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Rockwell B-1 Lancer

The Rockwell B-1 Lancer[b] is a supersonic variable-sweep wing, heavy bomber used by the United States Air Force. It has been nicknamed the "Bone" (from "B-One").[1][2] It is one of three strategic bombers serving in the U.S. Air Force fleet along with the B-2 Spirit and the B-52 Stratofortress as of 2023.

B-1 Lancer
A B-1B in flight
Role Supersonic strategic heavy bomber
National origin United States
Manufacturer North American Rockwell/Rockwell International
First flight 23 December 1974; 48 years ago (1974-12-23)
Introduction 1 October 1986
Status In service
Primary user United States Air Force
Produced 1973–1974, 1983–1988
Number built 104[a]

The B-1 was first envisioned in the 1960s as a platform that would combine the Mach 2 speed of the B-58 Hustler with the range and payload of the B-52, and was meant to ultimately replace both bombers. After a long series of studies, Rockwell International (now part of Boeing) won the design contest for what emerged as the B-1A. This version had a top speed of Mach 2.2 at high altitude and the ability to fly for long distances at Mach 0.85 at very low altitudes. The combination of the high cost of the aircraft, the introduction of the AGM-86 cruise missile that flew the same basic speed and distance, and early work on the B-2 stealth bomber reduced the need for the B-1. The program was canceled in 1977, after the B-1A prototypes had been built.

The program was restarted in 1981, largely as an interim measure due to delays in the B-2 stealth bomber program. The B-1A design was altered, reducing top speed to Mach 1.25 at high altitude, increasing low-altitude speed to Mach 0.96, extensively improving electronic components, and upgrading the airframe to carry more fuel and weapons. Dubbed the B-1B, deliveries of the new variant began in 1985; the plane formally entered service with Strategic Air Command (SAC) as a nuclear bomber the following year. By 1988, all 100 aircraft had been delivered.

With the disestablishment of SAC and its reassignment to the Air Combat Command in 1992, the B-1B was converted for a conventional bombing role. It first served in combat during Operation Desert Fox in 1998 and again during the NATO action in Kosovo the following year. The B-1B has supported U.S. and NATO military forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. As of 2021 the Air Force has 45 B-1Bs.[3] The Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider is to begin replacing the B-1B after 2025; all B-1s are planned to be retired by 2036.[4]

Development edit

Background edit

In 1955, the USAF issued requirements for a new bomber combining the payload and range of the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress with the Mach 2 maximum speed of the Convair B-58 Hustler.[5] In December 1957, the USAF selected North American Aviation's B-70 Valkyrie for this role, a six-engine bomber that could cruise at Mach 3 at high altitude (70,000 ft or 21,000 m).[6][7] Soviet Union interceptor aircraft, the only effective anti-bomber weapon in the 1950s,[8] were already unable to intercept the high-flying Lockheed U-2;[9] the Valkyrie would fly at similar altitudes, but much higher speeds, and was expected to fly right by the fighters.[8]

 
The XB-70 Valkyrie was chosen in 1957 to replace the Hustler, but suffered as a result of a switch in doctrine from high to low-altitude flying profiles

By the late 1950s, however, anti-aircraft surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) could threaten high-altitude aircraft,[10] as demonstrated by the 1960 downing of Gary Powers' U-2.[11] The USAF Strategic Air Command (SAC) was aware of these developments and had begun moving its bombers to low-level penetration even before the U-2 incident. This tactic greatly reduces radar detection distances through the use of terrain masking; using features of the terrain like hills and valleys, the line-of-sight from the radar to the bomber can be broken, rendering the radar (and human observers) incapable of seeing it.[12] Additionally, radars of the era were subject to "clutter" from stray returns from the ground and other objects, which meant a minimum angle existed above the horizon where they could detect a target. Bombers flying at low altitudes could remain under these angles simply by keeping their distance from the radar sites. This combination of effects made SAMs of the era ineffective against low-flying aircraft.[12][13] The same effects also meant that low-flying aircraft were difficult to detect by higher-flying interceptors, since their radar systems could not readily pick out aircraft against the clutter from ground reflections (lack of look-down/shoot-down capability).

The switch from high-altitude to low-altitude flight profiles severely affected the B-70, the design of which was tuned for high-altitude performance. Higher aerodynamic drag at low level limited the B-70 to subsonic speed while dramatically decreasing its range.[10] The result would be an aircraft with somewhat higher subsonic speed than the B-52, but less range. Because of this, and a growing shift to the intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) force, the B-70 bomber program was cancelled in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy,[8][14] and the two XB-70 prototypes were used in a supersonic research program.[15]

Although never intended for the low-level role, the B-52's flexibility allowed it to outlast its intended successor as the nature of the air war environment changed. The B-52's huge fuel load allowed it to operate at lower altitudes for longer times, and the large airframe allowed the addition of improved radar jamming and deception suites to deal with radars.[16] During the Vietnam War, the concept that all future wars would be nuclear was turned on its head, and the "big belly" modifications increased the B-52's total bomb load to 60,000 pounds (27,000 kg),[17] turning it into a powerful tactical aircraft which could be used against ground troops along with strategic targets from high altitudes.[13] The much smaller bomb bay of the B-70 would have made it much less useful in this role.

