were fitted with radio controls and television cameras, loaded with {{convert|20000|lb|abbr=on}} of high explosives and designated BQ-7 "Aphrodite missiles" for ] against bombing-resistant German bunkers. The operation, which involved remotely flying the Aphrodite drones onto their targets by accompanying CQ-17 "mothership" control aircraft, was approved on {{nowrap|26 June}} 1944, and assigned to the ] stationed at ], a satellite of ].<ref name="Ramsey" /> | |||
==Operators== | |||
{{main|List of units using the B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
] fly a bombing run to ], ], on ] ].]] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
** ] | |||
* ] | |||
** ] | |||
** ] | |||
** ] | |||
The first four drones were sent to ] (V-3 site), the ], and the V-2 ] at Watten, and ] at Wizernes on 4 August, causing little damage and two pilots were killed. On August 12, a ], part of the ]'s contribution ("Project Anvil"), en route for ] piloted by Lieutenant ] (future U.S. president ]'s elder brother) exploded over the ]. Blast damage was caused over a radius of {{convert|5|mi}}. Naval flights stopped but a few more missions were flown by the USAAF. The Aphrodite project was effectively scrapped in early 1945.<ref name="Ramsey">Ramsey, Winston G. "The V-Weapons". London: ''After the Battle'', Number 6, 1974, pp. 20–21.</ref> | |||
The B-17 was a versatile aircraft, serving in dozens of units in theaters of combat throughout World War II. Its main use was in ], where its shorter range and smaller bombload relative to other aircraft available did not hamper it as much as in the ]. Only five B-17 groups operated in the Pacific, with a peak of 168 bombers in September, 1942, and all groups converting to other types by mid-1943. Thirty-two groups were stationed in Europe, 26 in England and six in Italy. Peak USAAF inventory (in August, 1944) was 4,574 worldwide.<ref></ref> | |||
== Operational history == | |||
It was also used by the ], though mainly in roles other than those for which it had been designed. The first B-17s (-C and -D models) were known to the RAF as "Fortress I"s. The British already operated the more capable ] and were reluctant to use the B-17 for its original mission profile of heavy bombing. The British regarded the early B-17 as inefficient, due to its larger crew and relatively small bomb load compared to the ]. Instead, they used them for patrol bombing and, later, equipped a number of them with sophisticated radio-countermeasures equipment where they served in some of the first ] operations with ]. | |||
] | |||
The B-17 began operations in World War II with the ] (RAF) in 1941, and in the Southwest Pacific with the U.S. Army. | |||
] | |||
During World War II, after crash-landing or being forced down, approximately 40 B-17s were repaired and put back into the air in the service of the ]. These captured aircraft were codenamed "Dornier Do 200," given German markings and used for clandestine spy and reconnaissance missions by the Luftwaffe-most often used by the Luftwaffe unit known as ], hence a likely possibility as a source for the "Dornier Do 200" codename.<ref></ref> | |||
During World War II, the B-17 equipped 32 overseas combat groups, inventory peaking in August 1944 at 4,574 USAAF aircraft worldwide.<ref name="Baugher Squads" /> The British heavy bombers, the ] and ], dropped {{cvt|608612|LT|ST t}} and {{cvt|224207|LT|ST t}} <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.raf.mod.uk/rafbramptonwytonhenlow/aboutus/handleypagehalifax.cfm|title=Handley Page Halifax|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080530210057/http://www.raf.mod.uk/rafbramptonwytonhenlow/aboutus/handleypagehalifax.cfm|archive-date=30 May 2008|website=RAF.mod.uk|access-date=4 October 2019}}</ref> respectively. | |||
When ] achieved statehood in 1948, the ] had to be assembled quickly to defend the new nation from the war it found itself embroiled in almost immediately. Among the first aircraft acquired by the Israeli Air Force were three surplus American B-17s, smuggled via South America and Czechoslovakia to avoid an arms trading ban imposed by the United States. A fourth plane was abandoned due to malfunctions and confiscated by American officials. On their delivery flight from Europe, in retaliation for Egyptian bombing raids on ], the aircraft were ordered to bomb ]'s Royal Palace in ] before continuing to Israel. They performed the mission (despite some of the crew fainting due to defective oxygen equipment) but caused little damage. The B-17s were generally unsuitable for the needs of the Israeli Air Force and the nature of the conflict in which long-range bombing raids on large area targets were relatively unimportant although the psychological impact of the raids was not lost on the enemy. They were mainly used in the ] flown by ]. They were withdrawn in ].<ref>. Accessed December 24, 2005] From </ref> | |||
=== RAF use === | |||
==Noted B-17 pilots and crew members== | |||
] ''AN529'', with ]-style "bathtub" ventral ]]] | |||
] training to ferry B-17 Flying Fortresses.]] | |||
The RAF entered World War II without a sufficient supply of modern heavy bombers, with the largest available long-range medium bombers in any numbers being the ], which could carry {{convert|4500|lb}} of bombs.<ref name="Andrews & Morgan p340">Andrews and Morgan 1988, p. 340.</ref> While the ] and ] became its primary bombers by 1941, in early 1940, the RAF agreed with the U.S. Army Air Corps to acquire 20 B-17Cs, which were given the ] Fortress Mk.I. Their first operation, against ] on {{Nowrap|8 July}} 1941 was unsuccessful.<ref name="Yenne.p23" /><ref name="Chant" /> On {{Nowrap|24 July}} three B-17s of ] took part in a ] and ] anchored in ] from {{cvt|30000|ft}}, to draw German fighters away from 18 ]s attacking at lower altitudes, and in time for 79 Vickers Wellingtons to attack later with the German fighters refueling. The operation did not work as expected, with 90 Squadron's Fortresses being unopposed.<ref name="Chorlton p38">Chorlton ''Aeroplane'' January 2013, p. 38.</ref><ref name="hardest p122-3">Richards 1995, pp. 122–23.</ref>{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1985|pp=159–60}} | |||
* ] - author of ''Cyborg,'' the story that formed the basis of '']'' and the saga of the last transatlantic formation flight of B-17s ever made, ''Everything But The Flak'' | |||
* ] - waist gunner on B-17 “Eight Ball” of the 359th Bomber Squadron | |||
* ] - American-born nephew of Nazi Reichsmarschall ], Commander of the German Luftwaffe.<ref>Gobrecht 2006</ref> | |||
* ] - pilot of first US B-17 lost in action<ref>Frisbee 1994</ref> | |||
* ], second generation German-American whose 91 combat missions were the most flown by any Eighth Air Force pilot in World War II.<ref>Freeman 1981</ref> | |||
* ] - Olympic medalist 1932, 1936 and Pearl Harbor attack survivor | |||
* ] - American football player and coach | |||
* ] - radio operator | |||
* ] - later head of the ] and head of the USAF | |||
* ] - pilot of ''Memphis Belle'' | |||
* ] - creator of ] | |||
* ]- assistant to the US prosecutor at the ], where he interrogated ] | |||
* ] - ] film actor<ref>Smith 2005</ref> | |||
* ] - short story author | |||
* ] - later pilot of the B-29 ] dropping the atomic bomb on ], Japan | |||
* ]- one of the youngest bomber pilots in the US Army Air Forces | |||
* ] - motorsports car designer | |||
By September, the RAF had lost eight B-17Cs in combat and had experienced numerous mechanical problems,<ref group=Note>problems the RAF found included the tendency to burn when hit, icing problems, crew fatigue due to altitude, oxygen system failures</ref> and ] abandoned daylight bombing raids using the Fortress I because of the aircraft's poor performance. The experience showed both the RAF and USAAF that the B-17C was not ready for combat, and that improved defenses, larger bomb loads, and more accurate bombing methods were required. However, the USAAF continued using the B-17 as a day bomber, despite misgivings by the RAF that attempts at daylight bombing would be ineffective.<ref name="Weigley.338" /> | |||
==Notable B-17s== | |||
] in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.]] | |||
* ] | |||
* ]<ref> - the ]'s B-17G that tours the US offering flight experiences</ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ]<ref></ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ]<ref></ref> | |||
* ]<ref></ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
As use by Bomber Command had been curtailed, the RAF transferred its remaining Fortress Mk.I aircraft to ] for use as a long-range maritime patrol aircraft.<ref name="Stitt 1" /> These were augmented starting in July 1942 by 45 Fortress Mk.IIA (B-17E) followed by 19 Fortress Mk II (B-17F) and three Fortress Mk III (B-17G). A Fortress IIA from ] sank ] on {{Nowrap|27 October}} 1942, the first of 11 U-boat kills credited to RAF Fortress bombers during the war.<ref name="Wynn.93" /> | |||
==Specifications (B-17G)== | |||
] change a B-17 Flying Fortress engine. During the group's stay in England from May 1944 to April 1945, the 398th flew 195 missions and lost 292 men and 70 B-17 aircraft in combat.]] | |||
{{aircraft specifications | |||
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As sufficient Consolidated Liberators finally became available, Coastal Command withdrew the Fortress from the Azores, transferring the type to the meteorological reconnaissance role. Three squadrons undertook Met profiles from airfields in Iceland, Scotland, and England, gathering data for vital weather forecasting purposes. | |||
|ref=The Encyclopedia of World Aircraft<ref>Donald 1997, p. 155.</ref> | |||
The RAF's ], as part of ], operated several Fortresses equipped with an electronic warfare system known as "]" (ABC). This was operated by German-speaking radio operators to identify and jam German ground controllers' broadcasts to their ]s. They could also pose as ground controllers themselves to steer nightfighters away from the ]s.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2007/12/13/db1301.xml|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071214211240/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=%2Fnews%2F2007%2F12%2F13%2Fdb1301.xml|url-status=dead|archive-date=14 December 2007|title=Obituaries: John Hereford|newspaper=]|date=13 December 2007|access-date=8 July 2021}}</ref> | |||
<!-- please answer the following questions --> | |||
|plane or copter?=plane | |||
|jet or prop?=prop | |||
=== Initial USAAF operations over Europe === | |||
<!-- Now, fill out the specs. Please include units where appropriate (main comes first, alt in parentheses). If an item doesn't apply, like capacity, leave it blank. For additional lines, end your alt units with a right parenthesis ")" and start a new, fully-formatted line beginning with an asterisk "*" --> | |||
] | |||
The air corps – renamed ] (USAAF) on 20 June 1941 – used the B-17 and other bombers to bomb from high altitudes with the aid of the then-secret ], known as the "Blue Ox",<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/second-generation-norden-bombsight-vault.htm |title=Second-Generation Norden Bombsight Vault |work=] |access-date=2 July 2017}}</ref><ref>"Blue Ox." ''National Geographic Magazine'', Vol. LXXXIII, Number One, January 1943, p. 7, Ad(i).</ref> which was an optical electromechanical gyrostabilized ].<ref>Peterson, Paul. ''Ludington Daily News'', 16 April 1994, p. 1.</ref> The device was able to determine, from variables put in by the bombardier, the point at which the bombs should be released to hit the target. The bombardier essentially took over flight control of the aircraft during the bomb run, maintaining a level altitude during the final moments before release.<ref name="Baugher B-17B" /> | |||
|crew=10: <small>Pilot, co-pilot, navigator, bombardier/nose gunner, flight engineer-top turret gunner, radio operator, waist gunners (2), ball turret gunner, tail gunner<ref> describes in detail the various positions and their related duties. The also describes duties.</ref></small> | |||
|length main=74 ft 4 in | |||
|length alt=22.66 m | |||
|span main=103 ft 9 in | |||
|span alt=31.62 m | |||
|aspect ratio=7.57 | |||
|height main=19 ft 1 in | |||
|height alt=5.82 m | |||
|area main=1,420 ft² | |||
|area alt=131.92 m² | |||
|airfoil=] / NACA 0010 | |||
|empty weight main=36,135 lb | |||
|empty weight alt=16,391 kg | |||
|loaded weight main=54,000 lb | |||
|loaded weight alt=24,495 kg | |||
|max takeoff weight main=65,500 lb | |||
|max takeoff weight alt=29710 kg | |||
The USAAF began building up its air forces in Europe using B-17Es soon after entering the war. The first ] units arrived in ], on {{Nowrap|12 May}} 1942, to form the 97th Bomb Group.<ref name="Northstar" /> On {{Nowrap|17 August}} 1942, 12 B-17Es of the 97th, with the lead aircraft piloted by Major ] and carrying ] ] as an observer, were close escorted by four squadrons of RAF ] (and a further five squadrons of Spitfire Vs to cover the withdrawal) on the first USAAF heavy bomber raid over Europe, against the large railroad ] at ]-Sotteville in France, while a further six aircraft flew a diversionary raid along the French coast.<ref name="WoF p59-0" /><ref name="AAF combat" /> The operation, carried out in good visibility, was a success, with only minor damage to one aircraft, unrelated to enemy action, and half the bombs landing in the target area.<ref>{{citation |chapter-url=http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/AAF/I/AAF-I-18.html |chapter=Chapter 18: Rouen-Sotteville, No. 1, 17 August 1942 |volume=I: Plans & Early Operations, January 1939 to August 1942 |pages=662–63 |date=1975 |orig-date=1948 |first=Arthur B. |last=Ferguson |editor-last1=Craven |editor-first1=W F |editor-last2=Cate |editor-first2= J L |title= ] |via=Hyperwar Foundation }}</ref> | |||
|engine (prop)=]-97 "Cyclone" | |||
|type of prop=turbosupercharged ]s | |||
|number of props=4 | |||
|power main=1,200 hp | |||
|power alt=895 kW | |||
Two additional groups arrived in Britain at the same time, bringing with them the first B-17Fs, which served as the primary AAF heavy bomber fighting the Germans until September 1943. As the raids of the American bombing campaign grew in numbers and frequency, German interception efforts grew in strength (such as during the attempted bombing of Kiel on 13 June 1943<ref name="Bowman.7" />), such that unescorted bombing missions came to be discouraged.<ref name="Weigley 339" /> | |||
|max speed main=287 mph | |||
|max speed alt=249 knots, 462 km/h | |||
|cruise speed main=182 mph | |||
|cruise speed alt= 158 knots, 293 km/h | |||
|range main=1,738 nm | |||
|range alt=2,000 mi, 3,219 km | |||
|range more=with 2,722 kg (6,000 lb) bombload | |||
|ceiling main=35,600 ft | |||
|ceiling alt=10,850 m | |||
|climb rate main=900 ft/min | |||
|climb rate alt=4.6 m/s | |||
|loading main=38.0 lb/ft² | |||
|loading alt=185.7 kg/m² | |||
|power/mass main=0.089 hp/lb | |||
|power/mass alt=150 W/kg | |||
|more performance= | |||
=== Combined offensive === | |||
|guns=13× ] 0.50 caliber (12.7 mm) machine guns (with optional extra nose armament fitted in glazed nose) | |||
], Germany, {{Nowrap|17 August}} 1943]] | |||
|bombs=<br/> | |||
** '''Short range missions (<400 mi):''' 8,000 lb (3,600 kg) | |||
** '''Long range missions (≈800 mi):''' 4,500 lb (2,000 kg) | |||
** See also: ] | |||
}} | |||
The two different strategies of the American and British bomber commands were organized at the ] in January 1943. The resulting "]" weakened the ], destroyed German morale, and established air superiority through ]'s destruction of German fighter strength in preparation for a ground offensive.<ref name="Carey Pointblank" /> The USAAF bombers attacked by day, with British operations – chiefly against industrial cities – by night.<ref>{{Cite web|last=November 1998|first=Brian Todd Carey|date=2006-06-12|title=How Allied Air Attacks Evolved During World War II|url=https://www.historynet.com/how-allied-air-attacks-evolved-during-world-war-ii.htm|access-date=2021-03-24|website=HistoryNet|language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
==Notes== | |||
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;"><references/></div> | |||
Operation Pointblank opened with attacks on targets in Western Europe. General ] and the Eighth Air Force placed highest priority on attacks on the German aircraft industry, especially fighter assembly plants, engine factories, and ball-bearing manufacturers.<ref name="Carey Pointblank" /> Attacks began in April 1943 on heavily fortified key industrial plants in ] and ].<ref name="Bowman.8" /> | |||
==References== | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
] | |||
* Baugher, Joe. ''BQ-7: Encyclopedia of American Aircraft''. Access date: 12 January 2005. | |||
* Birdsall, Steve. ''The B-17 Flying Fortress''. Dallas, Texas: Morgan Aviation Books, 1965. | |||
* ''The Boeing Logbook: 1933 - 1938''. Boeing.com. Access date: 18 December 2006. | |||
* Bowers, Peter M. ''Fortress in the Sky''. Granada Hills, California: Sentry Books Inc., 1976. ISBN 0-913194-04-2. | |||
* Bowers, Peter M. ''Boeing Aircraft Since 1916''. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1989. ISBN 0-37000-016-1. | |||
* Brennan, Sandra. ''Biography'' , 2006. Access date: 25 December 2006. | |||
* Browne, Robert W. ''The Rugged Fortress: Life-Saving B-17 Remembered''. "Flight Journal: WW II Bombers, Winter 2001, Special Issue." Air Age Media. Access date: 18 December 2006. | |||
* Caidin, Martin. ''Black Thursday''. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1960. ISBN 0-553-26729-9. | |||
* Davis, Larry. ''B-17 in Action'' (Aircraft No. 63). Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1984. ISBN 0-89747-152-0. | |||
* Donald, David. (1997). "Boeing Model 299 (B-17 Flying Fortress". "The Encyclopedia of World Aircraft: 1". Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada: Prospero Books. ISBN 1-85605-375-X. p. 154-155. | |||
* Freeman, Roger A. ''B-17 Fortress at War''. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1977. ISBN 0-684-14872-2. | |||
* Freeman, Roger A. ''Mighty Eighth War Diary''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbook International, 1993. ISBN 0-87938-405-6. p. 497-500. | |||
* Freeman, Roger A. ''The Man Who Wouldn't Quit''. Access date: 20 December 2006. | |||
* Frisbee, John L. ''Valor: Colin Kelly (He was a Hero in Legend and in Fact)''. Air Force Magazine Online, June 1994. Access date: 20 December 2006. | |||
* Gobrecht, Harry D. ''WERNER G. GOERING CREW - 358th BS''. Hell's Angels: Home of the 303rd Bomb Group (H) Association. Access date: 20 December 2006. | |||
* Hess, William N. ''B-17 Flying Fortress: Combat and Development History of the Flying Fortress''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbook International, 1994. ISBN 0-87938-881-1. | |||
* Hess, William N. ''Big Bombers of WWII''. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Lowe & B. Hould, 1998. ISBN 0-681-07570-8. | |||
* Hoffman,Wally. ''We Get Our Feet Wet''. Magweb.com: Coalition Web, Inc., ©1998-2001. Access date: 18 July 2006. | |||
* Jablonski, Edward. ''Flying Fortress''. New York: Doubleday, 1965. ISBN 0-385-03855-0. | |||
* Johnson, Frederick A. ''Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress'' (Warbird Tech Series, Volume 7). Stillwater, Minnesota: Voyageur Press, 2001. ISBN 1-58007-052-3. | |||
* Lloyd, Alwyn T. ''B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale''. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, 1986. ISBN 0-8168-5029-1. | |||
* O'Leary, Michael. ''Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress'' (Osprey Production Line to Frontline 2). Botley, Oxford, United Kingdom: Osprey Publishing, 1999. ISBN 1-85532-814-3. | |||
* Salecker, Gene Eric. ''Fortress Against the Sun: The B-17 Flying Fortress in the Pacific''. Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: Combined Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-58097-049-4. | |||
* Smith, Starr. ''Jimmy Stewart: Bomber Pilot''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Press, 2005. ISBN 0-76032-199-X. | |||
* ''The Swoose''. 463rd Bombardment Group Historical Society. Access date: 18 December 2006. | |||
* Thompson, Scott A. ''Final Cut: The Post War B-17 Flying Fortress, The Survivors: Revised and Updated Edition''. Highland County, Ohio: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, 2000. ISBN 1-57510-077-0. | |||
* Willmott, H.P. ''B-17 Flying Fortress''. London: Bison Books, 1980. ISBN 0-85368-444-8. | |||
* Yenne, Bill. ''B-17 at War''. St Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint, 2006. ISBN 0-7603-2522-7. | |||
* ''USAF FAQ''. USAF National Museum. Access date: 18 December 2006. | |||
</div> | |||
Since the airfield bombings were not appreciably reducing German fighter strength, additional B-17 groups were formed, and Eaker ordered major missions deeper into Germany against important industrial targets. The 8th Air Force then targeted the ball-bearing factories in ], hoping to cripple the war effort there. The ] on {{Nowrap|17 August}} 1943 did not result in critical damage to the factories, with the 230 attacking B-17s being intercepted by an estimated 300 Luftwaffe fighters. The Germans shot down 36 aircraft with the loss of 200 men, and coupled with a raid earlier in the day against ], a total of 60 B-17s were lost that day.<ref name="Hess.pp59-60" /> | |||
==External links== | |||
] and was credited with three ] kills and one probable kill.]] | |||
*{{wikiquote-inline|B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
* - B-17 Restoration, crew positions, photos | |||
* | |||
* B-17 Flying Fortress on display at ] | |||
* at the ] | |||
* at the ] | |||
* at the ] | |||
* - Watch real combat footage in color from WWII | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* - Information about B-17s still flying today | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* first hand accounts of WWII Veterans. | |||
* | |||
A second attempt on Schweinfurt on 14 October 1943 later came to be known as "]".<ref name="Hess.pp65-67" /> While the attack was successful at disrupting the entire works, severely curtailing work there for the remainder of the war, it was at an extreme cost.<ref name="Bowman.22" /> Of the 291 attacking Fortresses, 60 were shot down over Germany, five crashed on approach to Britain, and 12 more were scrapped due to damage – a loss of 77 B-17s.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> Additionally, 122 bombers were damaged and needed repairs before their next flights. Of 2,900 men in the crews, about 650 did not return, although some survived as ]. Only 33 bombers landed without damage. These losses were a result of concentrated attacks by over 300 German fighters.<ref name="Hess.p64" /> | |||
