The development of the Convair B-36 strategic bomber began in 1941 with the XB-36, which was intended to meet the strategic needs of the US Army Air Forces, and later of the United States Air Force with its Strategic Air Command. In 1948, the B-36 become a mainstay of the American nuclear deterrent. It underwent a number of design changes before being withdrawn from service in 1959. It was also well suited to high altitude very long range reconnaissance missions, and several alterations were made with this mission profile in mind.
In 1941, the fall of Britain to a German invasion seemed imminent. If the United States joined the war against the Axis Powers, the fall of Britain would leave no bases in Europe from which the United States Army Air Corps (AAC) could bomb Germany. This possibility led to AAC to seek a bomber of truly intercontinental range. On 1941 April 11, the AAC issued a design competition for an aircraft with a 275 mph (445 km/h) cruising speed, a service ceiling of 45,000 ft (14,000 m), capable of delivering 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) of bombs to targets 5,000 miles (8,000 km) away. At the time, these requirements far exceeded the best technology available.
In November 1941, the United States Army Air Forces signed a contract for two experimental aircraft under the designation XB-36, based on design studies previously submitted by Consolidated Aircraft Corporation. A few days later, the Engineering Division at Wright Field decided that Consolidated's six-engine design, with all engines on the trailing edge of the wing, was the best option for the aircraft. The original design used vertical stabilizers and rudders, similar to those used in the B-24 Liberator. By the time the first XB-36 was delivered, the design had been changed to a huge single tail, and the wingspan increased to 230 ft (70 m), an unprecedented size.
Variant | Built |
---|---|
XB-36 | 1 |
YB-36 | 1 |
B-36A | 21 |
B-36B | 62 |
B-36D | 26 |
RB-36D | 24 |
B-36F | 36 |
RB-36F | 24 |
B-36H | 83 |
RB-36H | 73 |
B-36J | 33 |
Total | 384 |
It was clear that the B-36 needed nose guns. Adding these required a substantial rearrangement of the cockpit. In late 1944, a mockup of the new nose was approved. Though too late for the first prototype, it would be fitted to the second XB-36. Unfortunately, the new nose with its radar and radio equipment added significant weight.
The first (and only) XB-36 was completed at the Consolidated Fort Worth factory in late 1945. The plane sat on huge wheels 9 ft (2.8 m) in diameter; only three airfields in the USA had concrete thick enough to support the pressure exerted by wheels of that size. In 1948 June, the single-wheel undercarriage was replaced by a new undercarriage consisting of two wheels with half the diameter on each strut. This design, which would become the production standard, enabled the B-36 to operate on runways of reasonable thickness.
The maiden flight revealed problems with the flap actuating system, engine cooling, and the reliability of the aluminum wiring. Propeller vibration adversely affected the wing structure. Worse yet, the XB-36 failed to meet the 1941 specifications. In particular, inadequate engine cooling kept its service ceiling under 30,000 ft (9,000 m), much less than that called for in the original contract.
Following a grounding for modifications, the XB-36 was flight tested for 160 hours by pilots of the Army Air Force Air Materiel Command, then returned to Convair for further testing.
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The YB-36A, a conversion of the original XB-36, was turned over to the United States Air Force in June 1948, a week before the production B-36A was scheduled to be delivered. The YB-36A had inadequate operation value, and the Strategic Air Command used it primarily for training missions. Later it was idle for several years, then employed in the Carswell Air Force Base firefighting program.
The second prototype, designated YB-36, of which only a single instance was built, was chosen as the production version in mid-1945. Its new high-visibility cockpit and redesigned nose compartment became the standard. Thanks to various design improvements, the YB-36 outperformed the XB-36, eventually reaching altitudes of 40,000 ft (12,000 m). It was essentially built to B-36A specifications; in fact, it flew six months after the B-36A. In late 1950, the YB-36 was returned to Convair and converted into a reconnaissance aircraft under the designation RB-36E. In the spring of 1957, it was decommissioned and placed in the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
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The B-36A included several of the new elements developed on the YB-36, including the domed canopy and the four-wheel main landing gear (as opposed to the single-wheel landing gear used on the XB-36 and the YB-36). These new features were in a sense first seen on the B-36A rather than the YB-36, because it was the former that flew first — by six months.
The first B-36A ever built was destroyed by a series of brutal stress tests, consisting mainly of applying more and more load to various parts of the aircraft until they disintegrated.
On April 8, 1948, a B-36A made a 6,922 mile (11,140 km) flight of 33 hours, shuttling between Fort Worth and San Diego three times without landing, and carrying a 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) bomb load. In May, the same aircraft did a round trip of 8,062 miles (12,970 km) lasting 33 hours.
By virtue of its designation, the B-36A was technically a production aircraft. However, it lacked defensive armament because the system wasn't ready. It was an explicitly interim plane used by the 7th Bomb Group at Carswell Air Force Base in Texas for the sole purpose of flight testing and transitional crew training. When the newer B-36B became available, all B-36As were converted to reconnaissance aircraft and redesignated RB-36E.
A total of 22 were built.
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