Design studies and delays edit

Although effective, the B-52 was not ideal for the low-level role. This led to a number of aircraft designs known as penetrators, which were tuned specifically for long-range low-altitude flight. The first of these designs to see operation was the supersonic F-111 fighter-bomber, which used variable-sweep wings for tactical missions.[18] A number of studies on a strategic-range counterpart followed.

The first post-B-70 strategic penetrator study was known as the Subsonic Low-Altitude Bomber (SLAB), which was completed in 1961. This produced a design that looked more like an airliner than a bomber, with a large swept wing, T-tail, and large high-bypass engines.[19] This was followed by the similar Extended Range Strike Aircraft (ERSA), which added a variable-sweep wing, then en vogue in the aviation industry. ERSA envisioned a relatively small aircraft with a 10,000-pound (4,500 kg) payload and a range of 10,070 miles (16,210 km) including 2,900 miles (4,700 km) flown at low altitudes. In August 1963, the similar Low-Altitude Manned Penetrator design was completed, which called for an aircraft with a 20,000-pound (9,100 kg) bomb load and somewhat shorter range of 8,230 miles (13,240 km).[20][21]

These all culminated in the October 1963 Advanced Manned Precision Strike System (AMPSS), which led to industry studies at Boeing, General Dynamics, and North American.[22][23] In mid-1964, the USAF had revised its requirements and retitled the project as Advanced Manned Strategic Aircraft (AMSA), which differed from AMPSS primarily in that it also demanded a high-speed high-altitude capability, similar to that of the existing Mach 2-class F-111.[24] Given the lengthy series of design studies, Rockwell engineers joked that the new name actually stood for "America's Most Studied Aircraft".[25]

The arguments that led to the cancellation of the B-70 program had led some to question the need for a new strategic bomber of any sort. The USAF was adamant about retaining bombers as part of the nuclear triad concept that included bombers, ICBMs, and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) in a combined package that complicated any potential defense. They argued that the bomber was needed to attack hardened military targets and to provide a safe counterforce option because the bombers could be quickly launched into safe loitering areas where they could not be attacked. However, the introduction of the SLBM made moot the mobility and survivability argument, and a newer generation of ICBMs, such as the Minuteman III, had the accuracy and speed needed to attack point targets. During this time, ICBMs were seen as a less costly option based on their lower unit cost,[26] but development costs were much higher.[10] Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara preferred ICBMs over bombers for the Air Force portion of the deterrent force[27] and felt a new expensive bomber was not needed.[28][29] McNamara limited the AMSA program to studies and component development beginning in 1964.[29]

Program studies continued; IBM and Autonetics were awarded AMSA advanced avionics study contracts in 1968.[29][30] McNamara remained opposed to the program in favor of upgrading the existing B-52 fleet and adding nearly 300 FB-111s for shorter range roles then being filled by the B-58.[13][29] He again vetoed funding for AMSA aircraft development in 1968.[30]

B-1A program edit

 
AN/APQ-140 radar for the B-1A[31]

President Richard Nixon reestablished the AMSA program after taking office, keeping with his administration's flexible response strategy that required a broad range of options short of general nuclear war.[32] Nixon's Secretary of Defense, Melvin Laird, reviewed the programs and decided to lower the numbers of FB-111s, since they lacked the desired range, and recommended that the AMSA design studies be accelerated.[32] In April 1969, the program officially became the B-1A.[13][32] This was the first entry in the new bomber designation series, created in 1962. The Air Force issued a request for proposals in November 1969.[33]

 
B-1A prototype

Proposals were submitted by Boeing, General Dynamics and North American Rockwell in January 1970.[33][34] In June 1970, North American Rockwell was awarded the development contract.[33] The original program called for two test airframes, five flyable aircraft, and 40 engines. This was cut in 1971 to one ground and three flight test aircraft.[35] The company changed its name to Rockwell International and named its aircraft division North American Aircraft Operations in 1973.[36] A fourth prototype, built to production standards, was ordered in the fiscal year 1976 budget. Plans called for 240 B-1As to be built, with initial operational capability set for 1979.[37]

Rockwell's design had features common to the General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark and North American XB-70 Valkyrie. It used a crew escape capsule, that ejected as a unit to improve crew survivability if the crew had to abandon the aircraft at high speed. Additionally, the design featured large variable-sweep wings in order to provide both more lift during takeoff and landing, and lower drag during a high-speed dash phase.[38] With the wings set to their widest position the aircraft had a much better airfield performance than the B-52, allowing it to operate from a wider variety of bases. Penetration of the Soviet Union's defenses would take place at supersonic speed, crossing them as quickly as possible before entering the more sparsely defended interior of the country where speeds could be reduced again.[38] The large size and fuel capacity of the design would allow the "dash" portion of the flight to be relatively long.

In order to achieve the required Mach 2 performance at high altitudes, the exhaust nozzles and air intake ramps were variable.[39] Initially, it had been expected that a Mach 1.2 performance could be achieved at low altitude, which required that titanium be used in critical areas in the fuselage and wing structure. The low altitude performance requirement was later lowered to Mach 0.85, reducing the amount of titanium and therefore cost.[35] A pair of small vanes mounted near the nose are part of an active vibration damping system that smooths out the otherwise bumpy low-altitude ride.[40] The first three B-1As featured the escape capsule that ejected the cockpit with all four crew members inside. The fourth B-1A was equipped with a conventional ejection seat for each crew member.[41]

The B-1A mockup review occurred in late October 1971; this resulted in 297 requests for alteration to the design due to failures to meet specifications and desired improvements for ease of maintenance and operation.[42] The first B-1A prototype (Air Force serial no. 74–0158) flew on 23 December 1974.[43] As the program continued the per-unit cost continued to rise in part because of high inflation during that period. In 1970, the estimated unit cost was $40 million, and by 1975, this figure had climbed to $70 million.[44]

New problems and cancellation edit

 
B-1A Prototype 4 showing its anti-flash white underside in 1981
 
B-1A nose section with ejection capsule denoted. Three of the four B-1As were fitted with escape capsules.