== Related content == | |||
{{Commons|B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
{{aircontent | |||
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* '''Boeing:''' ] - ] - ] - '''299''' - ] - ] - ] | |||
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Such high losses of aircrews could not be sustained, and the USAAF, recognizing the vulnerability of heavy bombers to interceptors when operating alone, suspended daylight bomber raids deep into Germany until the development of an escort fighter that could protect the bombers all the way from the United Kingdom to Germany and back. At the same time, the German nightfighting ability noticeably improved to counter the nighttime strikes, challenging the conventional faith in the cover of darkness.<ref name="Weigley.341" /> The 8th Air Force alone lost 176 bombers in October 1943,<ref name="Hess.p67" /> and was to suffer similar casualties on {{Nowrap|11 January}} 1944 on missions to ], ], and ]. ] ], commander of the 8th, had ordered the second Schweinfurt mission to be cancelled as the weather deteriorated, but the lead units had already entered hostile air space and continued with the mission. Most of the escorts turned back or missed the rendezvous, and as a result, 60 B-17s were destroyed.<ref name="Hess.69-71" /><ref name="C&W.151" /> | |||
|similar aircraft= | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
A third raid on Schweinfurt on {{Nowrap|24 February}} 1944 highlighted what came to be known as "]",<ref name="Weigley.340-1" /> during which the bombing missions were directed against German aircraft production.<ref name="Weigley.341" /> German fighters needed to respond, and the ] and ] fighters (equipped with improved ]s to extend their range) accompanying the American heavies all the way to and from the targets engaged them.<ref name="Weigley.342" /> The escort fighters reduced the loss rate to below 7%, with a total of 247 B-17s lost in 3,500 ]s while taking part in the Big Week raids.<ref name="C&W.162" /> | |||
|lists= | |||
* ] | |||
By September 1944, 27 of the 42 bomb groups of the 8th Air Force and six of the 21 groups of the ] used B-17s. Losses to ] continued to take a high toll of heavy bombers through 1944, but the war in Europe was being won by the Allies. And by {{Nowrap|27 April}} 1945, 2 days after the last heavy bombing mission in Europe, the rate of aircraft loss was so low that replacement aircraft were no longer arriving and the number of bombers per bomb group was reduced. The Combined Bomber Offensive was effectively complete.<ref name="USAAF.04-45" /> | |||
=== Pacific Theater === | |||
]: An onboard fire burnt the aircraft in two shortly after landing on {{Nowrap|7 December}} 1941. One crewman was killed by a Zero attack.<ref name="A&K.1" />]] | |||
On 7 December 1941, a group of 12 B-17s of the 38th (four B-17C) and 88th (eight B-17E) Reconnaissance Squadrons, en route to reinforce the Philippines, was flown into Pearl Harbor from ], arriving while the surprise ] was going on. Leonard "Smitty" Smith Humiston, co-pilot on ] Robert H. Richards' B-17C, AAF S/N ''40-2049'', reported that he thought the U.S. Navy was giving the flight a 21-gun salute to celebrate the arrival of the bombers, after which he realized that Pearl Harbor was under attack. The Fortress came under fire from Japanese fighter aircraft, though the crew was unharmed with the exception of one member who suffered an abrasion on his hand. Japanese activity forced them to divert from ] to ]. On landing, the aircraft overran the runway and ran into a ditch, where it was then strafed. Although initially deemed repairable, ''40-2049'' (11th BG / 38th RS) received more than 200 bullet holes and never flew again. Ten of the 12 Fortresses survived the attack.<ref name="A&K.2" /> | |||
By 1941, the ] (FEAF) based at ] in the Philippines had 35 B-17s, with the War Department eventually planning to raise that to 165.<ref name="bloody p55-6" /> When the FEAF received word of the attack on Pearl Harbor, ] ] sent his bombers and fighters on various patrol missions to prevent them from being caught on the ground. Brereton planned B-17 raids on Japanese airfields in ], in accordance with ] war plan directives, but this was overruled by General Douglas MacArthur.<ref name="Bloody p163" /> A series of ], followed by several confusing and false reports of air attacks, delayed the authorization of the sortie. By the time the B-17s and escorting ] fighters were about to get airborne, they were destroyed by Japanese bombers of the ]. The FEAF lost half its aircraft during the first strike,<ref name="Bloody p166-7" /> and was all but destroyed over the next few days.{{citation needed|date=October 2017}} | |||
Another early World War II Pacific engagement, on {{Nowrap|10 December}} 1941, involved ], who reportedly crashed his B-17 into the ], which was later acknowledged as a near bomb miss on the ]. Nonetheless, this deed made him a celebrated ]. Kelly's B-17C AAF S/N ''40-2045'' (19th BG / 30th BS) crashed about {{convert|6|mi|km|sigfig=1|abbr=on}} from Clark Field after he held the burning Fortress steady long enough for the surviving crew to bail out. Kelly was posthumously awarded the ].<ref name="Sal.p64" /> | |||
Noted Japanese ace ] is credited with this kill, and in the process, came to respect the ability of the Fortress to absorb punishment.<ref name="Sakai" /> | |||
] | |||
B-17s were used in early battles of the Pacific with little success, notably the ]<ref name="WoF p96" /> and ].<ref name="Sword p180,329" /> While there, the ] B-17s were tasked with disrupting the Japanese sea lanes. Air Corps doctrine dictated bombing runs from high altitude, but they soon found only 1% of their bombs hit targets. However, B-17s were operating at heights too great for most ] fighters to reach. | |||
The B-17's greatest success in the Pacific was in the ], in which aircraft of this type were responsible for damaging and sinking several Japanese transport ships. On 2 March 1943, six B-17s of the 64th Squadron flying at {{convert|10000|ft|m|sigfig=1|abbr=on}} attacked a major Japanese troop convoy off ], using ] to sink {{ship|SS|Kyokusei Maru||2}}, which carried 1,200 army troops, and damage two other transports, ''Teiyo Maru'' and ''Nojima''. On 3 March 1943, 13 B-17s flying at {{convert|7000|ft|m|sigfig=1|abbr=on}} bombed the convoy, forcing the convoy to disperse and reducing the concentration of their anti-aircraft defenses. The B-17s attracted a number of ] fighters, which were in turn attacked by the P-38 Lightning escorts. One B-17 broke up in the air, and its crew was forced to take to their parachutes. Japanese fighter pilots machine-gunned some of the B-17 crew members as they descended and attacked others in the water after they landed.<ref name="Gillison, pp. 692-693">], pp. 692–93</ref> Five of the Japanese fighters strafing the B-17 aircrew were promptly engaged and shot down by three Lightnings, though these were also then lost.<ref name="historynet">{{cite journal |url=http://www.historynet.com/battle-of-the-bismarck-sea.htm |title=Battle of the Bismarck Sea |first=Lawrence |last=Spinetta |date=November 2007 |journal=World War II |issn=0898-4204|access-date=2 August 2013}}</ref> The allied fighter pilots claimed 15 Zeros destroyed, while the B-17 crews claimed five more.<ref name="Gillison, pp. 692-693"/><ref name="Watson, pp. 144-145">], pp. 144–45</ref> Actual Japanese fighter losses for the day were seven destroyed and three damaged.<ref name="Gamble 2010 313">], pp. 313</ref><ref name="awm" /> The remaining seven transports and three of the eight destroyers were then sunk by a combination of low level strafing runs by ] ], and skip bombing by USAAF ]s at {{convert|100|ft|m|abbr=on}}, while B-17s claimed five hits from higher altitudes.<ref name="Frisbee" /> On the morning of 4 March 1943, a B-17 sank the destroyer ''Asashio'' with a {{convert|500|lb|kg|abbr=on}} bomb while she was picking up survivors from ''Arashio''.<ref>{{harvnb|Morison|1950|p=61}}</ref> | |||
At their peak, 168 B-17 bombers were in the Pacific theater in September 1942, but already in mid-1942 Gen. Arnold had decided that the B-17 was unsuitable for the kind of operations required in the Pacific and made plans to replace all of the B-17s in the theater with B-24s (and later, B-29s) as soon as they became available. Although the conversion was not complete until mid-1943, B-17 combat operations in the Pacific theater came to an end after a little over a year.<ref>Kenney, George C. ''General Kenney Reports''. New York: Duall, Sloan and Pearce, 1949.</ref> Surviving aircraft were reassigned to the 54th Troop Carrier Wing's special airdrop section and were used to drop supplies to ground forces operating in close contact with the enemy. Special airdrop B-17s supported Australian commandos operating near the Japanese stronghold at Rabaul, which had been the primary B-17 target in 1942 and early 1943.<ref>Jacobson 1945 {{page needed|date=January 2012}}</ref> | |||
B-17s were still used in the Pacific later in the war, however, mainly in the ] role. A number of B-17Gs, redesignated B-17Hs and later SB-17Gs, were used in the Pacific during the final year of the war to carry and drop lifeboats to stranded bomber crews who had been shot down or crashed at sea.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.pbyrescue.com/Aircraft/b-17h.htm|title=The B-17H "Flying Dutchman"|website=www.pbyrescue.com|access-date=24 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170420225027/http://www.pbyrescue.com/Aircraft/b-17h.htm|archive-date=20 April 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref> These aircraft were nicknamed ], and remained in service for many years after the end of World War II.<ref>]</ref> | |||
{{clear left}} | |||
=== Bomber defense === | |||
] over ], Germany]] | |||
Before the advent of long-range ] escorts, B-17s had only their ] ]s to rely on for defense during the bombing runs over Europe. As the war intensified, Boeing used feedback from aircrews to improve each new variant with increased armament and armor.<ref name="Boeing" /> Defensive armament increased from four {{convert|0.50|in|mm|sigfig=3|abbr=on}} machine guns and one {{convert|0.30|in|mm|sigfig=3|abbr=on}} nose machine gun in the B-17C, to thirteen {{convert|0.50|in|mm|sigfig=3|abbr=on}} machine guns in the B-17G. But because the bombers could not ] when attacked by fighters and needed to be flown straight and level during their final bomb run, individual aircraft struggled to fend off a direct attack. | |||
A 1943 survey by the ] found that over half the bombers shot down by the Germans had left the protection of the main formation.<ref name="B-17.de 2" /> To address this problem, the United States developed the bomb-group formation, which evolved into the staggered ] formation in which all the B-17s could safely cover any others in their formation with their machine guns. This made a formation of bombers a dangerous target to engage by enemy fighters.<ref name="Manual 2" /> In order to more quickly form these formations, ]s, planes with distinctive paint schemes, were utilized to guide bombers into formation, saving assembly time.<ref name="MAH">{{cite web |title=Why Use Colourful Camouflage in World War 2? – Assembly Ships |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYm1QEV69bo | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211123/WYm1QEV69bo| archive-date=2021-11-23 | url-status=live|website=Youtube | date=6 September 2018 |publisher=Military Aviation History}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref name="Polka Dot">{{cite web |title=Polka Dot Warriors > Vintage Wings of Canada |url=http://www.vintagewings.ca/VintageNews/Stories/tabid/116/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/477/language/en-CA/Polka-Dot-Warriors.aspx |website=www.vintagewings.ca |publisher=Vintage Wings |access-date=7 February 2019 |archive-date=1 December 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191201121322/http://www.vintagewings.ca/VintageNews/Stories/tabid/116/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/477/language/en-CA/Polka-Dot-Warriors.aspx |url-status=dead }}</ref> ''Luftwaffe'' fighter pilots likened attacking a B-17 combat box formation to encountering a ''fliegendes Stachelschwein'', "flying porcupine", with dozens of machine guns in a combat box aimed at them from almost every direction. However, the use of this rigid formation meant that individual aircraft could not engage in evasive maneuvers: they had to fly constantly in a straight line, which made them vulnerable to German flak. Moreover, German fighter aircraft later developed the tactic of high-speed strafing passes rather than engaging with individual aircraft to inflict damage with minimum risk.{{citation needed|date=October 2017}} | |||
The B-17 was noted for its ability to absorb battle damage, still reach its target and bring its crew home safely.<ref name="Manual" /><ref name="browne" /><ref name="Johnsen 2006" /> Wally Hoffman, a B-17 pilot with the Eighth Air Force during World War II, said, "The plane can be cut and slashed almost to pieces by enemy fire and bring its crew home."<ref name="Hoffman" /> ] reported one instance in which a B-17 suffered a midair collision with a ], losing an engine and suffering serious damage to both the starboard horizontal stabilizer and the vertical stabilizer, and being knocked out of formation by the impact. The B-17 was reported as shot down by observers, but it survived and brought its crew home without injury.<ref name="Caidin.p86" /> Its toughness was compensation for its shorter range and lighter bomb load compared to the B-24 and British Avro Lancaster heavy bombers.{{Clarify|is this statement backed by the ref for the following sentence?|date=June 2010}} Stories circulated of B-17s returning to base with tails shredded, engines destroyed and large portions of their wings destroyed by flak.<ref name="DurableB-17Colorado" /> This durability, together with the large operational numbers in the Eighth Air Force and the fame achieved by the '']'', made the B-17 a key bomber aircraft of the war. Other factors such as combat effectiveness and political issues also contributed to the B-17's success.<ref name="B17vB24" /> | |||
The B-17 adopted early ]s, such as ] and ] to confuse German radar. This greatly reduced the effectiveness of German Flak, by perhaps as much as 75%, meaning that 450 bombers were saved by these technologies.<ref>{{cite thesis|page=30|url=https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/ADA265494|title=The Radar Eye Blinded: The USAF and Electronic Warfare, 1945-1955| last=Kuehl |first= Daniel T.|year=1992}}</ref> | |||
=== Luftwaffe attacks === | |||
], Germany, on {{Nowrap|15 October}} 1944; the bombardier was killed.<ref>. ''398th.org''. Retrieved: 24 January 2012.</ref>]] | |||
After examining wrecked B-17s and B-24s, Luftwaffe officers discovered that on average it took about 20 hits with ] shells fired from the rear to bring them down.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> Pilots of average ability hit the bombers with only about two percent of the rounds they fired, so to obtain 20 hits, the average pilot had to fire one thousand {{convert|20|mm|in|abbr=on}} rounds at a bomber.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> Early versions of the Fw 190, one of the best German interceptor fighters, were equipped with two {{convert|20|mm|in|abbr=on}} ] cannons, which carried only 500 rounds when belt-fed (normally using 60-round ]s in earlier installations), and later with the better Mauser MG 151/20 cannons, which had a longer effective range than the MG FF weapon. Later versions carried four or even six MG 151/20 cannon and twin ]. The German fighters found that when attacking from the front, where fewer defensive guns were mounted (and where the pilot was exposed and not protected by armor as he was from the rear), it took only four or five hits to bring a bomber down.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> | |||
To rectify the Fw 190's shortcomings, the number of cannons fitted was doubled to four, with a corresponding increase in the amount of ammunition carried, creating ] bomber destroyer version. This type replaced the vulnerable twin-engine ''Zerstörer'' heavy fighters which could not survive interception by P-51 Mustangs flying well ahead of the combat boxes in an ] role starting very early in 1944 to clear any Luftwaffe defensive fighters from the skies. By 1944, a further upgrade to ]-]'s {{convert|30|mm|in|abbr=on}} ]s mounted either in the wing, or in underwing, conformal mount gun pods, was made for the ''Sturmbock'' Focke-Wulfs as either the ], enabling aircraft to bring a bomber down with just a few hits.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> | |||
The adoption of the ]-derived '']'' (Wfr. Gr. 21) rocket mortar by the Luftwaffe in mid-August 1943 promised the introduction of a major "stand-off" style of offensive weapon – one strut-mounted tubular launcher was fixed under each wing panel on the Luftwaffe's single-engine fighters, and two under each wing panel of a few twin-engine ] daylight ''Zerstörer'' aircraft.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> However, due to the slow 715 mph velocity and characteristic ] of the fired rocket (despite the usual mounting of the launcher at about 15° upward orientation), and the small number of fighters fitted with the weapons, the Wfr. Gr. 21 never had a major effect on the combat box formations of Fortresses.<ref name="AFM.76-9" /> The Luftwaffe also fitted heavy-caliber ''Bordkanone''-series 37, 50 and even {{convert|75|mm|in|sigfig=3|abbr=on}} cannon as anti-bomber weapons on twin-engine aircraft such as the special ] fighters, as well as one model of the ] ''Hornisse'' but these measures did not have much effect on the American strategic bomber offensive. The ], however, had moderate success against the B-17 late in the war. With its usual nose-mounted armament of four ]s, and with some examples later equipped with the ], launched from underwing racks, it could fire from outside the range of the bombers' {{convert|.50|in|mm|sigfig=3|abbr=on}} defensive guns and bring an aircraft down with one hit,<ref name="Schollars" /> as both the MK 108's shells and the R4M's warheads were filled with the "shattering" force of the strongly ] ] military explosive. | |||
=== Luftwaffe-captured B-17s === | |||
]'' markings, the USAAF-named "Wulfe-Hound", ''41-24585'', of the 360th BS/303rd BG, was downed on 12 December 1942 near ], ], while on a raid on ], ]. The first Flying Fortress to fall intact into German hands, it was operated by ] from March 1944.<ref>Thomas, Geoffrey J., and Ketley, Barry, "KG 200 – The Luftwaffe's Most Secret Unit", Hikoku Publications Ltd., Crowborough, East Sussex, UK, 2003, {{ISBN|1-902109-33-3}}, pp. 57–58, 66.</ref>]] | |||
During World War II approximately 40 B-17s were captured and refurbished by Germany after crash-landing or being forced down, with about a dozen put back into the air. Given German '']'' national markings on their wings and fuselage sides, and ] tail fin–flashes, the captured B-17s were used to determine the B-17's vulnerabilities and to train German interceptor pilots in attack tactics.<ref name="WoF p89" /> Others, with the cover designations Dornier Do 200 and Do 288, were used as long-range transports by the ] special duties unit, carrying out agent drops and supplying secret airstrips in the Middle East and North Africa. They were chosen specifically for these missions as being more suitable for this role than other available German aircraft; they never attempted to deceive the Allies and always wore full ''Luftwaffe'' markings.<ref name="Donald Am p23" /><ref name="Wixley p30" /> One B-17 of KG200, bearing the ''Luftwaffe''{{'}}s KG 200 ''Geschwaderkennung'' (combat wing code) markings ''A3+FB'', was interned by Spain when it landed at ] airfield, {{Nowrap|27 June}} 1944, remaining there for the rest of the war.<ref name="Northstar" /> It has been alleged that some B-17s kept their Allied markings and were used by the ''Luftwaffe'' in attempts to infiltrate B-17 bombing formations and report on their positions and altitudes.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Aluminum Castles: WWII from a gunner's view|last=Richardson|first=Wilbur|publisher=Cantemos|date=26 May 2012|pages=29–30|quote=We also reported seeing a B17 flying at a safe distance from the formation. This mystery fortress shadowed the formation inbound from the Rhine river and we were informed others had seen it back across Belgium on the way out. A fortress manned by the enemy created an unsettling feeling in all of us.}}</ref> According to these allegations, the practice was initially successful, but Army Air Force combat aircrews quickly developed and established standard procedures to first warn off, and then fire upon any "stranger" trying to join a group's formation.<ref name="Northstar" /> | |||
=== Soviet-interned B-17s === | |||
The U.S. did not offer B-17s to the Soviet Union as part of its ], but at least 73 aircraft were acquired by the ]. These aircraft had landed with mechanical trouble during the ] over Germany or had been damaged by a ''Luftwaffe'' raid in ]. The Soviets restored 23 to flying condition and concentrated them in the 890th Bomber Regiment of the ],<ref>{{cite web|last=Holm |first=Michael |title=890th Bryanskiy Bomber Aviation Regiment|url=https://www.ww2.dk/new/air%20force/regiment/bap/890bap.htm}}</ref> but they never saw combat. In 1946 (or 1947, according to Holm), the regiment was assigned to the ] factory (moving from ]) to help the Soviet effort to reproduce the more advanced ] as the ].<ref name="Gordon p. 479">Gordon 2008, p. 479.</ref> | |||
=== Swiss-interned B-17s === | |||
During the ], some US and British bombers landed in Switzerland and were ]. Some had been damaged and were unable to get back to Allied bases. Others flew into Swiss airspace due to navigation errors, and on rare occasions, ]. Swiss fighter aircraft intercepted such aircraft and sought to force them to land. | |||
