Penetrator (aircraft)

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A penetrator is a long-range bomber aircraft designed to intrude against and penetrate enemy defenses. [1] The term is mostly applied to aircraft that fly at low altitude to avoid radar, a strategic counterpart to the shorter-ranged tactical interdictor designs like the TSR-2 and F-111. The term can be applied to any aircraft that is designed to survive over enemy airspace, and has been used for the penetration fighter designs intended to escort bombers. [2]

The classic penetrator design is the Rockwell B-1 Lancer, where the term was first widely used. [1] [3] [lower-alpha 1] The larger Tupolev Tu-160 is also a member of this class. Other aircraft, like the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress and some versions of the F-111 have also been adapted to this role. More modern designs, like the Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit, can be technically classified as penetrators, but the term is not generally applied to these aircraft. The mission for the Next-Generation Bomber has been described as "penetrate and persist". [4]

Notes

  1. The B-1 was developed as part of a project known as the "Low-Altitude Manned Penetrator".

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The term penetration fighter has been used to describe a long-range fighter aircraft designed to penetrate enemy air defences and attack defensive interceptors. The concept is similar to the escort fighter, but differs primarily in that the aircraft would not operate in close concert with bombers. Both types are sub-classes of the strategic fighter. The same general mission is also carried out by intruders, but these are generally night fighters or light bombers that do not have the air combat performance of this concept.

References

  1. 1 2 Copp, Carlo (November 1986). "The Long Range Penetrator". Australian Aviation.
  2. "USAF Air Materiel Command Design 938A Penetration Fighter Study of 1948". Retro Mechanic. 18 October 2011.
  3. Low-Altitude Manned Penetrators (PDF) (Technical report). RAND Corp. January 1965. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016.
  4. Warwick, Graham (12 June 2007). "Speed bump: USAF sets modest goals for new bomber". Flightglobal.