In 1976, Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko defected to Japan with his MiG-25 "Foxbat".[45] During debriefing he described a new "super-Foxbat" (almost certainly referring to the MiG-31) that had look-down/shoot-down radar in order to attack cruise missiles. This would also make any low-level penetration aircraft "visible" and easy to attack.[46] Given that the B-1's armament suite was similar to the B-52, and it now appeared no more likely to survive Soviet airspace than the B-52, the program was increasingly questioned.[47] In particular, Senator William Proxmire continually derided the B-1 in public, arguing it was an outlandishly expensive dinosaur. During the 1976 federal election campaign, Jimmy Carter made it one of the Democratic Party's platforms, saying "The B-1 bomber is an example of a proposed system which should not be funded and would be wasteful of taxpayers' dollars."[48]

When Carter took office in 1977 he ordered a review of the entire program. By this point the projected cost of the program had risen to over $100 million per aircraft, although this was lifetime cost over 20 years. He was informed of the relatively new work on stealth aircraft that had started in 1975, and he decided that this was a better approach than the B-1. Pentagon officials also stated that the AGM-86 Air-Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM) launched from the existing B-52 fleet would give the USAF equal capability of penetrating Soviet airspace. With a range of 1,500 miles (2,400 km), the ALCM could be launched well outside the range of any Soviet defenses and penetrate at low altitude like a bomber (with a much lower radar cross-section (RCS) due to smaller size), and in much greater numbers at a lower cost.[49] A small number of B-52s could launch hundreds of ALCMs, saturating the defense. A program to improve the B-52 and develop and deploy the ALCM would cost at least 20% less than the planned 244 B-1As.[48]

On 30 June 1977, Carter announced that the B-1A would be canceled in favor of ICBMs, SLBMs, and a fleet of modernized B-52s armed with ALCMs.[37] Carter called it "one of the most difficult decisions that I've made since I've been in office." No mention of the stealth work was made public with the program being top secret, but it is now known that in early 1978 he authorized the Advanced Technology Bomber (ATB) project, which eventually led to the B-2 Spirit.[50]

Domestically, the reaction to the cancellation was split along partisan lines. The Department of Defense was surprised by the announcement; it expected that the number of B-1s ordered would be reduced to around 150.[51] Congressman Robert Dornan (R-CA) claimed, "They're breaking out the vodka and caviar in Moscow."[52] However, it appears the Soviets were more concerned by large numbers of ALCMs representing a much greater threat than a smaller number of B-1s. Soviet news agency TASS commented that "the implementation of these militaristic plans has seriously complicated efforts for the limitation of the strategic arms race."[48] Western military leaders were generally happy with the decision. NATO commander Alexander Haig described the ALCM as an "attractive alternative" to the B-1. French General Georges Buis stated "The B-1 is a formidable weapon, but not terribly useful. For the price of one bomber, you can have 200 cruise missiles."[48]

Flight tests of the four B-1A prototypes for the B-1A program continued through April 1981. The program included 70 flights totaling 378 hours. A top speed of Mach 2.22 was reached by the second B-1A. Engine testing also continued during this time with the YF101 engines totaling almost 7,600 hours.[53]

Shifting priorities edit

 
A Rockwell B-1A in 1984

It was during this period that the Soviets started to assert themselves in several new theaters of action, in particular through Cuban proxies during the Angolan Civil War starting in 1975 and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. U.S. strategy to this point had been focused on containing Communism and preparation for war in Europe. The new Soviet actions revealed that the military lacked capability outside these narrow confines.[citation needed]

The U.S. Department of Defense responded by accelerating its Rapid Deployment Forces concept but suffered from major problems with airlift and sealift capability.[54] In order to slow an enemy invasion of other countries, air power was critical; however the key Iran-Afghanistan border was outside the range of the U.S. Navy's carrier-based attack aircraft, leaving this role to the U.S. Air Force.

During the 1980 presidential campaign, Ronald Reagan campaigned heavily on the platform that Carter was weak on defense, citing the cancellation of the B-1 program as an example, a theme he continued using into the 1980s.[55] During this time Carter's defense secretary, Harold Brown, announced the stealth bomber project, apparently implying that this was the reason for the B-1 cancellation.[56][verification needed]

B-1B program edit

 
The first B-1B debuted outside a hangar in Palmdale, California, 1984.