In October 1943, a B-17F-25-VE (tail number 25841) developed engine trouble after a raid over Germany and was forced to land in Switzerland. The plane and its US flight crew were interned. The aircraft was turned over to the ], which flew the bomber until the end of the war, using other interned but non-airworthy B-17s for spare parts. The bomber's topside surfaces were repainted a dark ], but it retained its light gray underwing and lower fuselage surfaces. It carried the Swiss national white cross insignia in red squares on the topside and underside of its wings, and on both sides of its rudder and its fuselage, with the light gray flash letters "RD" and "I" on either side of the fuselage insignias.<ref name="Cravens, Wesley 1956">Cravens, Wesley. ''Army Air Forces in World War II''. Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1956.</ref> | |||
=== Japanese-captured B-17s === | |||
] | |||
In 1942, Japanese technicians and mechanics rebuilt three damaged B-17s, one "D" and two "E" series, using parts salvaged from abandoned B-17 wrecks in the Philippines and the Java East Indies.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.historynet.com/japans-fleet-flying-forts.htm| title = The Surprising Story of Japan's B-17 Fleet| date = 26 January 2018}}</ref> The three bombers, which still contained their top-secret ]s, were ] to Japan where they underwent extensive technical evaluation by the ''Giken'', the ]'s Air Technical Research Institute (''Koku Gijutsu Kenkyujo'') at Tachikawa's air field. The "D" model, later deemed an obsolescent design, was used in Japanese training and propaganda films. The two "E"s were used to develop air combat tactics for use against B-17s; they were also used as enemy aircraft in pilot and crew training films. One of the two "E"s was photographed late in the war by US aerial recon. It was code-named "Tachikawa 105" after the mystery aircraft's wingspan ({{cvt|104|ft}}) but not correctly identified as a captured B-17 until after the war. No traces of the three captured Flying Fortresses were ever found in Japan by ] occupation forces. The bombers were assumed either lost by various means or scrapped late in the war for their vital war materials.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p314" /> | |||
=== Postwar history === | |||
==== U.S. Air Force ==== | |||
{{See also|3205th Drone Group}} | |||
] | |||
After World War II, the B-17 was quickly phased out of use as a bomber and the Army Air Forces retired most of its fleet. Flight crews ferried the bombers back across the Atlantic to the United States where the majority were sold for scrap and melted down, although many remained in use in second-line roles such as VIP transports, air-sea rescue and photo-reconnaissance.<ref name="Swan mil p80" /><ref name="Bowers Boeing p290" /> ] (SAC), established in 1946, used reconnaissance B-17s (at first called F-9 , later RB-17) until 1949.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p310-1" /><ref name="Knaack bomber p465" /> | |||
The USAF ] of the ] (MATS) operated B-17s as so-called "Dumbo" ] aircraft. Work on using B-17s to carry ]s had begun in 1943, but they entered service in the European theater only in February 1945. They were also used to provide search and rescue support for ] raids against Japan. About 130 B-17s were converted to the air-sea rescue role, at first designated B-17H and later SB-17G. Some SB-17s had their defensive guns removed, while others retained their guns to allow use close to combat areas. The SB-17 served through the ], remaining in service with USAF until the mid-1950s.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p303-4" /><ref>Hess & Winchester 1997, pp. 86, 89–90</ref> | |||
In 1946, surplus B-17s were chosen as ] for atmospheric sampling during the ] atomic bomb tests, being able to fly close to or even through the ]s without endangering a crew. This led to more widespread conversion of B-17s as drones and drone control aircraft, both for further use in atomic testing and as targets for testing ] and ]s.<ref name="WoF p91" /> {{nowrap|One hundred and seven B-17s}} were converted to drones.<ref name="Flight Sperry" /> The last operational mission flown by a USAF Fortress was conducted on {{Nowrap|6 August}} 1959, when a DB-17P, serial'' 44-83684 '', directed a QB-17G, out of ], New Mexico, as a target for an ] air-to-air missile fired from a ]. A retirement ceremony was held several days later at Holloman AFB, after which ''44-83684'' was retired.{{Citation needed|date=October 2010}} It was subsequently used in various films and in the 1960s television show '']'' before being retired to the ] aviation museum in Chino, California.<ref>{{cite web |url = http://warbirdregistry.org/b17registry/b17-4483684.html |title = Warbird Registry – Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress |website = warbirdregistry.org }}</ref> Perhaps the most famous B-17, the '']'', has been restored – with the B-17D '']'' under way – to her World War II wartime appearance by the ] at ], Ohio.<ref name="NMAF Memphis" /> | |||
==== U.S. Navy and Coast Guard ==== | |||
] aircraft.]] | |||
During the last year of World War II and shortly thereafter, the ] (USN) acquired 48 ex-USAAF B-17s for patrol and air-sea rescue work. The first two ex-USAAF B-17s, a B-17F (later modified to B-17G standard) and a B-17G were obtained by the Navy for various development programs.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p310-1" /> At first, these aircraft operated under their original USAAF designations, but on 31 July 1945 they were assigned the naval aircraft designation PB-1, a designation which had originally been used in 1925 for the ] experimental flying boat.<ref name="Swan Navy" /> | |||
Thirty-two B-17Gs<ref name="DABASv2 p661" /> were used by the Navy under the designation PB-1W, the suffix -W indicating an airborne early warning role. A large radome for an ] ] search radar was fitted underneath the fuselage and additional internal fuel tanks were added for longer range, with the provision for additional underwing fuel tanks. Originally, the B-17 was also chosen because of its heavy defensive armament, but this was later removed. These aircraft were painted dark blue, the standard Navy paint scheme which had been adopted in late 1944.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p310-1" /><ref name="Swan Navy" /> PB-1Ws continued in USN service until 1955, gradually being phased out in favor of the Lockheed WV-2 (known in the USAF as the ], a designation ]), a military version of the ] commercial airliner.{{Citation needed|date=October 2017}} | |||
In July 1945, 16 B-17s were transferred to the Coast Guard via the Navy; these aircraft were initially assigned U.S. Navy Bureau Numbers (BuNo), but were delivered to the Coast Guard designated as PB-1Gs beginning in July 1946.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p310-1" /><ref name="WoF p89-0" /> Coast Guard PB-1Gs were stationed at a number of bases in the U.S. and Newfoundland, with five at ], North Carolina, two at ], two at ], Newfoundland, one at ], Alaska, and one in Washington state.<ref name="WoF p89-0" /> They were used primarily in the "Dumbo" air-sea rescue role, but were also used for ] duties and for photo mapping. The Coast Guard PB-1Gs served throughout the 1950s, the last example not being withdrawn from service until 14 October 1959.<ref name="Bowers Boeing p310-1" /><ref name="USCG" /> | |||
=== Special operations === | |||
B-17s were used by the CIA front companies Civil Air Transport, Air America and Intermountain Aviation for special missions. These included B-17G ''44-85531'', registered as N809Z. These aircraft were primarily used for agent drop missions over the People's Republic of China, flying from Taiwan, with Taiwanese crews. Four B-17s were shot down in these operations.<ref>Pocock, Chris. ''The Black Bats: CIA Spy Flights Over China From Taiwan, 1951–1969''. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Military History, 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-7643-3513-6}}.</ref>{{page needed |date=February 2024}} | |||
In 1957 the surviving B-17s had been stripped of all weapons and painted black. One of these Taiwan-based B-17s was flown to ] in the Philippines in mid-September, assigned for covert missions into Tibet. | |||
On 28 May 1962, N809Z, piloted by Connie Seigrist and Douglas Price, flew Major James Smith, USAF and Lieutenant Leonard A. LeSchack, USNR to the abandoned Soviet arctic ice station NP 8, as ]. Smith and LeSchack parachuted from the B-17 and searched the station for several days. On 1 June, Seigrist and Price returned and picked up Smith and LeSchack using a ] system installed on the B-17.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.utdallas.edu/library/collections/speccoll/Leeker/b17.pdf |title=The Boeing B-17s |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100928084808/http://www.utdallas.edu/library/collections/speccoll/Leeker/b17.pdf |archive-date=28 September 2010 |website=utdallas.edu |accessdate= 25 July 2011}}</ref> N809Z was used to perform a Skyhook pick up in the James Bond movie '']'' in 1965. This aircraft, now restored to its original B-17G configuration, was on display in the ] in ] until it was sold to the ] in 2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.collingsfoundation.org/2015/12/b-17-flying-fortress-to-join-cf/|title = B-17 Flying Fortress to join CF |publisher=the Collings Foundation |date=2015}}</ref> | |||
== Operators == | |||
{{Main list|List of B-17 Flying Fortress operators}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
The B-17, a versatile aircraft, served in dozens of ] units in theaters of combat throughout World War II, and in other roles for the RAF. Its main use was in ], where its shorter range and smaller bombload relative to other aircraft did not hamper it as much as in the ]. Peak USAAF inventory (in August 1944) was 4,574 worldwide.<ref name="Baugher Squads" /> | |||
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== Surviving aircraft and wrecks == | |||
Of the more than 12,000 B-17 made, six were known to be in flying as of 2023.{{Citation needed|reason=Do not add sources from SimpleFlying per WP:SIMPLEFLYING|date=June 2024}} There are about 40 B-17 in collections in the United States,<ref>{{Cite web |title=B-17G Flying Fortress – Air Mobility Command Museum |url=https://amcmuseum.org/at-the-museum/aircraft/b-17g-flying-fortress/ |access-date=2024-05-03 |language=en-US}}</ref> and overall about 46 globally.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-12-19 |title=Surviving B-17s - Aero Vintage Books |url=https://www.aerovintage.com/b-17-locator-complete-aircraft/ |access-date=2024-05-03 |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
There are also nearly complete or partially complete B-17 wrecks that have been discovered: an example of this is a B-17F that ditched in the Pacific on 11 July 1943, but was located in 1986.<ref>{{Cite news |title=The Complete Guide to the B-17F Black Jack WWII Wreck |url=http://www.indopacificimages.com/index.php/papua-new-guinea-2/b-17f-black-jack/ |access-date=2017-08-03 |work=Indo-Pacific Images |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
{{further|List of surviving Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses}} | |||
{{anchor|The Fortress as a symbol}} | |||
== Fortresses as a symbol == | |||
] | |||
The B-17 Flying Fortress became symbolic of the United States of America's air power. In a 1943 ] poll of 2,500 men in cities where Consolidated advertisements had been run in newspapers, 73% had heard of the B-24 and 90% knew of the B-17.<ref name="Johnsen 2006" /> | |||
After the first Y1B-17s were delivered to the Army Air Corps 2nd Bombardment Group, they were used on flights to promote their long range and navigational capabilities. In January 1938, group commander ] ] flew a Y1B-17 from the U.S. east coast to the west coast, setting a transcontinental record of 13 hours 27 minutes. He also broke the west-to-east coast record on the return trip, averaging {{convert|245|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on}} in 11 hours 1 minute.<ref name="Zamzow" /> Six bombers of the 2nd Bombardment Group took off from ] on {{Nowrap|15 February}} 1938 as part of a goodwill flight to ]. Covering {{convert|12000|mi|km}} they returned on {{Nowrap|27 February}}, with seven aircraft setting off on a flight to ], Brazil, three days later.<ref name="WoF p46-7" /> In a well-publicized mission on 12 May of the same year, three Y1B-17s "intercepted" and took photographs of the Italian ocean liner ] {{convert|610|mi|km}} off the Atlantic coast.<ref name="AFM.91-12" />{{NoteTag|This is a commonly misreported error. The ''Rex'' was 725 miles offshore on her last position report as the Y1B-17s were taxiing for takeoff from Mitchel Field, four hours before interception{{citation needed|date=February 2023}} }} | |||
Many pilots who flew both the B-17 and the B-24 preferred the B-17 for its greater stability and ease in formation flying. The electrical systems were less vulnerable to damage than the B-24's hydraulics, and the B-17 was easier to fly than a B-24 when missing an engine.<ref name="levine1992">{{cite book |title = The Strategic Bombing of Germany, 1940–1945 |url = https://archive.org/details/strategicbombing00levi |url-access = limited |publisher=Praeger |last = Levine |first = Alan J. |year=1992 |location=Westport, Connecticut |pages=–15 |isbn = 0-275-94319-4}}</ref> During the war, the largest offensive bombing force, the ], had an open preference for the B-17. ] ] wrote about his preference for equipping the Eighth with B-17s, citing the logistical advantage in keeping field forces down to a minimum number of aircraft types with their individual servicing and spares. For this reason, he wanted B-17 bombers and P-51 fighters for the Eighth. His views were supported by Eighth Air Force statisticians, whose mission studies showed that the Flying Fortress's utility and survivability was much greater than those of the B-24 Liberator.<ref name="Johnsen 2006" /> Making it back to base on numerous occasions, despite extensive battle damage, the B-17's durability became legendary;<ref name="Manual" /><ref name=browne /> stories and photos of B-17s surviving battle damage were widely circulated during the war.<ref name="Johnsen 2006" /> Despite an inferior performance and smaller bombload than the more numerous B-24 Liberators,<ref name="Birdsall 3">Birdsall 1968, p. 3.</ref> a survey of Eighth Air Force crews showed a much higher rate of satisfaction with the B-17.<ref name="B-17.de" /> | |||
== Notable B-17s == | |||
]'' continues to fly after collision with an attacking ], eventually landing without crew injuries.]] | |||
<!-- Many of these aircraft already have lengthy articles. This section only needs to be a brief summary of the notability of each aircraft. --> | |||
* '']'' – This B-17F survived having her tail almost cut off in a mid-air collision with a ] over Tunisia but returned safely to base in Algeria.<ref name=WarbirdsNews20130627>{{cite web |title=WWII's B-17 ''All American:'' Separating Fact and Fiction |url=http://www.warbirdsnews.com/warbird-articles/wwiis-b-17-all-american-separating-fact-fiction.html |website=Warbirds News |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160405014119/http://www.warbirdsnews.com/warbird-articles/wwiis-b-17-all-american-separating-fact-fiction.html |archive-date=5 April 2016 |date=27 June 2013 |url-status=dead |access-date=12 August 2016 }}</ref> | |||
* ''Snap! Crackle! Pop!'' – B-17F-27-BO, 41-24620, part of the 360th Bomb Squadron, 303rd Bomb Group, was on a daylight bombing run over Saint-Nazaire, France when downed by flak. The ball turret gunner, ], his parachute damaged and unusable, free fell from 22,000 feet, survived and became a POW.<ref>{{cite web |title=41-24620 Snap! Crackle! Pop! |url=https://www.americanairmuseum.com/archive/aircraft/41-24620 |website=American Air Museum in Britain |publisher=Imperial War Museums |access-date=30 November 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Susskind |first1=Hal |title=20,000 Feet - Without a Chute The Alan Magee Story |url=http://www.303rdbg.com/magee.html |website=Hell's Angels Newsletter |publisher=via: 303rd Bomb Group (H) |access-date=30 November 2024 |date=February 1996}}</ref> | |||
* ''Chief Seattle'' – sponsored by the city of Seattle, she disappeared (MIA) on 14 August 1942<ref>Nose art clearly shows "Chief Seattle", but often incorrectly reported as "Chief of Seattle"</ref> flying a recon mission for the 19th BG, 435th BS<ref>B-17E SN# 41-2656 at or MACR report at Fold3.org</ref> and the crew declared dead on 7 December 1945. | |||
* ''Hell's Kitchen'' – B-17F 41-24392 was one of only three early B-17F's in 414th BS to complete more than 100 combat missions.<ref>{{cite web | |||
|url = http://www.reddog1944.com/414th_Squadron_Planes_and_Crews.htm | |||
|title = 414th Squadron Planes and Crews circa 1943 | |||
|website = reddog1944.com | |||
|access-date=20 December 2012 | |||
}}</ref> | |||
* ''Mary Ann'' – a fictional B-17D that was part of an unarmed flight which left Hamilton Air Field, Novato, California on 6 December 1941 en route to ] in ], arriving during the ]. The plane and her crew were immediately forced into action on ] and in the ] during the outbreak of ]. She became famous when her fictional exploits were featured in '']'', one of the first of the patriotic ] released in 1943.<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035616/trivia |title=Trivia |website=] |date=28 May 2013 |access-date=28 May 2013}}</ref> | |||
* '']'' – one of the first B-17s to complete a tour of duty of 25 missions in the 8th Air Force and the subject of ], now completely restored and on display since 17 May 2018<ref>{{cite news |url = https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/17/politics/memphis-belle-bomber-unveiling-air-force-museum/index.html |title=Memphis Belle bomber newly restored and unveiled at US Air Force museum |first=Andreas |last=Preuss |date=17 May 2018 |publisher=CNN |access-date=2018-05-17 }}</ref> at the ] at ] in Dayton, Ohio. | |||
* Milk Wagon - B-17G. Over the course of its tour of duty, ''Milk Wagon'' set a record in the 3rd Division, possibly the war, for 129 missions without aborting for mechanical failure.<ref>{{Cite web |title=43-37756 |url=http://www.447bg.com/43-37756.htm |access-date=2023-12-30 |website=www.447bg.com |archive-date=30 November 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231130211356/http://447bg.com/43-37756.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
* '']'' – B-17C. Previously named 'Pamela'. Stationed in Mackay, Queensland, Australia during World War II. On 14 June 1943, ] shortly after takeoff from Mackay while ferrying U.S. forces personnel back to Port Moresby, with 40 of the 41 people on board killed. It remains the worst air disaster in Australian history. The sole survivor, Foye Roberts, married an Australian and returned to the States. He died in ], on 4 February 2004.<ref>{{cite web |last=Choate|first=Trish |title = Going from lucky in love to lucky to be alive in 1943 |url = http://www.timesrecordnews.com/columnists/choate-going-from-lucky-in-love-to-lucky-to-be-alive-in-1943-ep-427243459-339500392.html |website=timesrecordnews.com |access-date=28 October 2016}}</ref> | |||
* ''Murder Inc.'' – A B-17 bombardier wearing the name of the B-17 "Murder Inc." on his jacket was used for propaganda in German newspapers.<ref name="murder inc.">Williams, Kenneth Daniel. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180330224444/http://www.merkki.com/murderinc.htm |date=30 March 2018 }}. ''World War II – Prisoners of War – Stalag Luft I''. Retrieved: 31 August 2010.</ref> | |||
* '']'' – B-17E flown by the most highly decorated crew in the Pacific Theater<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://zeamerseagerbeavers.com/old-666-lucy-history/ |title="Old 666"/"Lucy" – A History |last=Hayes |first=Clint |date=23 February 2014 |website=Zeamer's Eager Beavers |language=en-US |access-date=2018-07-26 }}</ref> | |||
* ''Royal Flush'' – B-17F ''42-6087'' from the ] and commanded on one mission by highly decorated USAAF officer ], she was the lone surviving 100th BG B-17 of 10 October 1943 raid against Münster to return to the unit's base at ].<ref>{{cite web |url = https://100thbg.com/index.php?option=com_bombgrp&view=personnel&id=4475&Itemid=334 |title=LT COL Robert ROSENTHAL |website=100th Bomber Group |language=en-gb |access-date=2018-07-26 }}</ref> | |||
* '']'' – B-17F featured in the June 1944 issue of '']'' magazine<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Powell |first=Hickman |title=Another Triumph for Yankee 'Know-How' |url = http://www.91stbombgroup.com/photo_history/sir_baboon_mcgoon_news.html |magazine=] |access-date=2018-07-26 }}</ref> and the 1945 issue of '']'' magazine.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://legendsintheirowntime.com/LiTOT/Content/1945/B17_Fl_4505_crash.html |title=Crash Landing |magazine=Flying |date=May 1945 |volume=36 |issue=5 |pages= |first=Harold W. |last=Kulick |access-date=2018-07-26 |archive-date=11 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511200231/http://legendsintheirowntime.com/LiTOT/Content/1945/B17_Fl_4505_crash.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Articles discuss mobile recovery crews following October 1943 belly landing at Tannington, England. | |||
* '']'' – Initially nicknamed ''Ole Betsy'' while in service, ''The Swoose'' is the only remaining intact B-17D, built in 1940, the oldest surviving Flying Fortress, and the only surviving B-17 to have seen action in the ]; she is in the collection of the National Air and Space Museum and is being restored for final display at the ] at ] in Dayton, Ohio.<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/news/story.asp?storyID=123106540 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121012220403/http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/news/story.asp?storyID=123106540 |archive-date=2012-10-12 |title=The Swoose comes home to roost at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force |first=Sarah |last=Parke |publisher=National Museum of the U.S. Air Force }}</ref> ''The Swoose'' was flown by ], father of actress ], who named his daughter after the bomber. | |||