On taking office, Reagan was faced with the same decision as Carter before: whether to continue with the B-1 for the short term, or to wait for the development of the ATB, a much more advanced aircraft. Studies suggested that the existing B-52 fleet with ALCM would remain a credible threat until 1985. It was predicted that 75% of the B-52 force would survive to attack its targets.[57] After 1985, the introduction of the SA-10 missile, the MiG-31 interceptor and the first effective Soviet Airborne Early Warning and Control (AWACS) systems would make the B-52 increasingly vulnerable.[58] During 1981, funds were allocated to a new study for a bomber for the 1990s time-frame which led to developing the Long-Range Combat Aircraft (LRCA) project. The LRCA evaluated the B-1, F-111, and ATB as possible solutions; an emphasis was placed on multi-role capabilities, as opposed to purely strategic operations.[57]

In 1981, it was believed the B-1 could be in operation before the ATB, covering the transitional period between the B-52's increasing vulnerability and the ATB's introduction. Reagan decided the best solution was to procure both the B-1 and ATB, and on 2 October 1981 he announced that 100 B-1s were to be ordered to fill the LRCA role.[38][59]

In January 1982, the U.S. Air Force awarded two contracts to Rockwell worth a combined $2.2 billion for the development and production of 100 new B-1 bombers.[60] Numerous changes were made to the design to make it better suited to the now expected missions, resulting in the B-1B.[49] These changes included a reduction in maximum speed,[56] which allowed the variable-aspect intake ramps to be replaced by simpler fixed geometry intake ramps. This reduced the B-1B's radar cross-section which was seen as a good trade off for the speed decrease.[38] High subsonic speeds at low altitude became a focus area for the revised design,[56] and low-level speeds were increased from about Mach 0.85 to 0.92. The B-1B has a maximum speed of Mach 1.25 at higher altitudes.[38][61]

The B-1B's maximum takeoff weight was increased to 477,000 pounds (216,000 kg) from the B-1A's 395,000 pounds (179,000 kg).[38][62] The weight increase was to allow for takeoff with a full internal fuel load and for external weapons to be carried. Rockwell engineers were able to reinforce critical areas and lighten non-critical areas of the airframe, so the increase in empty weight was minimal.[62] To deal with the introduction of the MiG-31 equipped with the new Zaslon radar system, and other aircraft with look-down capability, the B-1B's electronic warfare suite was significantly upgraded.[38]

 
A B-1B banking during a demonstration in 2004

Opposition to the plan was widespread within Congress. Critics pointed out that many of the original problems remained in both areas of performance and expense.[63] In particular it seemed the B-52 fitted with electronics similar to the B-1B would be equally able to avoid interception, as the speed advantage of the B-1 was now minimal. It also appeared that the "interim" time frame served by the B-1B would be less than a decade, being rendered obsolete shortly after the introduction of a much more capable ATB design.[64] The primary argument in favor of the B-1 was its large conventional weapon payload, and that its takeoff performance allowed it to operate with a credible bomb load from a much wider variety of airfields. Production subcontracts were spread across many congressional districts, making the aircraft more popular on Capitol Hill.[citation needed]

B-1A No. 1 was disassembled and used for radar testing at the Rome Air Development Center in the former Griffiss Air Force Base, New York.[65] B-1As No. 2 and No. 4 were then modified to include B-1B systems. The first B-1B was completed and began flight testing in March 1983. The first production B-1B was rolled out on 4 September 1984 and first flew on 18 October 1984.[66] The 100th and final B-1B was delivered on 2 May 1988;[67] before the last B-1B was delivered, the USAF had determined that the aircraft was vulnerable to Soviet air defenses.[68]

Design edit

Overview edit

The B-1 has a blended wing body configuration, with variable-sweep wing, four turbofan engines, triangular ride-control fins and cruciform tail. The wings can sweep from 15 degrees to 67.5 degrees (full forward to full sweep). Forward-swept wing settings are used for takeoff, landings and high-altitude economical cruise. Aft-swept wing settings are used in high subsonic and supersonic flight.[69] The B-1's variable-sweep wings and thrust-to-weight ratio provide it with improved takeoff performance, allowing it to use shorter runways than previous bombers.[70] The length of the aircraft presented a flexing problem due to air turbulence at low altitude. To alleviate this, Rockwell included small triangular fin control surfaces or vanes near the nose on the B-1. The B-1's Structural Mode Control System moves the vanes, and lower rudder, to counteract the effects of turbulence and smooth out the ride.[71]

 
Rear view of a B-1B in flight, 2004

Unlike the B-1A, the B-1B cannot reach Mach 2+ speeds; its maximum speed is Mach 1.25 (about 950 mph or 1,530 km/h at altitude),[72] but its low-level speed increased to Mach 0.92 (700 mph, 1,130 km/h).[61] The speed of the current version of the aircraft is limited by the need to avoid damage to its structure and air intakes. To help lower its radar cross-section, the B-1B uses serpentine air intake ducts (see S-duct) and fixed intake ramps, which limit its speed compared to the B-1A. Vanes in the intake ducts serve to deflect and shield radar returns from the highly reflective engine compressor blades.[73]

The B-1A's engine was modified slightly to produce the GE F101-102 for the B-1B, with an emphasis on durability, and increased efficiency.[74] The core from this engine was subsequently used in several other engines, including the GE F110 used in the F-14 Tomcat, F-15K/SG variants and later versions of the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon.[75] It is also the basis for the non-afterburning GE F118 used in the B-2 Spirit and the U-2S.[75] The F101 engine core is also used in the CFM56 civil engine.[76]

The nose-gear door is the location for ground-crew control of the auxiliary power unit (APU) which can be used during a scramble for quick-starting the APU.[77][78]

Avionics edit

 
A B-1B cockpit at night
 
AN/APQ-164 passive electronically scanned array

The B-1's main computer is the IBM AP-101, which was also used on the Space Shuttle orbiter and the B-52 bomber.[79] The computer is programmed with the JOVIAL programming language.[80] The Lancer's offensive avionics include the Westinghouse (now Northrop Grumman) AN/APQ-164 forward-looking offensive passive electronically scanned array radar set with electronic beam steering (and a fixed antenna pointed downward for reduced radar observability), synthetic aperture radar, ground moving target indication (GMTI), and terrain-following radar modes, Doppler navigation, radar altimeter, and an inertial navigation suite.[81] The B-1B Block D upgrade added a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver beginning in 1995.[82]

The B-1's defensive electronics include the Eaton AN/ALQ-161A radar warning and defensive jamming equipment,[83] which has three sets of antennas; one at the front base of each wing and the third rear-facing in the tail radome.[84][85] Also in the tail radome is the AN/ALQ-153 missile approach warning system (pulse-Doppler radar).[86] The ALQ-161 is linked to a total of eight AN/ALE-49 flare dispensers located on top behind the canopy, which are handled by the AN/ASQ-184 avionics management system.[87] Each AN/ALE-49 dispenser has a capacity of 12 MJU-23A/B flares. The MJU-23A/B flare is one of the world's largest infrared countermeasure flares at a weight of over 3.3 pounds (1.5 kg).[88] The B-1 has also been equipped to carry the ALE-50 towed decoy system.[89]

Also aiding the B-1's survivability is its relatively low RCS. Although not technically a stealth aircraft, thanks to the aircraft's structure, serpentine intake paths and use of radar-absorbent material its RCS is about 1/50th that of the similar sized B-52. This is approximately 26 ft2 or 2.4 m2, comparable to that of a small fighter aircraft.[87][90][91]

The B-1 holds 61 FAI world records for speed, payload, distance, and time-to-climb in different aircraft weight classes.[92][93] In November 1993, three B-1Bs set a long-distance record for the aircraft, which demonstrated its ability to conduct extended mission lengths to strike anywhere in the world and return to base without any stops.[94] The National Aeronautic Association recognized the B-1B for completing one of the 10 most memorable record flights for 1994.[89]

Upgrades edit

 
Nose of a B-1 showing the Sniper XR pod hanging below and triangular ride-control fins

The B-1 has been upgraded since production, beginning with the "Conventional Mission Upgrade Program" (CMUP), which added a new MIL-STD-1760 smart-weapons interface to enable the use of precision-guided conventional weapons. CMUP was delivered through a series of upgrades:

  • Block A was the standard B-1B with the capability to deliver non-precision gravity bombs.
  • Block B brought an improved Synthetic Aperture Radar, and upgrades to the Defensive Countermeasures System and was fielded in 1995.[citation needed]
  • Block C provided an "enhanced capability" for delivery of up to 30 cluster bomb units (CBUs) per sortie with modifications made to 50 bomb racks.[95]
  • Block D added a "Near Precision Capability" via improved weapons and targeting systems, and added advanced secure communications capabilities.[95] The first part of the electronic countermeasures upgrade added Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM), ALE-50 towed decoy system, and anti-jam radios.[83][96][97]
  • Block E upgraded the avionics computers and incorporated the Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser (WCMD), the AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) and the AGM-158 JASSM (Joint Air to Surface Standoff Munition), substantially improving the bomber's capability. Upgrades were completed in September 2006.[98]
  • Block F was the Defensive Systems Upgrade Program (DSUP) to improve the aircraft's electronic countermeasures and jamming capabilities, but it was canceled in December 2002 due to cost overruns and delays.[99]

In 2007, the Sniper XR targeting pod was integrated on the B-1 fleet. The pod is mounted on an external hardpoint at the aircraft's chin near the forward bomb bay.[100] Following accelerated testing, the Sniper pod was fielded in summer 2008.[101][102] Future precision munitions include the Small Diameter Bomb.[103]

The USAF commenced the Integrated Battle Station (IBS) modification in 2012 as a combination of three separate upgrades when it realised the benefits of completing them concurrently; the Fully Integrated Data Link (FIDL), Vertical Situational Display Unit (VSDU) and Central Integrated Test System (CITS).[104] FIDL enables electronic data sharing, eliminating the need to enter information between systems by hand.[105] VSDU replaces existing flight instruments with multifunction color displays, a second display aids with threat evasion and targeting, and acts as a back-up display. CITS saw a new diagnostic system installed that allows crew to monitor over 9,000 parameters on the aircraft.[106] Other additions are to replace the two spinning mass gyroscopic inertial navigation system with ring laser gyroscopic systems and a GPS antenna, replacement of the APQ-164 radar with the Scalable Agile Beam Radar – Global Strike (SABR-GS) active electronically scanned array, and a new attitude indicator.[107] The IBS upgrades were completed in 2020.[104]

In August 2019, the Air Force unveiled a modification to the B-1B to allow it to carry more weapons internally and externally. Using the moveable forward bulkhead, space in the intermediate bay was increased from 180 to 269 in (457 to 683 cm). Expanding the internal bay to make use of the Common Strategic Rotary Launcher (CSRL), as well as utilizing six of the eight external hardpoints that had been previously out of use to keep in line with the New START Treaty, would increase the B-1B's weapon load from 24 to 40. The configuration also enables it to carry heavier weapons in the 5,000 lb (2,300 kg) range, such as hypersonic missiles; the AGM-183 ARRW is planned for integration onto the bomber. In the future the HAWC could be used by the bomber which, combining both internal and external weapon carriage, could conceivably bring the total number of hypersonic weapons to 31.[108][109][110]