* ''Ye Olde Pub'' – A highly damaged B-17 piloted by ] that ] by ], as memorialized in the painting ''A Higher Call'' by John D. Shaw.<ref>{{cite web |url = https://www.valorstudios.com/Franz-Stigler-Charlie-Brown.htm |title = A Higher Call: autographed by JG 27 Bf-109 ace Franz Stigler and Charlie Brown of the B-17 "Ye Olde Pub" |website = www.valorstudios.com |access-date = 17 August 2019 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190817190904/https://www.valorstudios.com/Franz-Stigler-Charlie-Brown.htm |archive-date = 17 August 2019 |url-status = dead }}</ref> | |||
* ''5 Grand'' – 5,000th B-17 made, emblazoned with Boeing employee signatures, served with the 333rd Bomb Squadron, 96th Bomb Group in Europe. Damaged and repaired after gear-up landing, transferred to 388th Bomb Group. Returned from duty following ], flown for war bonds tour, then stored at Kingman, Arizona. Following an unsuccessful bid for museum preservation, the aircraft was scrapped.<ref>''Air Classics'' magazine, July 2004, pp. 66–74</ref> | |||
== Accidents and incidents == | |||
{{Main list|Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
]) ]] | |||
Most of the losses were during WWII, however because of the Warbird flights there have been losses in the 2020s as well. | |||
== Noted B-17 pilots and crew members == | |||
] receiving Medal of Honor from ] ]]] | |||
] receiving Medal of Honor from President Roosevelt]] | |||
], pilot and ], co-pilot, the first women to fly the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bomber for the ]<ref name="museum2" />]] | |||
=== Medal of Honor recipients === | |||
Many B-17 crew members received military honors and 17 received the ], the highest military decoration awarded by the United States:<ref name="AFM" /> | |||
* Brigadier General ] (flying as co-pilot) – awarded posthumously for remaining at controls so others could escape damaged aircraft.<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: The Quiet Hero." ''Air Force Magazine'', Volume 68, Issue 5, May 1998.</ref> | |||
* 2nd Lt ] (navigator) – awarded posthumously<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: 'I Am the Captain of My Soul{{' "}}. ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 68, Issue 5, May 1985.</ref> | |||
* 1st Lt ] (pilot) – awarded posthumously<ref name="Valor at its Highest">Frisbee, John L. "Valor: 'Valor at its Highest{{' "}}. ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 72, Issue 6, June 1989.</ref> | |||
* 2nd Lt ] (bombardier) – awarded posthumously for tending to injured crew and giving up his parachute to another<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: A Rather Special Award". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 73, Issue 8, August 1990.</ref> | |||
* 1st Lt ] – "heroism and exceptional flying skill"<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: One Turning and One Burning". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 82, Issue 6, June 1999.</ref> | |||
* Sgt ] (engineer-gunner) – awarded posthumously<ref name="Point of Honor">Frisbee, John L. "Valor: A Point of Honor". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 68, Issue 8, August 1985.</ref> | |||
* 1st Lt ] (bombardier) – posthumously, the first airman in the European theater to be awarded the Medal of Honor<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: A Tale of Two Texans". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 69, Issue 3, March 1986.</ref> | |||
* 2nd Lt ] (co-pilot) – awarded posthumously<ref name="Valor at its Highest" /> | |||
* 1st Lt ]<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: Gauntlet of Fire". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 68, Issue 8, August 1985.</ref> | |||
* 1st Lt ]<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: Crisis in the Cockpit". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 67, Issue 1, January 1984.</ref> | |||
* Capt ] (awarded posthumously)<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: Rabaul on a Wing and a Prayer". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 73, Issue 7, July 1990.</ref> | |||
* 2nd Lt ] (awarded posthumously)<ref>. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060623091114/http://www.homeofheroes.com/moh/citations_1940_wwii/sarnoski.html |date=23 June 2006 }} ''Home of Heroes''. Retrieved: 12 January 2007.</ref> | |||
* S/Sgt ] (gunner)<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: First of the Few". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 67, Issue 4, April 1984.</ref> | |||
* 1st Lt ] (awarded posthumously)<ref name="Point of Honor" /> | |||
* T/Sgt ] (radio operator)<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: The Right Touch". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 81, Issue 9, September 1998.</ref><ref>]. Chapter 25, "Jeffrey Bounce Jr."</ref> | |||
* Brigadier General ] Commanding officer of V Bomber Command, killed while leading small force in raid on Rabaul – awarded posthumously<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: Courage and Conviction". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 73, Issue 10, October 1990.</ref> | |||
* Maj ] (pilot) – earned on unescorted reconnaissance mission in Pacific, same mission as Sarnoski<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: Battle Over Bougainville". ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 68, Issue 12, December 1985.</ref> | |||
=== Other military achievements or events === | |||
* ] (1925–2008), tail-gunner on a B-17 in the 483rd Bombardment Group. He received a Distinguished Unit Citation and set two individual records in a single day: (1) most German jets destroyed by a single gunner in one mission (two), and (2) most German jets destroyed by a single gunner during the entirety of World War II.<ref>{{cite news |first = Joe |last = Holley |title=WWII gunner 'Babe' Broyhill dies: Set record for downing Nazi jets |newspaper =The Washington Post |url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/27/AR2008112702380.html |date=28 November 2008 |access-date=7 May 2010 }}</ref> | |||
* ] (1917–2006), a B-17 pilot who was awarded numerous military decorations and was ultimately promoted to the rank of major general and served in active duty until 1971.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.af.mil/bios/bio.asp?bioID=4800 |title = Major General Allison C. Brooks |publisher = United States Air Force |access-date=13 February 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20040210205832/http://www.af.mil/bios/bio.asp?bioID=4800 |archive-date=10 February 2004 }}</ref> | |||
* 1st Lt ] (1921–1998): Lead pilot for ''Man O War II Horsepower Limited''. Received the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal with three oak leaf clusters, American Theater Ribbon and Victory Ribbon. Was part of D-Day and witnessed one of the first German jets when a Me 262A-1a flew through his formation over Germany. One of the youngest bomber pilots in the U.S. Army Air Forces. | |||
* ] (1918–1988): Second-generation German-American whose 91 combat missions were the most flown by any Eighth Air Force pilot in World War II.<ref>Freeman 1993, pp. 497–500.</ref> | |||
* Capt ] (1915–1941): Pilot of the first U.S. B-17 lost in action.<ref>Frisbee, John L. "Valor: Colin Kelly (He was a Hero in Legend and in Fact)." ''Air Force Magazine'' Volume 77, Issue 6, June 1994.</ref> | |||
* Col ] (1911–1996): The USAAF's most decorated pilot of World War II. Commander of the 463rd Bombardment Group (Heavy), 15th Air Force, Celone Field, Foggia, Italy. Clark Field Philippines attack survivor. ] bronze medalist in diving (1932), 1944–1945. Father of actress ], herself named for the still-surviving B-17D mentioned above. | |||
* Gen ] (1906–1990): Became head of the ] and Chief of Staff of the USAF. | |||
* Lt Col ] (1914–1976) and ] (1908–1998): The first women pilots to be certified to fly the B-17, in 1943 and to qualify for the ].<ref name="museum2" /> | |||
* SSgt ] (1919–2003): B-17 gunner who on 3 January 1943 survived a {{convert|22,000|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us|adj=on}} freefall after his aircraft was shot down by the Luftwaffe over ]. | |||
* Col ] (1918–2004): Pilot of ''Memphis Belle''. | |||
* Lt Col ] (1917–2007): Commanded the only surviving B-17, ''Royal Flush'', of a US 8th Air Force raid by the 100th Bomb Group on ] on 10 October 1943. Completed 53 missions. Earned sixteen medals for gallantry (including one each from Britain and France), and ]<ref>{{cite web |url = https://100thbg.com/index.php?option=com_bombgrp&view=personnel&id=4475&Itemid=334 |title = 100th Bomb Group Foundation – Personnel – LT COL Robert ROSENTHAL |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=100thbg.com |publisher=100th Bomb Group Foundation |access-date=5 December 2016 |quote=Dec 1, 1944 – Feb 3, 1945 – 418th BS, 100th BG (H) ETOUSAAF (8AF) Squadron Commander, 55 hours, B-17 Air Leader 5 c/m (combat missions) 45 c/hrs (combat hours) '''1 Division Lead (Berlin Feb 3, 1945''', shot down, picked up by Russians and returned to England) Acting Command 4 Wing Leads, Pilot Feb 3, 1945 – BERLIN – MACR #12046, – A/C#44 8379 }}</ref> on 3 February 1945, that is likely to have ended the life of ], the infamous "]" of the ]. | |||
==Specifications (B-17G)== | |||
] | |||
] | |||
{{Aircraft specs | |||
|ref= The Encyclopedia of World Aircraft<ref name="Donald" /> | |||
|prime units?= imp | |||
<!-- | |||
General characteristics | |||
--> | |||
|genhide= | |||
|crew= 10: <small>Pilot, co-pilot, navigator, bombardier/nose gunner, flight engineer/top turret gunner, radio operator, waist gunners (2), ] gunner, tail gunner</small><ref name="Arizona" /> | |||
|capacity= | |||
|length m= 22.66 | |||
|length ft= 74 | |||
|length in= 4 | |||
|length note= | |||
|span m= 31.62 | |||
|span ft= 103 | |||
|span in= 9 | |||
|span note= | |||
|height m= 5.82 | |||
|height ft= 19 | |||
|height in= 1 | |||
|height note= | |||
|wing area sqm= 131.92 | |||
|wing area sqft= 1,420 | |||
|wing area note= | |||
|airfoil= ] / NACA 0010 | |||
|empty weight kg= 16,391 | |||
|empty weight lb= 36,135 | |||
|empty weight note= | |||
|gross weight kg= 24,500 | |||
|gross weight lb= 54,000 | |||
|gross weight note= | |||
|max takeoff weight kg= 29,700 | |||
|max takeoff weight lb= 65,500 | |||
|max takeoff weight note= | |||
|fuel capacity= | |||
|more general= | |||
* '''Aspect ratio:''' 7.57 | |||
<!-- | |||
Powerplant | |||
--> | |||
|eng1 number= 4 | |||
|eng1 name= ]-97 "Cyclone" | |||
|eng1 type= turbosupercharged ]s | |||
|eng1 kw= 895 | |||
|eng1 hp= 1,200 | |||
|eng1 shp=<!-- prop engines --> | |||
|eng1 note= | |||
|power original= | |||
|thrust original= | |||
|prop blade number=3 | |||
|prop name=] constant-speed propeller | |||
|prop dia ft=<!-- propeller aircraft --> | |||
|prop dia in=<!-- propeller aircraft --> | |||
|prop dia note= | |||
<!-- | |||
Performance | |||
--> | |||
|perfhide= | |||
|max speed kmh= 462 | |||
|max speed mph= 287 | |||
|max speed kts= 249 | |||
|max speed note= | |||
|cruise speed kmh= 293 | |||
|cruise speed mph= 182 | |||
|cruise speed kts= 158 | |||
|cruise speed note= | |||
|stall speed kmh= | |||
|stall speed mph= | |||
|stall speed kts= | |||
|stall speed note= | |||
|never exceed speed kmh= | |||
|never exceed speed mph= | |||
|never exceed speed kts= | |||
|never exceed speed note= | |||
|minimum control speed kmh= | |||
|minimum control speed mph= | |||
|minimum control speed kts= | |||
|minimum control speed note= | |||
|range km= 3,219 | |||
|range miles= 2,000 | |||
|range nmi= 1,738 | |||
|range note= with {{Nowrap|6,000 lb}} ({{Nowrap|2,700 kg}}) bombload | |||
|combat range km= | |||
|combat range miles= | |||
|combat range nmi= | |||
|combat range note= | |||
|ferry range km= | |||
|ferry range miles= | |||
|ferry range nmi= | |||
|ferry range note= | |||
|endurance=<!-- if range unknown --> | |||
|ceiling m= 10,850 | |||
|ceiling ft= 35,600 | |||
|ceiling note= | |||
|climb rate ms= 4.6 | |||
|climb rate ftmin= 900 | |||
|climb rate note= | |||
|time to altitude= | |||
|lift to drag= | |||
|wing loading kg/m2= 185.7 | |||
|wing loading lb/sqft= 38.0 | |||
|wing loading note= | |||
|disk loading kg/m2= | |||
|disk loading lb/sqft= | |||
|disk loading note= | |||
|fuel consumption kg/km= | |||
|fuel consumption lb/mi= | |||
|power/mass= 0.089 hp/lb (150 W/kg) | |||
|thrust/weight= | |||
|more performance= | |||
<!-- | |||
Armament | |||
--> | |||
|armament= | |||
* '''Guns:''' 13 × .50 in (12.7 mm) ]s in 9 positions (2 in the Bendix chin turret, 2 on nose cheeks, 2 staggered waist guns, 2 in upper Sperry turret, 2 in Sperry ball turret in belly, 2 in the tail and one firing upwards from radio compartment behind bomb bay) | |||
* '''Bombs:''' | |||
** '''Short range missions; internal load only (<400 mi):''' 8,000 lb ({{Nowrap|3,600 kg}}) | |||
** '''Long range missions; internal load only (≈800 mi):''' 4,500 lb ({{Nowrap|2,000 kg}}) | |||
** '''Max internal and external load:''' 17,600 lb ({{Nowrap|7,800 kg}}) | |||
|avionics= | |||
|ferry range mi=3,750}} | |||
==Notable appearances in media== | |||
<!-- All content about the aircraft in fictional and gaming use has been moved to ], please see ] --> | |||
{{Main|Aircraft in fiction#B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
A ] B-17 assembly line is featured in the 1944 drama '']''.<ref>{{cite web |title=An American Romance (1944) - Filming & production - IMDb | website=] |url=https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0036596/locations/?item=lc0022457}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=B-17 assembly line, 1944 | website=] | date=2 October 2018 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPW1L9jUGSw |language=en}}</ref> ] featured the B-17 in its period films, such as director ]' '']'' starring ] and '']'' starring ].<ref name="imdb1">. ''Internet Movie Database (IMDb)''. Retrieved: 16 January 2007.</ref> Both films were made with the full cooperation of the ] and used USAAF aircraft and (for ''Twelve O'Clock High'') combat footage. In 1964, the latter film was made into a ] and ran for three years on ]. Footage from ''Twelve O' Clock High'' was also used, along with three restored B-17s, in the 1962 film '']''. An early model YB-17 also appeared in the 1938 film '']'' with ] and ], and later with Clark Gable in '']'' in 1948, in '']'' in 1970, and in '']'' with ], ], ], and ] in 1990. The most famous B-17, the '']'', toured the U. S. with her crew to reinforce national morale (and to sell ]s). She was featured in a USAAF documentary, '']''.<ref name="imdb2">.''Internet Movie Database (IMDb)''. Retrieved: 16 January 2007.</ref> | |||
The Flying Fortress has also been featured in artistic works expressing the physical and psychological stress of the combat conditions and the high casualty rates that crews suffered.<ref>Philo, Tom. . {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100131044149/http://www.taphilo.com/history/8thaf/8aflosses.shtml |date=31 January 2010 }} ''taphilo.com''. Retrieved: 19 May 2012.</ref><ref>Vargas, John. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120203223503/http://en.allexperts.com/q/Military-History-669/2010/9/WWII-Bomber-Flight-Crews.htm |date=3 February 2012 }} ''allexperts.com'', 9 November 2010.</ref> Works such as '']'' by ] and '']''{{'}}s section "B-17" depict the nature of these missions. The ] itself has inspired works like ]'s '']''. Artists who served on the bomber units also created paintings and drawings depicting the combat conditions in World War II.<ref>McCormick, Ken. ''Images of War: The Artist's Vision of World War II''. London: Orion Press, 1990. {{ISBN|978-0-517-57065-4}}.</ref><ref>Mitgang, Herbert. ''The New York Times'', 3 November 1990. Retrieved 19 May 2012.</ref> | |||
"]", a 2024 American ] television miniseries created by ] and ],<ref name="WGA">{{Cite web |title=Masters of the Air |url=https://directories.wga.org/project/1246247/masters-of-the-air |access-date=November 6, 2023 |website=]}}</ref> based on the 2007 book ''Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany'' by ], follows the actions of the ], a B-17 unit in ] during ].<ref name="SI">{{cite web |last1=Solly |first1=Meilan |title=Watch the Trailer for 'Masters of the Air,' Steven Spielberg's Long-Awaited Follow-Up to 'Band of Brothers' |url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/watch-the-trailer-for-masters-of-the-air-steven-spielbergs-long-awaited-follow-up-to-band-of-brothers-180982870/ |website=Smithsonian Magazine |publisher=Smithsonian Institution |access-date=10 November 2023 |date=9 November 2023}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
{{Portal|Aviation}} | |||
]. When testing concluded, the aircraft was restored to stock configuration as the "]", but was lost in a post-forced-landing fire near ], on 13 June 2011.]] | |||
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== Notes == | |||
|see also= | |||
{{NoteFoot}} | |||
{{reflist|group=Note}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist | |||
|refs = | |||
<ref name="A&K.1">Arakaki and Kuborn 1991, pp. 73–75, 158–59.</ref> | |||
<ref name="A&K.2">Arakaki and Kuborn 1991, pp. 73, 158–59.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Baugher B-17B">Baugher, Joe. . ''Encyclopedia of American Aircraft'', 22 May 2010.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Baugher Squads">Baugher, Joe. . ''Encyclopedia of American Aircraft'', Last revised 9 August 1999.</ref> | |||
<ref name="B17vB24">Benitez, Nannette. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161105040134/http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA397895 |date=5 November 2016 }} ''Defense Technical Information Center'', 1997. Retrieved: 1 July 2011.</ref> | |||
<ref name="bloody p55-6">Shores, Cull and Izawa 1992, pp. 55–56.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bloody p163">Shores, Cull and Izawa 1992, p. 163.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bloody p166-7">Shores, Cull and Izawa 1992, pp. 166–67.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers1976.p12">Bowers 1976, p. 12.</ref> | |||
<!-- <ref name="Bowers1976.p37" /> --><!-- This reference is used in the text but is currently (September 2010) commented out. --> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p286-7">Bowers 1989, pp. 286–87.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p290">Bowers 1989, p. 290.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p291-2">Bowers 1989, pp. 291–92.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p292">Bowers 1989, p. 292.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p293-4">Bowers 1989, pp. 293–94.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers boeing p294">Bowers 1989, p. 294.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p295">Bowers 1989, p. 295.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p297">Bowers 1989, p. 297.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p299">Bowers 1989, p. 299.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p303-4">Bowers 1989, pp. 303–04.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p307-8">Bowers 1989, pp. 307–08.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p310-1">Bowers 1989, pp. 310–11.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowers Boeing p314">Bowers 1989, p. 314.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowman.7">Bowman 2002, p. 7.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowman.8">Bowman 2002, p. 8.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bowman.22">Bowman 2002, p. 22.</ref> | |||
<ref name="browne">Browne, Robert W. "The Rugged Fortress: Life-Saving B-17 Remembered." ''Flight Journal: WW II Bombers'', Winter 2001.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Caidin.p86">Caidin 1960, p. 86.</ref> | |||
<ref name="C&W.151">Caldwell and Muller 2007, pp. 151–52.</ref> | |||
<ref name="C&W.162">Caldwell and Muller 2007, p. 162.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Carey Pointblank">Carey 1998, p. 4.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Chant">Chant 1996, pp. 61–62.</ref> | |||
<ref name="DABASv2 p661">Roberts 2000, p. 661.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Donald">Donald 1997, p. 155.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Donald Am p23">Donald 1995, p. 23.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Erickson">Erickson, Mark St. John {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180116140254/http://www.dailypress.com/features/history/dp-nws-langley-air-power-20160424-story.html |date=16 January 2018 }} ''Daily Press'', 1 March 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Francillon Doug p201-2">Francillon 1979, pp. 201–02.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Francillon Lock p211">Francillon 1982, p. 211.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Francillon Lock p212">Francillon 1982, p. 212.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Francillon Lock p213-5">Francillon 1982, pp. 213–15.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Frisbee">Frisbee 1990</ref> | |||
<ref name="NYTimes.299Record">. ''The New York Times'', 21 August 1935.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hess.pp59-60">Hess 1994, pp. 59–60.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hess.p64">Hess 1994, p. 64.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hess.pp65-67">Hess 1994, pp. 65–67.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hess.p67">Hess 1994, p. 67.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hess.69-71">Hess 1994, pp. 69–71.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Knaack bomber p465">Knaack 1988, p. 465.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Pop1">Ethell, Jeff. . ''Popular Mechanics'', Volume 162, Issue 1, January 1985, pp. 124–29.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Stitt 1">Stitt 2010, p. 1.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Weigley.338">Weigley 1977, p. 338.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Weigley 339">Weigley 1977, p. 339.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Weigley.340-1">Weigley 1977, pp. 340–41.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Weigley.341">Weigley 1977, p. 341.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Weigley.342">Weigley 1977, p. 342.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Zamzow.33">Zamzow 2008, p. 33.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Zamzow.34">Zamzow 2008, p. 34.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Zamzow.47">Zamzow 2008, p. 47.</ref> | |||
<!-- Air Force Magazine --> | |||
<ref name="Johnsen 2006">Johnsen, Frederick A. . ''Air Force Magazine'', Volume 89, Issue 10, 2006. Retrieved: 15 January 2007.</ref> | |||
<ref name="AFM">Eylanbekov, Zaur. . ''Air Force Magazine'', February 2006. Retrieved 30 December 2008.</ref> | |||
<ref name="AFM.76-9">Price, Alfred. . ''Air Force Magazine'', Volume 76, Issue 9, September 1993. Retrieved: 18 December 2008.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Meilinger">Meilinger, Phillip S. . ''Air Force Magazine (Air Force Association)'', Volume 87, Issue 10, October 2004. Retrieved: 22 May 2010.</ref> | |||
<ref name="AFM.91-12">Correll, John T. " Rendezvous With the 'Rex'." ''Air Force Magazine'', Volume 91. Issue 12, December 2008, p. 56.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Maurer">Maurer 1987, pp. 406–08.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Sal.p46">Salecker 2001, p. 46.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Sal.p48">Salecker 2001, p. 48.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Sal.p64">Salecker 2001, pp. 64–71.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Sakai">Sakai et al. 1996, pp. 68–72.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Schollars">Schollars, Todd J. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060619091435/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0IBO/is_3_27/ai_111852898 |date=19 June 2006 }} ''Air Force Journal of Logistics'', Fall 2003. Retrieved: 16 January 2007.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Serling.p55">Serling 1992, p. 55.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Swan Mil p74">Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 74.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Swan Mil p75">Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 75.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Swan Mil p76">Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 76.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Swan Mil p78">Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 78.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Swan mil p80">Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 80.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Swan Navy">Swanborough and Bowers 1976, pp. 66–67.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Sword p180,329">Parshall and Tulley 2005, pp. 180, 329.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Tate.p164">Tate 1998, p. 164.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Tate 165">Tate 1998, p. 165.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Wixley p23">Wixley 1998, p. 23.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Wixley p30">Wixley 1998, p. 30.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p41">Hess and Winchester 1997, p. 41.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p46-7">Hess and Winchester 1997, pp. 46–47.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p56-7">Hess and Winchester 1997, pp. 56–57.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p59-0">Hess and Winchester 1997, pp. 59–60.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF 62-3,5">Hess and Winchester 1997, pp. 62–63, 65.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p63-4">Hess and Winchester 1997, pp. 63–64.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p66">Hess and Winchester 1997, p. 66.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p89">Hess and Winchester 1997, p. 89.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p89-0">Hess and Winchester 1997, pp. 89–90.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p91">Hess and Winchester 1997, p. 91.</ref> | |||
<ref name="WoF p96">Hess and Winchester 1997, p. 96.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Wynn.93">Wynn 1998, p. 93.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Yenne.p46">Yenne 2005, p. 46.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Yenne.p6">Yenne 2006, p. 6.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Yenne.p8">Yenne 2006, p. 8.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Yenne.p23">Yenne 2006, p. 23.</ref> | |||
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<ref name="AAF combat">{{cite web |url = http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=1507 |title = AAF Enters Combat from England |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131104031058/http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=1507 |archive-date= 4 November 2013 |publisher = National Museum of the United States Air Force |accessdate=13 September 2010}}</ref> | |||
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<ref name="Checks2">Schamel, John . {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121014052107/http://www.atchistory.org/History/checklst.htm |date=14 October 2012 }} ''Flight Service History''. Retrieved: {{Nowrap|22 May}} 2010.</ref> | |||
<ref name="DurableB-17Colorado">Wright, James G. (requires subscription). ''Colorado Springs Gazette'', 8 June 1994. {{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hoffman">Hoffman, Wally. . ''Magweb.com'', 2006. Retrieved: 18 July 2006.</ref>'' | |||
<ref name="USAAF.04-45">{{cite web |last=McKillop |first= Jack |url=http://www.usaaf.net/chron/45/apr45.htm |title=Combat Chronology of the U.S. Army Air Forces: April 1945 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100307201343/http://www.usaaf.net/chron/45/apr45.htm |archive-date=7 March 2010 |website= usaaf.net |access-date=17 January 2007}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="USCG">. ''United States Coast Guard/'' Retrieved: 18 June 2010.</ref> | |||
<ref name="awm">{{cite web |url = http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/remembering1942/bismark/ |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20030824011504/http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/remembering1942/bismark/ |url-status=dead |title = Anniversary talks: Battle of the Bismarck Sea, 2–4 March 1943 |work=Australian War Memorial |archive-date= 24 August 2003}}</ref> | |||
}} | }} | ||
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*{{cite magazine|last=Gardner|first=Brian|title=Flight Refuelling... The Wartime Story|magazine=]|date=1984|issue=25 |pages=34–43, 80 |issn=0143-5450}} | |||
* Gamble, Bruce. ''Fortress Rabaul: The Battle for the Southwest Pacific, January 1942 – April 1943''. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Zenith Press, 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-7603-2350-2}}. | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Garzke |first1=William H. |last2=Dulin |first2=Robert O. |title=Battleships: Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II |year=1985 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis |isbn=978-0-87021-101-0 }} | |||
* Gillison, Douglas. Canberra, Australia: ], 1962. {{OCLC|2000369}}. | |||
* Gordon, Yefim. ''Soviet Air Power in World War 2''. Hinckley, Lancashire, UK: Midland, Ian Allan Publishing, 2008. {{ISBN|978-1-85780-304-4}}. | |||
* Herman, Arthur. ''Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II'' New York: Random House, 2012. {{ISBN|978-1-4000-6964-4}}. | |||
* Hess, William N. ''B-17 Flying Fortress: Combat and Development History of the Flying Fortress''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbook International, 1994. {{ISBN|0-87938-881-1}}. | |||
* Hess, William N. ''B-17 Flying Fortress Units of the MTO''. Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing Limited, 2003. {{ISBN|1-84176-580-5}}. | |||
* Hess, William N. ''Big Bombers of WWII''. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Lowe & B. Hould, 1998. {{ISBN|0-681-07570-8}}. | |||
* Hess, William N. and Jim Winchester. "Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress: Queen of the Skies". ''Wings of Fame''. Volume 6, 1997, pp. 38–103. London: Aerospace Publishing. {{ISBN|1-874023-93-X}}. {{ISSN|1361-2034}}. | |||
* Hoffman, Wally and Philippe Rouyer. ''La guerre à 30 000 pieds''. Louviers, France: Ysec Editions, 2008. {{ISBN|978-2-84673-109-6}}. | |||
* Jacobson, Capt. Richard S., ed. ''Moresby to Manila Via Troop Carrier: True Story of 54th Troop Carrier Wing, the Third Tactical Arm of the U.S. Army, Air Forces in the Southwest Pacific''. Sydney, Australia: Angus and Robertson, 1945. {{OCLC|220194939}} | |||
* Johnsen, Frederick A. . {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120219003449/http://www.airforce-magazine.com/MagazineArchive/Pages/2006/October%202006/1006bomber.aspx |date=19 February 2012 }} ''Air Force Magazine'', Volume 89, Issue 10, October 2006. Retrieved: {{Nowrap|14 September}} 2012. | |||
* Knaack, Marcelle Size. ''Encyclopedia of U.S. Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems: Volume II: Post-World War II Bombers, 1945–1973''. Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1988. {{ISBN|0-16-002260-6}}. | |||
*{{cite magazine |last1=Ledet|first1=Michel|title=Des avions alliés aux couleurs japonais |magazine =Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire |date=April 2002 |issue=109 |pages=17–21 |trans-title=Allied Aircraft in Japanese Colors|language=fr |issn=1243-8650}} | |||
*{{cite magazine |last1=Ledet|first1=Michel|title=Des avions alliés aux couleurs japonais |magazine = Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire |date=May 2002 |issue=110 |pages=16–23|language=fr |issn=1243-8650}} | |||
*Listemann, Phil H. ''Allied Wings No. 7, Boeing Fortress Mk. I''. www.raf-in-combat.com, 2009. First edition. {{ISBN|978-2-9532544-2-6}}. | |||
* Maurer, Maurer. ''Aviation in the U.S. Army, 1919–1939''. Washington, D.C.: United States Air Force Historical Research Center, Office of Air Force History, 1987, pp. 406–08. {{ISBN|0-912799-38-2}}. | |||
* {{cite book |last=Morison |first=Samuel Eliot |author-link=Samuel Eliot Morison |year=1950 |title=Breaking the Bismarcks Barrier |series=] |volume=6 |publisher=Little Brown and Company |location=Boston |isbn=0-7858-1307-1 |oclc=10310299 |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780785813071}} | |||
* Parker, Dana T. ''Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II''. Cypress, California, Dana Parker Enterprises, 2013. {{ISBN|978-0-9897906-0-4}}. | |||
* Parshall, Jonathon and Anthony Tulley. ''Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway''. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books, 2005. {{ISBN|1-57488-923-0}}. | |||
* Ramsey, Winston G. ''The V-Weapons''. London, United Kingdom: ''After The Battle'', Number 6, 1974. | |||
* Roberts, Michael D. ''''. Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, 2000. | |||
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* Salecker, Gene Eric. ''Fortress Against The Sun: The B-17 Flying Fortress in the Pacific''. Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: Combined Publishing, 2001. {{ISBN|1-58097-049-4}}. | |||
* Serling, Robert J. ''Legend & Legacy: The Story of Boeing and its People''. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992. {{ISBN|0-312-05890-X}}. | |||
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* Stitt, Robert M. ''Boeing B-17 Fortress in RAF Coastal Command Service''. Sandomierz, Poland: STRATUS sp.j., 2010 (second edition 2019). {{ISBN|978-83-65281-54-8}}. | |||
* Swanborough, F. G. and Peter M. Bowers. ''United States Military aircraft since 1909''. London: Putnam, 1963. {{OCLC|846651845}} | |||
* Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. ''United States Navy Aircraft since 1911''. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1976. {{ISBN|0-370-10054-9}}. | |||
* Tate, James P. . Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Air University Press, 1998. {{ISBN|1-4289-1257-6}}. Retrieved: 1 August 2008. | |||
* Trescott, Jacqueline. "Smithsonian Panel Backs Transfer of Famed B-17 Bomber." '']'' Volume 130, Issue 333, 3 November 2007. | |||
* Weigley, Russell Frank. ''The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy''. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1977. {{ISBN|0-253-28029-X}}. | |||
* Wixley, Ken. "Boeing's Battle Wagon: The B-17 Flying Fortress – An Outline History". '']'', No. 78, November/December 1998, pp. 20–33. Stamford, UK: Key Publishing. {{ISSN|0143-5450}}. | |||
* Wynn, Kenneth G. ''U-boat Operations of the Second World War: Career Histories, U511-UIT25''. Annapolis, ]: Naval Institute Press, 1998. {{ISBN|1-55750-862-3}}. | |||
* Yenne, Bill. ''B-17 at War''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint, 2006. {{ISBN|0-7603-2522-7}}. | |||
* Yenne, Bill. ''The Story of the Boeing Company''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint, 2005. {{ISBN|0-7603-2333-X}}. | |||
* {{cite book |last=Zamzow |first = S. L. |title = Ambassador of American Airpower: Major General Robert Olds |publisher=Biblioscholar |year=2012 |isbn= 978-1-28834434-5}}; originally issued as an academic thesis {{OCLC|405724149}}. | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* Birdsall, Steve. ''The B-17 Flying Fortress''. Dallas, Texas: Morgan Aviation Books, 1965. {{OCLC|752618401}}. | |||
*{{cite journal |last1=Cahill |first1=Bill |title=Ghost Fortresses of the Apocalypse: Boeing B-17 Drones & the USA's Atomic Test Programme: Part 1: Crossroads to Sandstone, 1946–48|journal=The Aviation Historian |date=October 2022 |issue=41 |pages=74–85 |issn=2051-1930}} | |||
* {{cite magazine |last1=Calegari|first1=Robert|title=A vendre: B-17G|magazine=Le Fana de l'Aviation |date=December 1976 |issue=85 |pages=34–36 |issn=0757-4169 |language=fr|trans-title=For Sale: B-17G}} | |||
* Davis, Larry. ''B-17 in Action''. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1984. {{ISBN|0897471520}}. | |||
* Jablonski, Edward. ''Flying Fortress''. New York: Doubleday, 1965. {{ISBN|0385038550}}. | |||
* Johnsen, Frederick A. ''Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress''. Stillwater, Minnesota: Voyageur Press, 2001. {{ISBN|1580070523}}. | |||
* Gansz, David M. ''B-17 Production – Boeing Aircraft: 4 January 1944 – 26 February 1944 B-17G-35 to G-45 42-31932 – 42-32116 and 42-97058 – 42-97407''. New Jersey: First Mountain Belgians, 2020. {{ISBN|978-1734380606}}. | |||
* Gansz, David M. ''B-17 Production – Boeing Aircraft: 26 February 1944 – 25 April 1944 B-17G-50 to G-60 42-102379 – 42-102978''. New Jersey: First Mountain Belgians, 2013. {{ISBN|978-0692365465}}. | |||
* Gansz, David M. ''B-17 Production – Boeing Aircraft: 25 April 1944 – 22 June 1944 B-17G-65 to G-75 43-37509 – 43-38073''. New Jersey: First Mountain Belgians, 2017. {{ISBN|978-0692859841}}. | |||
* Lloyd, Alwyn T. ''B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale, Vol. 11: Derivatives, Part 2''. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, 1983. {{ISBN|0816850216}}. | |||
* Lloyd, Alwyn T. ''B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale, Vol. 20: More derivatives, Part 3''. Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania: Tab Books, 1986. {{ISBN|0816850291}}. | |||
* Lloyd, Alwyn T. and Terry D. Moore. ''B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale, Vol. 1: Production Versions, Part 1''. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, 1981. {{ISBN|0816850127}}. | |||
* O'Leary, Michael. ''Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress'' (Osprey Production Line to Frontline 2). Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 1999. {{ISBN|1855328143}}. | |||
* {{cite magazine |last1=Stitt|first1=Robert M.|last2=Olson|first2=Janice L.|name-list-style=amp |title=Brothers in Arms: A Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress Crew in New Guinea, Part 1|magazine=Air Enthusiast |date=July–August 2002 |issue=100 |pages=2–11 |issn=0143-5450}} | |||
* Thompson, Scott A. ''Final Cut: The Post War B-17 Flying Fortress, The Survivors: Revised and Updated Edition''. Highland County, Ohio: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, 2000. {{ISBN|1575100770}}. | |||
* Wagner, Ray, ''American Combat Planes of the 20th Century'', Reno, Nevada, 2004, Jack Bacon & Company, {{ISBN|0930083172}}. | |||
* Willmott, H.P. ''B-17 Flying Fortress''. London: Bison Books, 1980. {{ISBN|0853684448}}. | |||
* Wisker Thomas J. "Talkback". ''Air Enthusiast'', No. 10, July–September 1979, p. 79. {{ISSN|0143-5450}} | |||
== External links == | |||
{{Commons category|Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
* B-17 manuals from | |||
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{{Wikiquote|B-17 Flying Fortress}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 04:05, 19 December 2024
American WWII-era heavy bomber "B-17" redirects here. For other uses, see B17 (disambiguation). "B-17 Bomber" and "B-17 Flying Fortress" redirect here. For the video games, see B-17 Bomber (video game) and B-17 Flying Fortress (video game). "Flying Fortress" redirects here. For the film, see Flying Fortress (film).
B-17 Flying Fortress | |
---|---|
A B-17G, Sentimental Journey, performing at the 2014 Chino Airshow in Chino, California | |
General information | |
Type | Heavy bomber |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Boeing |
Status | Retired; small number in service as warbirds |
Primary users | United States Army Air Forces Royal Air Force |
Number built | 12,731 |
History | |
Manufactured | 1936–1945 |
Introduction date | April 1938 |
First flight | 28 July 1935 |
Variants | |
Developed into | Boeing 307 Stratoliner |
The Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress is an American four-engined heavy bomber aircraft developed in the 1930s for the United States Army Air Corps (USAAC). A fast and high-flying bomber, the B-17 was used primarily in the European Theater of Operations and dropped more bombs than any other aircraft during World War II. It is the third-most produced bomber of all time, behind the American four-engined Consolidated B-24 Liberator and the German multirole, twin-engined Junkers Ju 88. The B-17 was also employed in transport, anti-submarine warfare, and search and rescue roles.
In a USAAC competition, Boeing's prototype Model 299/XB-17 outperformed two other entries but crashed, losing the initial 200-bomber contract to the Douglas B-18 Bolo. Still, the Air Corps ordered 13 more B-17s for further evaluation, which were introduced into service in 1938. The B-17 evolved through numerous design advances but from its inception, the USAAC (from 1941 the United States Army Air Forces, USAAF) promoted the aircraft as a strategic weapon. It was a relatively fast, high-flying, long-range bomber with heavy defensive armament at the expense of bomb load. It also developed a reputation for toughness based upon stories and photos of badly damaged B-17s safely returning to base.
The B-17 saw early action in the Pacific War, where it conducted air raids against Japanese shipping and airfields. But it was primarily employed by the USAAF in the daylight component of the Allied strategic bombing campaign over Europe, complementing RAF Bomber Command's night bombers in attacking German industrial, military and civilian targets. Of the roughly 1.5 million tons of bombs dropped on Nazi Germany and its occupied territories by Allied aircraft, over 640,000 tons (42.6%) were dropped from B-17s.
At the start of 2024, six aircraft remain in flying condition. About 50 survive in storage or are on static display, the oldest of which is The Swoose, a B-17D which was flown in combat in the Pacific on the first day of the United States' involvement in World War II. There are also several reasonably complete wrecks, such as underwater, that have been found. B-17 survivors gained national attention in 2022 in the United States, when one was destroyed in a fatal mid-air collision with another warbird at an airshow.
Development
Origins
On 8 August 1934, the USAAC tendered a proposal for a multiengine bomber to replace the Martin B-10. The Air Corps was looking for a bomber capable of reinforcing the air forces in Hawaii, Panama, and Alaska. Requirements were for it to carry a "useful bombload" at an altitude of 10,000 ft (3,000 m) for 10 hours with a top speed of at least 200 mph (320 km/h).
They also desired, but did not require, a bomber with a range of 2,000 mi (3,200 km) and a speed of 250 mph (220 kn; 400 km/h). The competition for the air corps contract was to be decided by a "fly-off" between Boeing's design, the Douglas DB-1, and the Martin Model 146 at Wilbur Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio.
The prototype B-17, with the Boeing factory designation of Model 299, was designed by a team of engineers led by E. Gifford Emery and Edward Curtis Wells, and was built at Boeing's own expense. It combined features of the company's experimental XB-15 bomber and 247 transport. The B-17's armament consisted of five .30 caliber (7.62 mm) machine guns, with a payload up to 4,800 lb (2,200 kg) of bombs on two racks in the bomb bay behind the cockpit. The aircraft was powered by four Pratt & Whitney R-1690 Hornet radial engines, each producing 750 hp (600 kW) at 7,000 ft (2,100 m).
The first flight of the Model 299 was on 28 July 1935 with Boeing chief test pilot Leslie Tower at the controls. The day before, Richard Williams, a reporter for The Seattle Times, coined the name "Flying Fortress" when – observing the large number of machine guns sticking out from the new aircraft – he described it as a "15-ton flying fortress" in a picture caption. The most distinctive mount was in the nose, which allowed the single machine gun to be fired toward nearly all frontal angles.
Boeing was quick to see the value of the name and had it trademarked for use. Boeing also claimed in some of the early press releases that Model 299 was the first combat aircraft that could continue its mission if one of its four engines failed. On 20 August 1935, the prototype flew from Seattle to Wright Field in nine hours and three minutes with an average ground speed of 252 mph (219 kn; 406 km/h), much faster than the competition.
At the fly-off, the four-engined Boeing's performance was superior to those of the twin-engine DB-1 and Model 146. In March 1935 Army Chief of Staff General Douglas MacArthur created GHQ Air Force and promoted lieutenant colonel Frank Maxwell Andrews to brigadier general to become the head of GHQ Air Force. MacArthur and Andrews both believed that the capabilities of large four-engined aircraft exceeded those of shorter-ranged, twin-engine aircraft, and that the B-17 was better suited to new, emerging USAAC doctrine. Their opinions were shared by the air corps procurement officers, and even before the competition had finished, they suggested buying 65 B-17s.