Operational history edit

Strategic Air Command edit

The second B-1B, "The Star of Abilene", was the first B-1B delivered to SAC in June 1985. Initial operational capability was reached on 1 October 1986 and the B-1B was placed on nuclear alert status.[111][112] The B-1 received the official name "Lancer" on 15 March 1990. However, the bomber has been commonly called the "Bone"; a nickname that appears to stem from an early newspaper article on the aircraft wherein its name was phonetically spelled out as "B-ONE" with the hyphen inadvertently omitted.[1]

 
A dismantled decommissioned B-1 being transported by flatbed truck

In late 1990, engine fires in two Lancers led to a grounding of the fleet. The cause was traced back to problems in the first-stage fan, and the aircraft were placed on "limited alert"; in other words, they were grounded unless a nuclear war broke out. Following inspections and repairs they were returned to duty beginning on 6 February 1991.[113][114] By 1991, the B-1 had a fledgling conventional capability, forty of them able to drop the 500-pound (230 kg) Mk-82 General Purpose (GP) bomb, although mostly from low altitude. Despite being cleared for this role, the problems with the engines prevented their use in Operation Desert Storm during the Gulf War.[68][115] B-1s were primarily reserved for strategic nuclear strike missions at this time, providing the role of airborne nuclear deterrent against the Soviet Union.[115] The B-52 was more suited to the role of conventional warfare and it was used by coalition forces instead.[115]

Originally designed strictly for nuclear war, the B-1's development as an effective conventional bomber was delayed. The collapse of the Soviet Union had brought the B-1's nuclear role into question, leading to President George H. W. Bush ordering a $3 billion conventional refit.[116]

After the inactivation of SAC and the establishment of the Air Combat Command (ACC) in 1992, the B-1 developed a greater conventional weapons capability. Part of this development was the start-up of the U.S. Air Force Weapons School B-1 Division.[117] In 1994, two additional B-1 bomb wings were also created in the Air National Guard, with former fighter wings in the Kansas Air National Guard and the Georgia Air National Guard converting to the aircraft.[118] By the mid-1990s, the B-1 could employ GP weapons as well as various CBUs. By the end of the 1990s, with the advent of the "Block D" upgrade, the B-1 boasted a full array of guided and unguided munitions.

The B-1B no longer carries nuclear weapons;[38] its nuclear capability was disabled by 1995 with the removal of nuclear arming and fuzing hardware.[119] Under provisions of the New START treaty with Russia, further conversions were performed. These included modification of aircraft hardpoints to prevent nuclear weapon pylons from being attached, removal of weapons bay wiring bundles for arming nuclear weapons, and destruction of nuclear weapon pylons. The conversion process was completed in 2011, and Russian officials inspect the aircraft every year to verify compliance.[120]

Air Combat Command edit

 
A B-1B with wings swept full forward

The B-1 was first used in combat in support of operations in Iraq during Operation Desert Fox in December 1998, employing unguided GP weapons. B-1s have been subsequently used in Operation Allied Force (Kosovo) and, most notably, in Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[38] The B-1 has deployed an array of conventional weapons in war zones, most notably the GBU-31, 2,000-pound (910 kg) JDAM.[38] In the first six months of Operation Enduring Freedom, eight B-1s dropped almost 40 percent of aerial ordnance, including some 3,900 JDAMs.[107] JDAM munitions were heavily used by the B-1 over Iraq, notably on 7 April 2003 in an unsuccessful attempt to kill Saddam Hussein and his two sons.[121] During Operation Enduring Freedom, the B-1 was able to raise its mission capable rate to 79%.[89]

Of the 100 B-1Bs built, 93 remained in 2000 after losses in accidents. In June 2001, the Pentagon sought to place one-third of its then fleet into storage; this proposal resulted in several U.S. Air National Guard officers and members of Congress lobbying against the proposal, including the drafting of an amendment to prevent such cuts.[68] The 2001 proposal was intended to allow money to be diverted to further upgrades to the remaining B-1Bs, such as computer modernization.[68] In 2003, accompanied by the removal of B-1Bs from the two bomb wings in the Air National Guard, the USAF decided to retire 33 aircraft to concentrate its budget on maintaining availability of remaining B-1Bs.[122] In 2004, a new appropriation bill called for some retired aircraft to return to service,[123] and the USAF returned seven mothballed bombers to service to increase the fleet to 67 aircraft.[124]

 
Transferring a GBU-31 Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) to a lift truck for loading onto a B-1B on 29 March 2007, in Southwest Asia

On 14 July 2007, the Associated Press reported on the growing USAF presence in Iraq, including reintroduction of B-1Bs as a close-at-hand platform to support Coalition ground forces.[125] Beginning in 2008, B-1s were used in Iraq and Afghanistan in an "armed overwatch" role, loitering for surveillance purposes while ready to deliver guided bombs in support of ground troops as required.[126][127]