On 30 October 1935, a test flight determining the rate of climb and service ceiling was planned. The command pilot was Major Ployer Peter Hill, Wright Field Material Division Chief of the Flying Branch, his first flight in the Model 299. Copilot was Lieutenant Donald Putt, while Boeing chief test pilot Leslie R. Tower was behind the pilots in an advisory role. Also on board were Wright Field test observer John Cutting and mechanic Mark Koegler. The plane stalled and spun into the ground soon after takeoff, bursting into flames. Though initially surviving the impact, Hill died within a few hours, and Tower on 19 November. Post-accident interviews with Tower and Putt determined the control surface gust lock had not been released. Doyle notes, "The loss of Hill and Tower, and the Model 299, was directly responsible for the creation of the modern written checklist used by pilots to this day."
The crashed Model 299 could not finish the evaluation, thus disqualifying it from the competition. While the Air Corps was still enthusiastic about the aircraft's potential, Army officials were daunted by its cost; Douglas quoted a unit price of $58,200 (equivalent to $1,018,000 in 2023) based on a production order of 220 aircraft, compared with $99,620 (equivalent to $1,743,000 in 2023 ) from Boeing. MacArthur's successor, Army Chief of Staff Malin Craig, canceled the order for 65 YB-17s and ordered 133 of the twin-engined Douglas B-18 Bolo, instead. Secretary of War Harry Hines Woodring in October 1938 decided that no four-engine bombers, including B-17s, would be purchased by the War Department in 1939.
The loss was not total... But Boeing's hopes for a substantial bomber contract were dashed.
— Peter Bowers, 1976
Initial orders
Despite the crash, the USAAC had been impressed by the prototype's performance, and on 17 January 1936, through a legal loophole, the Air Corps ordered 13 YB-17s (designated Y1B-17 after November 1936 to denote its special F-1 funding) for service testing. The YB-17 incorporated a number of significant changes from the Model 299, including more powerful Wright R-1820-39 Cyclone engines. Although the prototype was company-owned and never received a military serial (the B-17 designation itself did not appear officially until January 1936, nearly three months after the prototype crashed), the term "XB-17" was retroactively applied to the NX13372's airframe and has entered the lexicon to describe the first Flying Fortress.
Between 1 March and 4 August 1937, 12 of the 13 Y1B-17s were delivered to the 2nd Bombardment Group at Langley Field in Virginia for operational development and flight tests. One suggestion adopted was the use of a preflight checklist to avoid accidents such as that which befell the Model 299. In one of their first missions, three B-17s, directed by lead navigator Lieutenant Curtis LeMay, were sent by General Andrews to "intercept" and photograph the Italian ocean liner Rex 610 miles (980 km) off the Atlantic coast. The mission was successful and widely publicized. The 13th Y1B-17 was delivered to the Material Division at Wright Field, Ohio, to be used for flight testing.
A 14th Y1B-17 (37-369), originally constructed for ground testing of the airframe's strength, was upgraded by Boeing with exhaust-driven General Electric turbo-superchargers, and designated Y1B-17A. Designed by Sanford Moss, engine exhaust gases turned the turbine's steel-alloy blades, forcing high-pressure air into the Wright Cyclone GR-1820-39 engine supercharger. Scheduled to fly in 1937, it encountered problems with the turbochargers, and its first flight was delayed until 29 April 1938. The aircraft was delivered to the Army on 31 January 1939. Once service testing was complete, the Y1B-17s and Y1B-17A were redesignated B-17 and B-17A, respectively, to signify the change to operational status. The Y1B-17A had a maximum speed of 311 mph (270 kn; 501 km/h), at its best operational altitude, compared to 239 mph (208 kn; 385 km/h) for the Y1B-17. Also, the Y1B-17A's new service ceiling was more than 2 miles (3,200 m) higher at 38,000 feet (12,000 m), compared to the Y1B-17's 27,800 feet (8,500 m). These turbo-superchargers were incorporated into the B-17B.
Opposition to the Air Corps' ambitions for the acquisition of more B-17s faded, and in late 1937, 10 more aircraft designated B-17B were ordered to equip two bombardment groups, one on each U.S. coast. Improved with larger flaps and rudder and a well-framed, 10 panel plexiglass nose, the B-17Bs were delivered in five small batches between July 1939 and March 1940. In July 1940, an order for 512 B-17s was issued, but at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor, fewer than 200 were in service with the army.
A total of 155 B-17s of all variants were delivered between 11 January 1937 and 30 November 1941, but production quickly accelerated, with the B-17 once holding the record for the highest production rate for any large aircraft. The aircraft went on to serve in every World War II combat zone, and by the time production ended in May 1945, 12,731 B-17s had been built by Boeing, Douglas, and Vega (a subsidiary of Lockheed).
Though the crash of the prototype 299 in 1935 had almost wiped out Boeing, now it was seen as a boon. Instead of building models based on experimental engineering, Boeing had been hard at work developing their bomber and now had versions ready for production far better than would have been possible otherwise. One of the most significant weapons of World War II would be ready, but only by a hair.
— Jeff Ethell, 1985
Design and variants
Main article: List of Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress variantsVariant | Produced | First flight |
---|---|---|
Model 299 | 1 | 28 July 1935 |
YB-17 | 13 | 2 December 1936 |
YB-17A | 1 | 29 April 1938 |
B-17B | 39 | 27 June 1939 |
B-17C | 38 | 21 July 1940 |
B-17D | 42 | 3 February 1941 |
B-17E | 512 | 5 September 1941 |
B-17F (total) | 3,405 | 30 May 1942 |
B-17F-BO | 2,300 | |
B-17F-DL | 605 | |
B-17F-VE | 500 | |
B-17G (total) | 8,680 | 16 August 1943 |
B-17G-BO | 4,035 | |
B-17G-DL | 2,395 | |
B-17G-VE | 2,250 | |
Total | 12,731 | |
B-17s were built at Boeing Plant 2, Seattle, Washington (BO), Lockheed-Vega, Burbank, California (VE) and Douglas Aircraft, Long Beach, California (DL) |
The aircraft went through several alterations in each of its design stages and variants. Of the 13 YB-17s ordered for service testing, 12 were used by the 2nd Bomb Group at Langley Field, Virginia, to develop heavy bombing techniques, and the 13th was used for flight testing at the Material Division at Wright Field, Ohio. Experiments on this aircraft led to the use of a quartet of General Electric turbo-superchargers, which later became standard on the B-17 line. A 14th aircraft, the YB-17A, originally destined for ground testing only and upgraded with the turbochargers, was redesignated B-17A after testing had finished.
As the production line developed, Boeing engineers continued to improve upon the basic design. To enhance performance at slower speeds, the B-17B was altered to include larger rudders and flaps. The B-17C changed from three bulged, oval-shaped gun blisters to two flush, oval-shaped gun window openings, and on the lower fuselage, a single "bathtub" gun gondola housing, which resembled the similarly configured and located Bodenlafette/"Bola" ventral defensive emplacement on the German Heinkel He 111P-series medium bomber.
While models A through D of the B-17 were designed defensively, the large-tailed B-17E was the first model primarily focused on offensive warfare. The B-17E was an extensive revision of the Model 299 design: The fuselage was extended by 10 ft (3.0 m); a much larger rear fuselage, vertical tailfin, rudder, and horizontal stabilizer were added; a gunner's position was added in the new tail; the nose (especially the bombardier's framed, 10-panel nose glazing) remained relatively the same as the earlier B through D versions had; a Sperry electrically powered manned dorsal gun turret just behind the cockpit was added; a similarly powered (also built by Sperry) manned ventral ball turret just aft of the bomb bay – replaced the relatively hard-to-use, Sperry model 645705-D remotely operated ventral turret on the earliest examples of the E variant. These modifications resulted in a 20% increase in aircraft weight. The B-17's turbocharged Wright R-1820 Cyclone 9 engines were upgraded to increasingly more powerful versions of the same powerplants throughout its production, and similarly, the number of machine gun emplacement locations was increased.
The B-17F variant was the primary version used by the Eighth Air Force to face the Germans in 1943, and standardized the manned Sperry ball turret for ventral defense, also replacing the earlier, 10-panel framed bombardier's nose glazing from the B subtype with an enlarged, nearly frameless Plexiglas bombardier's nose enclosure for improved forward vision.
Two experimental versions of the B-17 were flown under different designations, the XB-38 'Flying Fortress' and the YB-40 'Flying Fortress.' The XB-38 was an engine testbed for Allison V-1710 liquid-cooled engines, should the Wright engines normally used on the B-17 become unavailable. The only prototype XB-38 to fly crashed on its ninth flight, and the concept was abandoned. The Allison V-1710 was reallocated to fighter aircraft.
The YB-40 was a heavily armed modification of the standard B-17 used before the North American P-51 Mustang, an effective long-range fighter, became available to act as escort. Additional armament included an additional dorsal turret in the radio room, a remotely operated and fired Bendix-built "chin turret" directly below the bombardier's accommodation, and twin 50 caliber (12.7 mm) guns in each of the waist positions. The ammunition load was over 11,000 rounds. All of these modifications made the YB-40 well over 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) heavier than a fully loaded B-17F. The YB-40s with their greater weight, had trouble keeping up with the lighter bombers once they had dropped their bombs, so the project was abandoned and finally phased out in July 1943. The final production blocks of the B-17F from Douglas' plants did, however, adopt the YB-40's "chin turret", giving them a much-improved forward defense capability.
By the time the definitive B-17G appeared, the number of guns had been increased from seven to 13, the designs of the gun stations were finalized, and other adjustments were completed. The B-17G was the final version of the Flying Fortress, incorporating all changes made to its predecessor, the B-17F, and in total, 8,680 were built, the last (by Lockheed) on 28 July 1945. Many B-17Gs were converted for other missions such as cargo hauling, engine testing, and reconnaissance. Initially designated SB-17G, a number of B-17Gs were also converted for search-and-rescue duties, later to be redesignated B-17H.
Late in World War II, at least 25 B-17s were fitted with radio controls and television cameras, loaded with 20,000 lb (9,100 kg) of high explosives and designated BQ-7 "Aphrodite missiles" for Operation Aphrodite against bombing-resistant German bunkers. The operation, which involved remotely flying the Aphrodite drones onto their targets by accompanying CQ-17 "mothership" control aircraft, was approved on 26 June 1944, and assigned to the 388th Bombardment Group stationed at RAF Fersfield, a satellite of RAF Knettishall.
The first four drones were sent to Mimoyecques (V-3 site), the Siracourt V-1 bunker, and the V-2 Blockhaus d'Éperlecques at Watten, and La Coupole at Wizernes on 4 August, causing little damage and two pilots were killed. On August 12, a Consolidated B-24 Liberator, part of the United States Navy's contribution ("Project Anvil"), en route for Heligoland piloted by Lieutenant Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. (future U.S. president John F. Kennedy's elder brother) exploded over the Blyth estuary. Blast damage was caused over a radius of 5 miles (8.0 km). Naval flights stopped but a few more missions were flown by the USAAF. The Aphrodite project was effectively scrapped in early 1945.
Operational history
The B-17 began operations in World War II with the Royal Air Force (RAF) in 1941, and in the Southwest Pacific with the U.S. Army.
During World War II, the B-17 equipped 32 overseas combat groups, inventory peaking in August 1944 at 4,574 USAAF aircraft worldwide. The British heavy bombers, the Avro Lancaster and Handley Page Halifax, dropped 608,612 long tons (681,645 short tons; 618,378 t) and 224,207 long tons (251,112 short tons; 227,805 t) respectively.
RAF use
The RAF entered World War II without a sufficient supply of modern heavy bombers, with the largest available long-range medium bombers in any numbers being the Vickers Wellington, which could carry 4,500 pounds (2,000 kg) of bombs. While the Short Stirling and Handley Page Halifax became its primary bombers by 1941, in early 1940, the RAF agreed with the U.S. Army Air Corps to acquire 20 B-17Cs, which were given the service name Fortress Mk.I. Their first operation, against Wilhelmshaven on 8 July 1941 was unsuccessful. On 24 July three B-17s of 90 Squadron took part in a raid on the German capital ship Gneisenau and Prinz Eugen anchored in Brest from 30,000 ft (9,100 m), to draw German fighters away from 18 Handley Page Hampdens attacking at lower altitudes, and in time for 79 Vickers Wellingtons to attack later with the German fighters refueling. The operation did not work as expected, with 90 Squadron's Fortresses being unopposed.
By September, the RAF had lost eight B-17Cs in combat and had experienced numerous mechanical problems, and Bomber Command abandoned daylight bombing raids using the Fortress I because of the aircraft's poor performance. The experience showed both the RAF and USAAF that the B-17C was not ready for combat, and that improved defenses, larger bomb loads, and more accurate bombing methods were required. However, the USAAF continued using the B-17 as a day bomber, despite misgivings by the RAF that attempts at daylight bombing would be ineffective.
As use by Bomber Command had been curtailed, the RAF transferred its remaining Fortress Mk.I aircraft to Coastal Command for use as a long-range maritime patrol aircraft. These were augmented starting in July 1942 by 45 Fortress Mk.IIA (B-17E) followed by 19 Fortress Mk II (B-17F) and three Fortress Mk III (B-17G). A Fortress IIA from No. 206 Squadron RAF sank U-627 on 27 October 1942, the first of 11 U-boat kills credited to RAF Fortress bombers during the war.
As sufficient Consolidated Liberators finally became available, Coastal Command withdrew the Fortress from the Azores, transferring the type to the meteorological reconnaissance role. Three squadrons undertook Met profiles from airfields in Iceland, Scotland, and England, gathering data for vital weather forecasting purposes.
The RAF's No. 223 Squadron, as part of 100 Group, operated several Fortresses equipped with an electronic warfare system known as "Airborne Cigar" (ABC). This was operated by German-speaking radio operators to identify and jam German ground controllers' broadcasts to their nightfighters. They could also pose as ground controllers themselves to steer nightfighters away from the bomber streams.
Initial USAAF operations over Europe
The air corps – renamed United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) on 20 June 1941 – used the B-17 and other bombers to bomb from high altitudes with the aid of the then-secret Norden bombsight, known as the "Blue Ox", which was an optical electromechanical gyrostabilized analog computer. The device was able to determine, from variables put in by the bombardier, the point at which the bombs should be released to hit the target. The bombardier essentially took over flight control of the aircraft during the bomb run, maintaining a level altitude during the final moments before release.
The USAAF began building up its air forces in Europe using B-17Es soon after entering the war. The first Eighth Air Force units arrived in High Wycombe, England, on 12 May 1942, to form the 97th Bomb Group. On 17 August 1942, 12 B-17Es of the 97th, with the lead aircraft piloted by Major Paul Tibbets and carrying Brigadier General Ira Eaker as an observer, were close escorted by four squadrons of RAF Spitfire IXs (and a further five squadrons of Spitfire Vs to cover the withdrawal) on the first USAAF heavy bomber raid over Europe, against the large railroad marshalling yards at Rouen-Sotteville in France, while a further six aircraft flew a diversionary raid along the French coast. The operation, carried out in good visibility, was a success, with only minor damage to one aircraft, unrelated to enemy action, and half the bombs landing in the target area.
Two additional groups arrived in Britain at the same time, bringing with them the first B-17Fs, which served as the primary AAF heavy bomber fighting the Germans until September 1943. As the raids of the American bombing campaign grew in numbers and frequency, German interception efforts grew in strength (such as during the attempted bombing of Kiel on 13 June 1943), such that unescorted bombing missions came to be discouraged.
Combined offensive
The two different strategies of the American and British bomber commands were organized at the Casablanca Conference in January 1943. The resulting "Combined Bomber Offensive" weakened the Wehrmacht, destroyed German morale, and established air superiority through Operation Pointblank's destruction of German fighter strength in preparation for a ground offensive. The USAAF bombers attacked by day, with British operations – chiefly against industrial cities – by night.
Operation Pointblank opened with attacks on targets in Western Europe. General Ira C. Eaker and the Eighth Air Force placed highest priority on attacks on the German aircraft industry, especially fighter assembly plants, engine factories, and ball-bearing manufacturers. Attacks began in April 1943 on heavily fortified key industrial plants in Bremen and Recklinghausen.
Since the airfield bombings were not appreciably reducing German fighter strength, additional B-17 groups were formed, and Eaker ordered major missions deeper into Germany against important industrial targets. The 8th Air Force then targeted the ball-bearing factories in Schweinfurt, hoping to cripple the war effort there. The first raid on 17 August 1943 did not result in critical damage to the factories, with the 230 attacking B-17s being intercepted by an estimated 300 Luftwaffe fighters. The Germans shot down 36 aircraft with the loss of 200 men, and coupled with a raid earlier in the day against Regensburg, a total of 60 B-17s were lost that day.
A second attempt on Schweinfurt on 14 October 1943 later came to be known as "Black Thursday". While the attack was successful at disrupting the entire works, severely curtailing work there for the remainder of the war, it was at an extreme cost. Of the 291 attacking Fortresses, 60 were shot down over Germany, five crashed on approach to Britain, and 12 more were scrapped due to damage – a loss of 77 B-17s. Additionally, 122 bombers were damaged and needed repairs before their next flights. Of 2,900 men in the crews, about 650 did not return, although some survived as prisoners of war. Only 33 bombers landed without damage. These losses were a result of concentrated attacks by over 300 German fighters.
Such high losses of aircrews could not be sustained, and the USAAF, recognizing the vulnerability of heavy bombers to interceptors when operating alone, suspended daylight bomber raids deep into Germany until the development of an escort fighter that could protect the bombers all the way from the United Kingdom to Germany and back. At the same time, the German nightfighting ability noticeably improved to counter the nighttime strikes, challenging the conventional faith in the cover of darkness. The 8th Air Force alone lost 176 bombers in October 1943, and was to suffer similar casualties on 11 January 1944 on missions to Oschersleben, Halberstadt, and Brunswick. Lieutenant General James Doolittle, commander of the 8th, had ordered the second Schweinfurt mission to be cancelled as the weather deteriorated, but the lead units had already entered hostile air space and continued with the mission. Most of the escorts turned back or missed the rendezvous, and as a result, 60 B-17s were destroyed.
A third raid on Schweinfurt on 24 February 1944 highlighted what came to be known as "Big Week", during which the bombing missions were directed against German aircraft production. German fighters needed to respond, and the North American P-51 Mustang and Republic P-47 Thunderbolt fighters (equipped with improved drop tanks to extend their range) accompanying the American heavies all the way to and from the targets engaged them. The escort fighters reduced the loss rate to below 7%, with a total of 247 B-17s lost in 3,500 sorties while taking part in the Big Week raids.
By September 1944, 27 of the 42 bomb groups of the 8th Air Force and six of the 21 groups of the 15th Air Force used B-17s. Losses to flak continued to take a high toll of heavy bombers through 1944, but the war in Europe was being won by the Allies. And by 27 April 1945, 2 days after the last heavy bombing mission in Europe, the rate of aircraft loss was so low that replacement aircraft were no longer arriving and the number of bombers per bomb group was reduced. The Combined Bomber Offensive was effectively complete.
Pacific Theater
On 7 December 1941, a group of 12 B-17s of the 38th (four B-17C) and 88th (eight B-17E) Reconnaissance Squadrons, en route to reinforce the Philippines, was flown into Pearl Harbor from Hamilton Field, California, arriving while the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor was going on. Leonard "Smitty" Smith Humiston, co-pilot on First Lieutenant Robert H. Richards' B-17C, AAF S/N 40-2049, reported that he thought the U.S. Navy was giving the flight a 21-gun salute to celebrate the arrival of the bombers, after which he realized that Pearl Harbor was under attack. The Fortress came under fire from Japanese fighter aircraft, though the crew was unharmed with the exception of one member who suffered an abrasion on his hand. Japanese activity forced them to divert from Hickam Field to Bellows Field. On landing, the aircraft overran the runway and ran into a ditch, where it was then strafed. Although initially deemed repairable, 40-2049 (11th BG / 38th RS) received more than 200 bullet holes and never flew again. Ten of the 12 Fortresses survived the attack.
By 1941, the Far East Air Force (FEAF) based at Clark Field in the Philippines had 35 B-17s, with the War Department eventually planning to raise that to 165. When the FEAF received word of the attack on Pearl Harbor, General Lewis H. Brereton sent his bombers and fighters on various patrol missions to prevent them from being caught on the ground. Brereton planned B-17 raids on Japanese airfields in Formosa, in accordance with Rainbow 5 war plan directives, but this was overruled by General Douglas MacArthur. A series of disputed discussions and decisions, followed by several confusing and false reports of air attacks, delayed the authorization of the sortie. By the time the B-17s and escorting Curtiss P-40 Warhawk fighters were about to get airborne, they were destroyed by Japanese bombers of the 11th Air Fleet. The FEAF lost half its aircraft during the first strike, and was all but destroyed over the next few days.
Another early World War II Pacific engagement, on 10 December 1941, involved Colin Kelly, who reportedly crashed his B-17 into the Japanese battleship Haruna, which was later acknowledged as a near bomb miss on the heavy cruiser Ashigara. Nonetheless, this deed made him a celebrated war hero. Kelly's B-17C AAF S/N 40-2045 (19th BG / 30th BS) crashed about 6 mi (10 km) from Clark Field after he held the burning Fortress steady long enough for the surviving crew to bail out. Kelly was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. Noted Japanese ace Saburō Sakai is credited with this kill, and in the process, came to respect the ability of the Fortress to absorb punishment.
B-17s were used in early battles of the Pacific with little success, notably the Battle of Coral Sea and Battle of Midway. While there, the Fifth Air Force B-17s were tasked with disrupting the Japanese sea lanes. Air Corps doctrine dictated bombing runs from high altitude, but they soon found only 1% of their bombs hit targets. However, B-17s were operating at heights too great for most A6M Zero fighters to reach.
The B-17's greatest success in the Pacific was in the Battle of the Bismarck Sea, in which aircraft of this type were responsible for damaging and sinking several Japanese transport ships. On 2 March 1943, six B-17s of the 64th Squadron flying at 10,000 ft (3,000 m) attacked a major Japanese troop convoy off New Guinea, using skip bombing to sink Kyokusei Maru, which carried 1,200 army troops, and damage two other transports, Teiyo Maru and Nojima. On 3 March 1943, 13 B-17s flying at 7,000 ft (2,000 m) bombed the convoy, forcing the convoy to disperse and reducing the concentration of their anti-aircraft defenses. The B-17s attracted a number of Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters, which were in turn attacked by the P-38 Lightning escorts. One B-17 broke up in the air, and its crew was forced to take to their parachutes. Japanese fighter pilots machine-gunned some of the B-17 crew members as they descended and attacked others in the water after they landed. Five of the Japanese fighters strafing the B-17 aircrew were promptly engaged and shot down by three Lightnings, though these were also then lost. The allied fighter pilots claimed 15 Zeros destroyed, while the B-17 crews claimed five more. Actual Japanese fighter losses for the day were seven destroyed and three damaged. The remaining seven transports and three of the eight destroyers were then sunk by a combination of low level strafing runs by Royal Australian Air Force Beaufighters, and skip bombing by USAAF North American B-25 Mitchells at 100 ft (30 m), while B-17s claimed five hits from higher altitudes. On the morning of 4 March 1943, a B-17 sank the destroyer Asashio with a 500 lb (230 kg) bomb while she was picking up survivors from Arashio.
At their peak, 168 B-17 bombers were in the Pacific theater in September 1942, but already in mid-1942 Gen. Arnold had decided that the B-17 was unsuitable for the kind of operations required in the Pacific and made plans to replace all of the B-17s in the theater with B-24s (and later, B-29s) as soon as they became available. Although the conversion was not complete until mid-1943, B-17 combat operations in the Pacific theater came to an end after a little over a year. Surviving aircraft were reassigned to the 54th Troop Carrier Wing's special airdrop section and were used to drop supplies to ground forces operating in close contact with the enemy. Special airdrop B-17s supported Australian commandos operating near the Japanese stronghold at Rabaul, which had been the primary B-17 target in 1942 and early 1943.
B-17s were still used in the Pacific later in the war, however, mainly in the combat search and rescue role. A number of B-17Gs, redesignated B-17Hs and later SB-17Gs, were used in the Pacific during the final year of the war to carry and drop lifeboats to stranded bomber crews who had been shot down or crashed at sea. These aircraft were nicknamed Dumbos, and remained in service for many years after the end of World War II.
Bomber defense
Before the advent of long-range fighter escorts, B-17s had only their .50 caliber M2 Browning machine guns to rely on for defense during the bombing runs over Europe. As the war intensified, Boeing used feedback from aircrews to improve each new variant with increased armament and armor. Defensive armament increased from four 0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns and one 0.30 in (7.62 mm) nose machine gun in the B-17C, to thirteen 0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns in the B-17G. But because the bombers could not maneuver when attacked by fighters and needed to be flown straight and level during their final bomb run, individual aircraft struggled to fend off a direct attack.
A 1943 survey by the USAAF found that over half the bombers shot down by the Germans had left the protection of the main formation. To address this problem, the United States developed the bomb-group formation, which evolved into the staggered combat box formation in which all the B-17s could safely cover any others in their formation with their machine guns. This made a formation of bombers a dangerous target to engage by enemy fighters. In order to more quickly form these formations, assembly ships, planes with distinctive paint schemes, were utilized to guide bombers into formation, saving assembly time. Luftwaffe fighter pilots likened attacking a B-17 combat box formation to encountering a fliegendes Stachelschwein, "flying porcupine", with dozens of machine guns in a combat box aimed at them from almost every direction. However, the use of this rigid formation meant that individual aircraft could not engage in evasive maneuvers: they had to fly constantly in a straight line, which made them vulnerable to German flak. Moreover, German fighter aircraft later developed the tactic of high-speed strafing passes rather than engaging with individual aircraft to inflict damage with minimum risk.
The B-17 was noted for its ability to absorb battle damage, still reach its target and bring its crew home safely. Wally Hoffman, a B-17 pilot with the Eighth Air Force during World War II, said, "The plane can be cut and slashed almost to pieces by enemy fire and bring its crew home." Martin Caidin reported one instance in which a B-17 suffered a midair collision with a Focke-Wulf Fw 190, losing an engine and suffering serious damage to both the starboard horizontal stabilizer and the vertical stabilizer, and being knocked out of formation by the impact. The B-17 was reported as shot down by observers, but it survived and brought its crew home without injury. Its toughness was compensation for its shorter range and lighter bomb load compared to the B-24 and British Avro Lancaster heavy bombers. Stories circulated of B-17s returning to base with tails shredded, engines destroyed and large portions of their wings destroyed by flak. This durability, together with the large operational numbers in the Eighth Air Force and the fame achieved by the Memphis Belle, made the B-17 a key bomber aircraft of the war. Other factors such as combat effectiveness and political issues also contributed to the B-17's success.
The B-17 adopted early electronic countermeasures, such as Window and Carpet to confuse German radar. This greatly reduced the effectiveness of German Flak, by perhaps as much as 75%, meaning that 450 bombers were saved by these technologies.
Luftwaffe attacks
After examining wrecked B-17s and B-24s, Luftwaffe officers discovered that on average it took about 20 hits with 20 mm shells fired from the rear to bring them down. Pilots of average ability hit the bombers with only about two percent of the rounds they fired, so to obtain 20 hits, the average pilot had to fire one thousand 20 mm (0.79 in) rounds at a bomber. Early versions of the Fw 190, one of the best German interceptor fighters, were equipped with two 20 mm (0.79 in) MG FF cannons, which carried only 500 rounds when belt-fed (normally using 60-round drum magazines in earlier installations), and later with the better Mauser MG 151/20 cannons, which had a longer effective range than the MG FF weapon. Later versions carried four or even six MG 151/20 cannon and twin 13 mm machine guns. The German fighters found that when attacking from the front, where fewer defensive guns were mounted (and where the pilot was exposed and not protected by armor as he was from the rear), it took only four or five hits to bring a bomber down.
To rectify the Fw 190's shortcomings, the number of cannons fitted was doubled to four, with a corresponding increase in the amount of ammunition carried, creating the Sturmbock bomber destroyer version. This type replaced the vulnerable twin-engine Zerstörer heavy fighters which could not survive interception by P-51 Mustangs flying well ahead of the combat boxes in an air supremacy role starting very early in 1944 to clear any Luftwaffe defensive fighters from the skies. By 1944, a further upgrade to Rheinmetall-Borsig's 30 mm (1.2 in) MK 108 cannons mounted either in the wing, or in underwing, conformal mount gun pods, was made for the Sturmbock Focke-Wulfs as either the /R2 or /R8 field modification kits, enabling aircraft to bring a bomber down with just a few hits.
The adoption of the 21 cm Nebelwerfer-derived Werfer-Granate 21 (Wfr. Gr. 21) rocket mortar by the Luftwaffe in mid-August 1943 promised the introduction of a major "stand-off" style of offensive weapon – one strut-mounted tubular launcher was fixed under each wing panel on the Luftwaffe's single-engine fighters, and two under each wing panel of a few twin-engine Bf 110 daylight Zerstörer aircraft. However, due to the slow 715 mph velocity and characteristic ballistic drop of the fired rocket (despite the usual mounting of the launcher at about 15° upward orientation), and the small number of fighters fitted with the weapons, the Wfr. Gr. 21 never had a major effect on the combat box formations of Fortresses. The Luftwaffe also fitted heavy-caliber Bordkanone-series 37, 50 and even 75 mm (2.95 in) cannon as anti-bomber weapons on twin-engine aircraft such as the special Ju 88P fighters, as well as one model of the Me 410 Hornisse but these measures did not have much effect on the American strategic bomber offensive. The Me 262, however, had moderate success against the B-17 late in the war. With its usual nose-mounted armament of four MK 108 cannons, and with some examples later equipped with the R4M rocket, launched from underwing racks, it could fire from outside the range of the bombers' .50 in (12.7 mm) defensive guns and bring an aircraft down with one hit, as both the MK 108's shells and the R4M's warheads were filled with the "shattering" force of the strongly brisant Hexogen military explosive.
Luftwaffe-captured B-17s
During World War II approximately 40 B-17s were captured and refurbished by Germany after crash-landing or being forced down, with about a dozen put back into the air. Given German Balkenkreuz national markings on their wings and fuselage sides, and swastika tail fin–flashes, the captured B-17s were used to determine the B-17's vulnerabilities and to train German interceptor pilots in attack tactics. Others, with the cover designations Dornier Do 200 and Do 288, were used as long-range transports by the Kampfgeschwader 200 special duties unit, carrying out agent drops and supplying secret airstrips in the Middle East and North Africa. They were chosen specifically for these missions as being more suitable for this role than other available German aircraft; they never attempted to deceive the Allies and always wore full Luftwaffe markings. One B-17 of KG200, bearing the Luftwaffe's KG 200 Geschwaderkennung (combat wing code) markings A3+FB, was interned by Spain when it landed at Valencia airfield, 27 June 1944, remaining there for the rest of the war. It has been alleged that some B-17s kept their Allied markings and were used by the Luftwaffe in attempts to infiltrate B-17 bombing formations and report on their positions and altitudes. According to these allegations, the practice was initially successful, but Army Air Force combat aircrews quickly developed and established standard procedures to first warn off, and then fire upon any "stranger" trying to join a group's formation.
Soviet-interned B-17s
The U.S. did not offer B-17s to the Soviet Union as part of its war materiel assistance program, but at least 73 aircraft were acquired by the Soviet Air Force. These aircraft had landed with mechanical trouble during the shuttle bombing raids over Germany or had been damaged by a Luftwaffe raid in Poltava. The Soviets restored 23 to flying condition and concentrated them in the 890th Bomber Regiment of the 45th Bomber Aviation Division, but they never saw combat. In 1946 (or 1947, according to Holm), the regiment was assigned to the Kazan factory (moving from Baranovichi) to help the Soviet effort to reproduce the more advanced Boeing B-29 as the Tupolev Tu-4.
Swiss-interned B-17s
During the Allied bomber offensive, some US and British bombers landed in Switzerland and were interned. Some had been damaged and were unable to get back to Allied bases. Others flew into Swiss airspace due to navigation errors, and on rare occasions, accidentally bombed Swiss cities. Swiss fighter aircraft intercepted such aircraft and sought to force them to land.
In October 1943, a B-17F-25-VE (tail number 25841) developed engine trouble after a raid over Germany and was forced to land in Switzerland. The plane and its US flight crew were interned. The aircraft was turned over to the Swiss Air Force, which flew the bomber until the end of the war, using other interned but non-airworthy B-17s for spare parts. The bomber's topside surfaces were repainted a dark olive drab, but it retained its light gray underwing and lower fuselage surfaces. It carried the Swiss national white cross insignia in red squares on the topside and underside of its wings, and on both sides of its rudder and its fuselage, with the light gray flash letters "RD" and "I" on either side of the fuselage insignias.
Japanese-captured B-17s
In 1942, Japanese technicians and mechanics rebuilt three damaged B-17s, one "D" and two "E" series, using parts salvaged from abandoned B-17 wrecks in the Philippines and the Java East Indies. The three bombers, which still contained their top-secret Norden bombsights, were ferried to Japan where they underwent extensive technical evaluation by the Giken, the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force's Air Technical Research Institute (Koku Gijutsu Kenkyujo) at Tachikawa's air field. The "D" model, later deemed an obsolescent design, was used in Japanese training and propaganda films. The two "E"s were used to develop air combat tactics for use against B-17s; they were also used as enemy aircraft in pilot and crew training films. One of the two "E"s was photographed late in the war by US aerial recon. It was code-named "Tachikawa 105" after the mystery aircraft's wingspan (104 ft (32 m)) but not correctly identified as a captured B-17 until after the war. No traces of the three captured Flying Fortresses were ever found in Japan by Allied occupation forces. The bombers were assumed either lost by various means or scrapped late in the war for their vital war materials.
Postwar history
U.S. Air Force
See also: 3205th Drone GroupAfter World War II, the B-17 was quickly phased out of use as a bomber and the Army Air Forces retired most of its fleet. Flight crews ferried the bombers back across the Atlantic to the United States where the majority were sold for scrap and melted down, although many remained in use in second-line roles such as VIP transports, air-sea rescue and photo-reconnaissance. Strategic Air Command (SAC), established in 1946, used reconnaissance B-17s (at first called F-9 , later RB-17) until 1949.
The USAF Air Rescue Service of the Military Air Transport Service (MATS) operated B-17s as so-called "Dumbo" air-sea rescue aircraft. Work on using B-17s to carry airborne lifeboats had begun in 1943, but they entered service in the European theater only in February 1945. They were also used to provide search and rescue support for B-29 raids against Japan. About 130 B-17s were converted to the air-sea rescue role, at first designated B-17H and later SB-17G. Some SB-17s had their defensive guns removed, while others retained their guns to allow use close to combat areas. The SB-17 served through the Korean War, remaining in service with USAF until the mid-1950s.
In 1946, surplus B-17s were chosen as drone aircraft for atmospheric sampling during the Operation Crossroads atomic bomb tests, being able to fly close to or even through the mushroom clouds without endangering a crew. This led to more widespread conversion of B-17s as drones and drone control aircraft, both for further use in atomic testing and as targets for testing surface-to-air and air-to-air missiles. One hundred and seven B-17s were converted to drones. The last operational mission flown by a USAF Fortress was conducted on 6 August 1959, when a DB-17P, serial 44-83684 , directed a QB-17G, out of Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, as a target for an AIM-4 Falcon air-to-air missile fired from a McDonnell F-101 Voodoo. A retirement ceremony was held several days later at Holloman AFB, after which 44-83684 was retired. It was subsequently used in various films and in the 1960s television show 12 O'Clock High before being retired to the Planes of Fame aviation museum in Chino, California. Perhaps the most famous B-17, the Memphis Belle, has been restored – with the B-17D The Swoose under way – to her World War II wartime appearance by the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio.
U.S. Navy and Coast Guard
During the last year of World War II and shortly thereafter, the United States Navy (USN) acquired 48 ex-USAAF B-17s for patrol and air-sea rescue work. The first two ex-USAAF B-17s, a B-17F (later modified to B-17G standard) and a B-17G were obtained by the Navy for various development programs. At first, these aircraft operated under their original USAAF designations, but on 31 July 1945 they were assigned the naval aircraft designation PB-1, a designation which had originally been used in 1925 for the Boeing Model 50 experimental flying boat.
Thirty-two B-17Gs were used by the Navy under the designation PB-1W, the suffix -W indicating an airborne early warning role. A large radome for an S-band AN/APS-20 search radar was fitted underneath the fuselage and additional internal fuel tanks were added for longer range, with the provision for additional underwing fuel tanks. Originally, the B-17 was also chosen because of its heavy defensive armament, but this was later removed. These aircraft were painted dark blue, the standard Navy paint scheme which had been adopted in late 1944. PB-1Ws continued in USN service until 1955, gradually being phased out in favor of the Lockheed WV-2 (known in the USAF as the EC-121, a designation adopted by the USN in 1962), a military version of the Lockheed 1049 Constellation commercial airliner.
In July 1945, 16 B-17s were transferred to the Coast Guard via the Navy; these aircraft were initially assigned U.S. Navy Bureau Numbers (BuNo), but were delivered to the Coast Guard designated as PB-1Gs beginning in July 1946. Coast Guard PB-1Gs were stationed at a number of bases in the U.S. and Newfoundland, with five at Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City, North Carolina, two at CGAS San Francisco, two at NAS Argentia, Newfoundland, one at CGAS Kodiak, Alaska, and one in Washington state. They were used primarily in the "Dumbo" air-sea rescue role, but were also used for iceberg patrol duties and for photo mapping. The Coast Guard PB-1Gs served throughout the 1950s, the last example not being withdrawn from service until 14 October 1959.
Special operations
B-17s were used by the CIA front companies Civil Air Transport, Air America and Intermountain Aviation for special missions. These included B-17G 44-85531, registered as N809Z. These aircraft were primarily used for agent drop missions over the People's Republic of China, flying from Taiwan, with Taiwanese crews. Four B-17s were shot down in these operations.
In 1957 the surviving B-17s had been stripped of all weapons and painted black. One of these Taiwan-based B-17s was flown to Clark Air Base in the Philippines in mid-September, assigned for covert missions into Tibet.
On 28 May 1962, N809Z, piloted by Connie Seigrist and Douglas Price, flew Major James Smith, USAF and Lieutenant Leonard A. LeSchack, USNR to the abandoned Soviet arctic ice station NP 8, as Operation Coldfeet. Smith and LeSchack parachuted from the B-17 and searched the station for several days. On 1 June, Seigrist and Price returned and picked up Smith and LeSchack using a Fulton Skyhook system installed on the B-17. N809Z was used to perform a Skyhook pick up in the James Bond movie Thunderball in 1965. This aircraft, now restored to its original B-17G configuration, was on display in the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon until it was sold to the Collings Foundation in 2015.
Operators
For a more comprehensive list, see List of B-17 Flying Fortress operators.The B-17, a versatile aircraft, served in dozens of USAAF units in theaters of combat throughout World War II, and in other roles for the RAF. Its main use was in Europe, where its shorter range and smaller bombload relative to other aircraft did not hamper it as much as in the Pacific Theater. Peak USAAF inventory (in August 1944) was 4,574 worldwide.
- Argentina
- Australia
- Austria
- Bolivia
- Brazil
- Canada
- Colombia
- Denmark
- Dominican Republic
- France
- Germany
- Iran
- Israel
- Japan
- Mexico
- Nicaragua
- Peru
- Portugal
- South Africa
- Republic of China
- Soviet Union
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- United Kingdom
- United States
Surviving aircraft and wrecks
Of the more than 12,000 B-17 made, six were known to be in flying as of 2023. There are about 40 B-17 in collections in the United States, and overall about 46 globally.
There are also nearly complete or partially complete B-17 wrecks that have been discovered: an example of this is a B-17F that ditched in the Pacific on 11 July 1943, but was located in 1986.
Further information: List of surviving Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses
Fortresses as a symbol
The B-17 Flying Fortress became symbolic of the United States of America's air power. In a 1943 Consolidated Aircraft poll of 2,500 men in cities where Consolidated advertisements had been run in newspapers, 73% had heard of the B-24 and 90% knew of the B-17.
After the first Y1B-17s were delivered to the Army Air Corps 2nd Bombardment Group, they were used on flights to promote their long range and navigational capabilities. In January 1938, group commander Colonel Robert Olds flew a Y1B-17 from the U.S. east coast to the west coast, setting a transcontinental record of 13 hours 27 minutes. He also broke the west-to-east coast record on the return trip, averaging 245 mph (394 km/h) in 11 hours 1 minute. Six bombers of the 2nd Bombardment Group took off from Langley Field on 15 February 1938 as part of a goodwill flight to Buenos Aires, Argentina. Covering 12,000 miles (19,000 km) they returned on 27 February, with seven aircraft setting off on a flight to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, three days later. In a well-publicized mission on 12 May of the same year, three Y1B-17s "intercepted" and took photographs of the Italian ocean liner SS Rex 610 miles (980 km) off the Atlantic coast.
Many pilots who flew both the B-17 and the B-24 preferred the B-17 for its greater stability and ease in formation flying. The electrical systems were less vulnerable to damage than the B-24's hydraulics, and the B-17 was easier to fly than a B-24 when missing an engine. During the war, the largest offensive bombing force, the Eighth Air Force, had an open preference for the B-17. Lieutenant General Jimmy Doolittle wrote about his preference for equipping the Eighth with B-17s, citing the logistical advantage in keeping field forces down to a minimum number of aircraft types with their individual servicing and spares. For this reason, he wanted B-17 bombers and P-51 fighters for the Eighth. His views were supported by Eighth Air Force statisticians, whose mission studies showed that the Flying Fortress's utility and survivability was much greater than those of the B-24 Liberator. Making it back to base on numerous occasions, despite extensive battle damage, the B-17's durability became legendary; stories and photos of B-17s surviving battle damage were widely circulated during the war. Despite an inferior performance and smaller bombload than the more numerous B-24 Liberators, a survey of Eighth Air Force crews showed a much higher rate of satisfaction with the B-17.