The B-1B underwent a series of flight tests using a 50/50 mix of synthetic and petroleum fuel; on 19 March 2008, a B-1B from Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, became the first USAF aircraft to fly at supersonic speed using a synthetic fuel during a flight over Texas and New Mexico. This was conducted as part of an USAF testing and certification program to reduce reliance on traditional oil sources.[128] On 4 August 2008, a B-1B flew the first Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod equipped combat sortie where the crew successfully targeted enemy ground forces and dropped a GBU-38 guided bomb in Afghanistan.[101]

In March 2011, B-1Bs from Ellsworth Air Force Base attacked undisclosed targets in Libya as part of Operation Odyssey Dawn.[129]

With upgrades to keep the B-1 viable, the USAF may keep it in service until approximately 2038.[130] Despite upgrades, a single flight hour needs 48.4 hours of repair. The fuel, repairs, and other needs for a 12-hour mission cost $720,000 (~$948,003 in 2022) as of 2010.[131] The $63,000 cost per flight hour is, however, less than the $72,000 for the B-52 and the $135,000 of the B-2.[132] In June 2010, senior USAF officials met to consider retiring the entire fleet to meet budget cuts.[133] The Pentagon plans to begin replacing the aircraft with the B-21 Raider after 2025.[134] In the meantime, its "capabilities are particularly well-suited to the vast distances and unique challenges of the Pacific region, and we'll continue to invest in, and rely on, the B-1 in support of the focus on the Pacific" as part of President Obama's "Pivot to East Asia".[135]

In August 2012, the 9th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron returned from a six-month tour in Afghanistan. Its 9 B-1Bs flew 770 sorties, the most of any B-1B squadron on a single deployment. The squadron spent 9,500 hours airborne, keeping one of its bombers in the air at all times. They accounted for a quarter of all combat aircraft sorties over the country during that time and fulfilled an average of two to three air support requests per day.[136] On 4 September 2013, a B-1B participated in a maritime evaluation exercise, deploying munitions such as laser-guided 500 lb GBU-54 bombs, 500 lb and 2,000 lb JDAM, and Long Range Anti-Ship Missiles (LRASM). The aim was to detect and engage several small craft using existing weapons and tactics developed from conventional warfare against ground targets; the B-1 is seen as a useful asset for maritime duties such as patrolling shipping lanes.[137]

Beginning in 2014, the B-1 was used against the Islamic State (IS) in the Syrian Civil War.[138][139] From August 2014 to January 2015, the B-1 accounted for eight percent of USAF sorties during Operation Inherent Resolve.[140] The 9th Bomb Squadron was deployed to Qatar in July 2014 to support missions in Afghanistan, but when the air campaign against IS began on 8 August, the aircraft were employed in Iraq. During the Battle of Kobane in Syria, the squadron's B-1s dropped 660 bombs over 5 months in support of Kurdish forces defending the city. This amounted to one-third of all bombs used during OIR during the period, and they killed some 1,000 ISIL fighters. The 9th Bomb Squadron's B-1s went "Winchester"–dropping all weapons on board–31 times during their deployment. They dropped over 2,000 JDAMs during the six-month rotation.[139] B-1s from the 28th Bomb Wing flew 490 sorties where they dropped 3,800 munitions on 3,700 targets during a six-month deployment. In February 2016, the B-1s were sent back to the U.S. for cockpit upgrades.[141]

Air Force Global Strike Command edit

As part of a USAF reorganization announced in April 2015, all B-1s were reassigned from Air Combat Command to Global Strike Command (GSC) in October 2015.[142]

On 8 July 2017, the USAF flew two B-1s near the North Korean border in a show of force amid increasing tensions, particularly in response to North Korea's 4 July test of an ICBM capable of reaching Alaska.[143]

On 14 April 2018, B-1s launched 19 JASSM missiles as part of the 2018 bombing of Damascus and Homs in Syria.[144][145][146] In August 2019, six B-1Bs met full mission capability; 15 were undergoing depot maintenance and 39 under repair and inspection.[147]

In February 2021, the USAF announced it will retire 17 B-1s, leaving 45 aircraft in service. Four of these will be stored in a condition that will allow their return to service if required.[148][149]

In March 2021, B-1s deployed to Norway's Ørland Main Air Station for the first time. During the deployment, they conducted bombing training with Norwegian and Swedish ground force Joint terminal attack controllers. One B-1 also conducted a warm-pit refuel at Bodø Main Air Station, marking the first landing inside Norway's Arctic Circle, and integrated with four Swedish Air Force JAS 39 Gripen fighters.[150][151]

Variants edit

 
The rear section showing the B-1A's pointed radome
B-1A
The B-1A was the original B-1 design with variable engine intakes and Mach 2.2 top speed. Four prototypes were built; no production units were manufactured.[124][152]
B-1B
The B-1B is a revised B-1 design with reduced radar signature and a top speed of Mach 1.25. It is optimized for low-level penetration. A total of 100 B-1Bs were produced.[152]
B-1R
The B-1R was a 2004 proposed upgrade of existing B-1B aircraft.[153] The B-1R (R for "regional") would be fitted with advanced radars, air-to-air missiles, and new Pratt & Whitney F119 engines (from the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor). This variant would have a top speed of Mach 2.2, but with 20% shorter range.[154] Existing external hardpoints would be modified to allow multiple conventional weapons to be carried, increasing overall loadout. For air-to-air defense, an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar would be added and some existing hardpoints modified to carry air-to-air missiles.[153]

Operators edit

 
A 28th Bomb Wing B-1B on the ramp in the early morning at Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota
 
A B-1B on public display at Ellsworth AFB, 2003
 
A B-1B arrives at Royal International Air Tattoo 2008

The USAF had 62 B-1Bs in service as of August 2017.[155]

  United States
United States Air Force
Strategic Air Command 1985–1992
Air Combat Command 1992–2015
Air Force Global Strike Command 2015–present
Air National Guard
Air Force Flight Test CenterEdwards AFB, California

Aircraft on display edit

 
A B-1B at the Museum of Aviation, Robins AFB
 
A B-1B at the National Museum of the USAF, Dayton, OH
B-1A
B-1B

Accidents and incidents edit

 
A B-1B with a brake fire after a hard landing at Rhein-Main AB, Germany, June 1994.