Notable B-17s
- All American – This B-17F survived having her tail almost cut off in a mid-air collision with a Bf 109 over Tunisia but returned safely to base in Algeria.
- Snap! Crackle! Pop! – B-17F-27-BO, 41-24620, part of the 360th Bomb Squadron, 303rd Bomb Group, was on a daylight bombing run over Saint-Nazaire, France when downed by flak. The ball turret gunner, Alan Magee, his parachute damaged and unusable, free fell from 22,000 feet, survived and became a POW.
- Chief Seattle – sponsored by the city of Seattle, she disappeared (MIA) on 14 August 1942 flying a recon mission for the 19th BG, 435th BS and the crew declared dead on 7 December 1945.
- Hell's Kitchen – B-17F 41-24392 was one of only three early B-17F's in 414th BS to complete more than 100 combat missions.
- Mary Ann – a fictional B-17D that was part of an unarmed flight which left Hamilton Air Field, Novato, California on 6 December 1941 en route to Hickam Field in Hawaii, arriving during the attack on Pearl Harbor. The plane and her crew were immediately forced into action on Wake Island and in the Philippines during the outbreak of World War II. She became famous when her fictional exploits were featured in Air Force, one of the first of the patriotic war films released in 1943.
- Memphis Belle – one of the first B-17s to complete a tour of duty of 25 missions in the 8th Air Force and the subject of a feature film, now completely restored and on display since 17 May 2018 at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio.
- Milk Wagon - B-17G. Over the course of its tour of duty, Milk Wagon set a record in the 3rd Division, possibly the war, for 129 missions without aborting for mechanical failure.
- Miss Every Morning Fix'n – B-17C. Previously named 'Pamela'. Stationed in Mackay, Queensland, Australia during World War II. On 14 June 1943, crashed shortly after takeoff from Mackay while ferrying U.S. forces personnel back to Port Moresby, with 40 of the 41 people on board killed. It remains the worst air disaster in Australian history. The sole survivor, Foye Roberts, married an Australian and returned to the States. He died in Wichita Falls, Texas, on 4 February 2004.
- Murder Inc. – A B-17 bombardier wearing the name of the B-17 "Murder Inc." on his jacket was used for propaganda in German newspapers.
- Old 666 – B-17E flown by the most highly decorated crew in the Pacific Theater
- Royal Flush – B-17F 42-6087 from the 100th Bomb Group and commanded on one mission by highly decorated USAAF officer Robert Rosenthal, she was the lone surviving 100th BG B-17 of 10 October 1943 raid against Münster to return to the unit's base at RAF Thorpe Abbotts.
- Sir Baboon McGoon – B-17F featured in the June 1944 issue of Popular Science magazine and the 1945 issue of Flying magazine. Articles discuss mobile recovery crews following October 1943 belly landing at Tannington, England.
- The Swoose – Initially nicknamed Ole Betsy while in service, The Swoose is the only remaining intact B-17D, built in 1940, the oldest surviving Flying Fortress, and the only surviving B-17 to have seen action in the Philippines campaign (1941–1942); she is in the collection of the National Air and Space Museum and is being restored for final display at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio. The Swoose was flown by Frank Kurtz, father of actress Swoosie Kurtz, who named his daughter after the bomber.
- Ye Olde Pub – A highly damaged B-17 piloted by Charlie Brown that was not shot down by Franz Stigler, as memorialized in the painting A Higher Call by John D. Shaw.
- 5 Grand – 5,000th B-17 made, emblazoned with Boeing employee signatures, served with the 333rd Bomb Squadron, 96th Bomb Group in Europe. Damaged and repaired after gear-up landing, transferred to 388th Bomb Group. Returned from duty following V-E Day, flown for war bonds tour, then stored at Kingman, Arizona. Following an unsuccessful bid for museum preservation, the aircraft was scrapped.
Accidents and incidents
For a more comprehensive list, see Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress.Most of the losses were during WWII, however because of the Warbird flights there have been losses in the 2020s as well.
Noted B-17 pilots and crew members
Medal of Honor recipients
Many B-17 crew members received military honors and 17 received the Medal of Honor, the highest military decoration awarded by the United States:
- Brigadier General Frederick Castle (flying as co-pilot) – awarded posthumously for remaining at controls so others could escape damaged aircraft.
- 2nd Lt Robert Femoyer (navigator) – awarded posthumously
- 1st Lt Donald J. Gott (pilot) – awarded posthumously
- 2nd Lt David R. Kingsley (bombardier) – awarded posthumously for tending to injured crew and giving up his parachute to another
- 1st Lt William R. Lawley Jr. – "heroism and exceptional flying skill"
- Sgt Archibald Mathies (engineer-gunner) – awarded posthumously
- 1st Lt Jack W. Mathis (bombardier) – posthumously, the first airman in the European theater to be awarded the Medal of Honor
- 2nd Lt William E. Metzger Jr. (co-pilot) – awarded posthumously
- 1st Lt Edward Michael
- 1st Lt John C. Morgan
- Capt Harl Pease (awarded posthumously)
- 2nd Lt Joseph Sarnoski (awarded posthumously)
- S/Sgt Maynard H. Smith (gunner)
- 1st Lt Walter E. Truemper (awarded posthumously)
- T/Sgt Forrest L. Vosler (radio operator)
- Brigadier General Kenneth Walker Commanding officer of V Bomber Command, killed while leading small force in raid on Rabaul – awarded posthumously
- Maj Jay Zeamer Jr. (pilot) – earned on unescorted reconnaissance mission in Pacific, same mission as Sarnoski
Other military achievements or events
- Lincoln Broyhill (1925–2008), tail-gunner on a B-17 in the 483rd Bombardment Group. He received a Distinguished Unit Citation and set two individual records in a single day: (1) most German jets destroyed by a single gunner in one mission (two), and (2) most German jets destroyed by a single gunner during the entirety of World War II.
- Allison C. Brooks (1917–2006), a B-17 pilot who was awarded numerous military decorations and was ultimately promoted to the rank of major general and served in active duty until 1971.
- 1st Lt Eugene Emond (1921–1998): Lead pilot for Man O War II Horsepower Limited. Received the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal with three oak leaf clusters, American Theater Ribbon and Victory Ribbon. Was part of D-Day and witnessed one of the first German jets when a Me 262A-1a flew through his formation over Germany. One of the youngest bomber pilots in the U.S. Army Air Forces.
- Immanuel J. Klette (1918–1988): Second-generation German-American whose 91 combat missions were the most flown by any Eighth Air Force pilot in World War II.
- Capt Colin Kelly (1915–1941): Pilot of the first U.S. B-17 lost in action.
- Col Frank Kurtz (1911–1996): The USAAF's most decorated pilot of World War II. Commander of the 463rd Bombardment Group (Heavy), 15th Air Force, Celone Field, Foggia, Italy. Clark Field Philippines attack survivor. Olympic bronze medalist in diving (1932), 1944–1945. Father of actress Swoosie Kurtz, herself named for the still-surviving B-17D mentioned above.
- Gen Curtis LeMay (1906–1990): Became head of the Strategic Air Command and Chief of Staff of the USAF.
- Lt Col Nancy Love (1914–1976) and Betty (Huyler) Gillies (1908–1998): The first women pilots to be certified to fly the B-17, in 1943 and to qualify for the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron.
- SSgt Alan Magee (1919–2003): B-17 gunner who on 3 January 1943 survived a 22,000-foot (6,700-meter) freefall after his aircraft was shot down by the Luftwaffe over St. Nazaire.
- Col Robert K. Morgan (1918–2004): Pilot of Memphis Belle.
- Lt Col Robert Rosenthal (1917–2007): Commanded the only surviving B-17, Royal Flush, of a US 8th Air Force raid by the 100th Bomb Group on Münster on 10 October 1943. Completed 53 missions. Earned sixteen medals for gallantry (including one each from Britain and France), and led the raid on Berlin on 3 February 1945, that is likely to have ended the life of Roland Freisler, the infamous "hanging judge" of the People's Court.
Specifications (B-17G)
Data from The Encyclopedia of World Aircraft
General characteristics
- Crew: 10: Pilot, co-pilot, navigator, bombardier/nose gunner, flight engineer/top turret gunner, radio operator, waist gunners (2), ball turret gunner, tail gunner
- Length: 74 ft 4 in (22.66 m)
- Wingspan: 103 ft 9 in (31.62 m)
- Height: 19 ft 1 in (5.82 m)
- Wing area: 1,420 sq ft (131.92 m)
- Airfoil: NACA 0018 / NACA 0010
- Empty weight: 36,135 lb (16,391 kg)
- Gross weight: 54,000 lb (24,500 kg)
- Max takeoff weight: 65,500 lb (29,700 kg)
- Aspect ratio: 7.57
- Powerplant: 4 × Wright R-1820-97 "Cyclone" turbosupercharged radial engines, 1,200 hp (895 kW) each
- Propellers: 3-bladed Hamilton-Standard constant-speed propeller
Performance
- Maximum speed: 287 mph (462 km/h, 249 kn)
- Cruise speed: 182 mph (293 km/h, 158 kn)
- Range: 2,000 mi (3,219 km, 1,738 nmi) with 6,000 lb (2,700 kg) bombload
- Ferry range: 3,750 mi (6,040 km, 3,260 nmi)
- Service ceiling: 35,600 ft (10,850 m)
- Rate of climb: 900 ft/min (4.6 m/s)
- Wing loading: 38.0 lb/sq ft (185.7 kg/m)
- Power/mass: 0.089 hp/lb (150 W/kg)
Armament
- Guns: 13 × .50 in (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns in 9 positions (2 in the Bendix chin turret, 2 on nose cheeks, 2 staggered waist guns, 2 in upper Sperry turret, 2 in Sperry ball turret in belly, 2 in the tail and one firing upwards from radio compartment behind bomb bay)
- Bombs:
- Short range missions; internal load only (<400 mi): 8,000 lb (3,600 kg)
- Long range missions; internal load only (≈800 mi): 4,500 lb (2,000 kg)
- Max internal and external load: 17,600 lb (7,800 kg)
Notable appearances in media
Main article: Aircraft in fiction § B-17 Flying FortressA Douglas Aircraft B-17 assembly line is featured in the 1944 drama An American Romance. Hollywood featured the B-17 in its period films, such as director Howard Hawks' Air Force starring John Garfield and Twelve O'Clock High starring Gregory Peck. Both films were made with the full cooperation of the United States Army Air Forces and used USAAF aircraft and (for Twelve O'Clock High) combat footage. In 1964, the latter film was made into a television show of the same name and ran for three years on ABC TV. Footage from Twelve O' Clock High was also used, along with three restored B-17s, in the 1962 film The War Lover. An early model YB-17 also appeared in the 1938 film Test Pilot with Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy, and later with Clark Gable in Command Decision in 1948, in Tora! Tora! Tora! in 1970, and in Memphis Belle with Matthew Modine, Eric Stoltz, Billy Zane, and Harry Connick Jr. in 1990. The most famous B-17, the Memphis Belle, toured the U. S. with her crew to reinforce national morale (and to sell war bonds). She was featured in a USAAF documentary, Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress.
The Flying Fortress has also been featured in artistic works expressing the physical and psychological stress of the combat conditions and the high casualty rates that crews suffered. Works such as The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner by Randall Jarrell and Heavy Metal's section "B-17" depict the nature of these missions. The Ball turret itself has inspired works like Steven Spielberg's The Mission. Artists who served on the bomber units also created paintings and drawings depicting the combat conditions in World War II. "Masters of the Air", a 2024 American war drama television miniseries created by John Shiban and John Orloff, based on the 2007 book Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany by Donald L. Miller, follows the actions of the 100th Bomb Group, a B-17 unit in eastern England during World War II.
See also
- Air warfare of World War II
- Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress variants
- B-17 Flying Fortress units of the United States Army Air Forces
- Accidents and incidents involving the B-17 Flying Fortress
Related development
Related lists
- List of bomber aircraft
- List of aircraft of World War II
- List of military aircraft of the United States
Notes
- The 1 January 1938 Air Corps News Letter noted the Langley Field correspondent used the appellation "Jeep" to the B-17, which it objected to as "not befitting" the aircraft and adding, "Why not let the term 'Flying Fortress' suffice?"
- The idea of a pilot's checklist spread to other crew members, other air corps aircraft types, and eventually throughout the aviation world. Life published the lengthy B-17 checklist in its 24 August 1942 issue.
- Quote: "At the peak of production, Boeing was rolling out as many as 363 B-17s a month, averaging between 14 and 16 Forts a day, the most incredible production rate for large aircraft in aviation history." This production rate was, however, surpassed by that of the Consolidated B-24 Liberator: at its peak in 1944, the Willow Run plant alone produced one B-24 per hour and 650 B-24s per month.
- During the crash investigation of Boeing 307 Stratoliner NX19901, it was found that two B-17s had already spun from lack of directional stability. British combat experience with the B-17 was also showing the need for a tail gunner. Boeing was not willing to add a turret because they did not want to disrupt the clean aerodynamics. The inadequate directional stability exposed by two spin incidents and a crash, brought about a redesigned vertical stabilizer and dorsal fin. A compromise for the tail turret resulted in handheld tail guns. The combination created a successful design. Not only were defensive needs solved, but the improved lateral stability made precision high altitude bombing possible.
- This is a commonly misreported error. The Rex was 725 miles offshore on her last position report as the Y1B-17s were taxiing for takeoff from Mitchel Field, four hours before interception
- problems the RAF found included the tendency to burn when hit, icing problems, crew fatigue due to altitude, oxygen system failures
References
- Yenne 2006, p. 8.
- Angelucci and Matricardi 1988, p. 46.
- ^ "The Boeing Logbook: 1933–1938". Archived 8 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine Boeing. Retrieved: 3 March 2009.
- Parker 2013, pp. 35, 40–48.
- Herman 2012, pp. 292–299, 305, 333.
- Parker 2013, p. 41.
- ^ Carey 1998, p. 4.
- Yenne 2005, p. 46.
- Tate 1998, p. 164.
- ^ Swanborough and Bowers 1963, p. 74.
- Hess and Winchester 1997, p. 41.
- Bowers 1989, pp. 291–92.
- Salecker 2001, p. 46.
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- Parshall, Jonathon and Anthony Tulley. Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books, 2005. ISBN 1-57488-923-0.
- Ramsey, Winston G. The V-Weapons. London, United Kingdom: After The Battle, Number 6, 1974.
- Roberts, Michael D. Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons: Volume 2: The History of VP, VPB, VP(HL) and VP(AM) Squadrons. Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, 2000.
- Sakai, Saburo with Martin Caidin and Fred Saito. Samurai!. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0-671-56310-3.
- Salecker, Gene Eric. Fortress Against The Sun: The B-17 Flying Fortress in the Pacific. Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: Combined Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-58097-049-4.
- Serling, Robert J. Legend & Legacy: The Story of Boeing and its People. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992. ISBN 0-312-05890-X.
- Shores, Christopher, Brian Cull and Yasuho Izawa. Bloody Shambles: Volume One: The Drift to War to The Fall of Singapore. London: Grub Street, 1992. ISBN 0-948817-50-X.
- Stitt, Robert M. Boeing B-17 Fortress in RAF Coastal Command Service. Sandomierz, Poland: STRATUS sp.j., 2010 (second edition 2019). ISBN 978-83-65281-54-8.
- Swanborough, F. G. and Peter M. Bowers. United States Military aircraft since 1909. London: Putnam, 1963. OCLC 846651845
- Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Navy Aircraft since 1911. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1976. ISBN 0-370-10054-9.
- Tate, James P. The Army and its Air Corps: Army Policy toward Aviation 1919–1941. Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Air University Press, 1998. ISBN 1-4289-1257-6. Retrieved: 1 August 2008.
- Trescott, Jacqueline. "Smithsonian Panel Backs Transfer of Famed B-17 Bomber." The Washington Post Volume 130, Issue 333, 3 November 2007.
- Weigley, Russell Frank. The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1977. ISBN 0-253-28029-X.
- Wixley, Ken. "Boeing's Battle Wagon: The B-17 Flying Fortress – An Outline History". Air Enthusiast, No. 78, November/December 1998, pp. 20–33. Stamford, UK: Key Publishing. ISSN 0143-5450.
- Wynn, Kenneth G. U-boat Operations of the Second World War: Career Histories, U511-UIT25. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1998. ISBN 1-55750-862-3.
- Yenne, Bill. B-17 at War. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint, 2006. ISBN 0-7603-2522-7.
- Yenne, Bill. The Story of the Boeing Company. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint, 2005. ISBN 0-7603-2333-X.
- Zamzow, S. L. (2012). Ambassador of American Airpower: Major General Robert Olds. Biblioscholar. ISBN 978-1-28834434-5.; originally issued as an academic thesis OCLC 405724149.
Further reading
- Birdsall, Steve. The B-17 Flying Fortress. Dallas, Texas: Morgan Aviation Books, 1965. OCLC 752618401.
- Cahill, Bill (October 2022). "Ghost Fortresses of the Apocalypse: Boeing B-17 Drones & the USA's Atomic Test Programme: Part 1: Crossroads to Sandstone, 1946–48". The Aviation Historian (41): 74–85. ISSN 2051-1930.
- Calegari, Robert (December 1976). "A vendre: B-17G" [For Sale: B-17G]. Le Fana de l'Aviation (in French). No. 85. pp. 34–36. ISSN 0757-4169.
- Davis, Larry. B-17 in Action. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1984. ISBN 0897471520.
- Jablonski, Edward. Flying Fortress. New York: Doubleday, 1965. ISBN 0385038550.
- Johnsen, Frederick A. Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. Stillwater, Minnesota: Voyageur Press, 2001. ISBN 1580070523.
- Gansz, David M. B-17 Production – Boeing Aircraft: 4 January 1944 – 26 February 1944 B-17G-35 to G-45 42-31932 – 42-32116 and 42-97058 – 42-97407. New Jersey: First Mountain Belgians, 2020. ISBN 978-1734380606.
- Gansz, David M. B-17 Production – Boeing Aircraft: 26 February 1944 – 25 April 1944 B-17G-50 to G-60 42-102379 – 42-102978. New Jersey: First Mountain Belgians, 2013. ISBN 978-0692365465.
- Gansz, David M. B-17 Production – Boeing Aircraft: 25 April 1944 – 22 June 1944 B-17G-65 to G-75 43-37509 – 43-38073. New Jersey: First Mountain Belgians, 2017. ISBN 978-0692859841.
- Lloyd, Alwyn T. B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale, Vol. 11: Derivatives, Part 2. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, 1983. ISBN 0816850216.
- Lloyd, Alwyn T. B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale, Vol. 20: More derivatives, Part 3. Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania: Tab Books, 1986. ISBN 0816850291.
- Lloyd, Alwyn T. and Terry D. Moore. B-17 Flying Fortress in Detail and Scale, Vol. 1: Production Versions, Part 1. Fallbrook, California: Aero Publishers, 1981. ISBN 0816850127.
- O'Leary, Michael. Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress (Osprey Production Line to Frontline 2). Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 1999. ISBN 1855328143.
- Stitt, Robert M. & Olson, Janice L. (July–August 2002). "Brothers in Arms: A Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress Crew in New Guinea, Part 1". Air Enthusiast. No. 100. pp. 2–11. ISSN 0143-5450.
- Thompson, Scott A. Final Cut: The Post War B-17 Flying Fortress, The Survivors: Revised and Updated Edition. Highland County, Ohio: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company, 2000. ISBN 1575100770.
- Wagner, Ray, American Combat Planes of the 20th Century, Reno, Nevada, 2004, Jack Bacon & Company, ISBN 0930083172.
- Willmott, H.P. B-17 Flying Fortress. London: Bison Books, 1980. ISBN 0853684448.
- Wisker Thomas J. "Talkback". Air Enthusiast, No. 10, July–September 1979, p. 79. ISSN 0143-5450
External links
- B-17 manuals from The Museum of Flight Digital Collections
- Pilot's flight operating instructions for the B-17F airplane
- Pilot training manual for the Flying Fortress, B-17
- Flight manual : Y1B-17 bombardment plane
- Flight manual B-17E bombardment airplane
- Boeing model B-17G bombardment airplane : The Flying Fortress field service manual
- Boeing model B-17F bombardment airplane field service manual
- Familiarization and inspection manual for the B-17F Flying Fortress manufactured by Boeing Aircraft Company - Seattle, Washington
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Main sequence (1930–1962) |
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RAAF Series One 1921–34 | |
RAAF Series Two 1935–63 |
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RAN Series | |
RAAF Series Three Tri-Service series 1964–present | |
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Prior to adoption of Tri-Service prefixes. |