From 1984 to 2001, ten B-1s were lost due to accidents with 17 crew members or people on board killed.[166]

  • In September 1987, B-1B (serial number 84–0052) from the 96th Bomb Wing, 338th Combat Crew Training Squadron, Dyess AFB, crashed near La Junta, Colorado, while flying on a low-level training route. This was the only B-1B crash to occur with six crew members aboard. The two crew members in jump seats, and one of the four crew members in ejection seats perished. The root cause of the accident was thought to be a bird strike on a wing's leading edge during the low-level flight. The impact was severe enough to sever fuel and hydraulic lines on one side of the aircraft, while the other side's engines functioned long enough to allow for ejection. The B-1B fleet was later modified to protect these supply lines.[167]
  • In October 1990, while flying a training route in eastern Colorado, B-1B (86-0128) from the 384th Bomb Wing, 28th Bomb Squadron, McConnell AFB, experienced an explosion as the engines reached full power without afterburners. Fire on the aircraft's left was spotted. The No. 1 engine was shut down and its fire extinguisher was activated. The accident investigation determined that the engine had suffered catastrophic failure, engine blades had cut through the engine mounts and the engine became detached from the aircraft.[167]
  • In December 1990, B-1B (83-0071) from the 96th Bomb Wing, 337th Bomb Squadron, Dyess AFB, Texas, experienced a jolt that caused the No. 3 engine to shut down with its fire extinguisher activating. This event, coupled with the October 1990 engine incident, led to a 50+ day grounding of the B-1Bs not on nuclear alert status. The problem was eventually traced back to problems in the first-stage fan, and all B-1Bs were equipped with modified engines.[167]

Specifications (B-1B) edit

 
B-1A orthographic projection
 
B-1B cockpit
 
B-1B forward bomb bay fitted with a rotary launcher

Data from USAF Fact Sheet,[89] Jenkins,[168] Pace,[61] Lee[83]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 4 (Aircraft Commander, Pilot, Offensive Systems Officer, and Defensive Systems Officer)
  • Length: 146 ft (45 m)
  • Wingspan: 137 ft (42 m)
  • Swept wingspan: 79 ft (24 m) swept
  • Height: 34 ft (10 m)
  • Wing area: 1,950 sq ft (181 m2)
  • Airfoil: NACA69-190-2
  • Empty weight: 192,000 lb (87,090 kg)
  • Gross weight: 326,000 lb (147,871 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 477,000 lb (216,364 kg)
     
    A B-1B flying over the Pacific ocean
  • Powerplant: 4 × General Electric F101-GE-102 afterburning turbofan engines, 17,390 lbf (77.4 kN) thrust each dry, 30,780 lbf (136.9 kN) with afterburner

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 721 kn (830 mph, 1,335 km/h) at 40,000 ft (12,000 m), 608 kn (1,126 km/h) at 200–500 ft (61–152 m)
  • Maximum speed: Mach 1.25
  • Range: 5,100 nmi (5,900 mi, 9,400 km) with weapon load of 37,000 lb (16,800 kg). Max range is 6,500 nmi (12,000 km).[169]
  • Combat range: 2,993 nmi (3,444 mi, 5,543 km)
  • Service ceiling: 60,000 ft (18,000 m)
  • Rate of climb: 5,678 ft/min (28.84 m/s)
  • Wing loading: 167 lb/sq ft (820 kg/m2)
  • Thrust/weight: 0.38 at gross weight

Armament

Previously B61 or B83 nuclear bombs could be carried.[177]
  • Bombs: 3 internal bomb bays for 75,000 pounds (34,000 kg) of ordnance.[170]

Avionics

Weapons loads edit

B-1B Lancer internal weapons loads
Bomb rack & stores[181] Bay 1 Bay 2 Bay 3 Total
Conventional
CBM
2,816 to 3,513 lb (1,277 to 1,593 kg)
1 1 1
  • Mk-82
  • Mk-82 AIR
  • Mk-36
  • Mk-62
28 28 28 84
Conventional
SECBM
(CBM w/ TMD upgrade)
2,816 lb (1,277 kg) empty
1 1 1
  • CBU-87
  • CBU-89
  • CBU-97
  • CBU-103
  • CBU-104
  • CBU-105
10 10 10 30
GBU-38 6 6 3 15
Multi-purpose
MPRL
1,300 to 2,055 lb (590 kg)
1 1 1
  • Mk-84
  • GBU-31
  • AGM-154
  • AGM-158
8 8 8 24
Mk-65 naval mines 4 4 4 12
  • 4-pack GBU-39
  • 6-pack GBU-39
8 8 8 96 or 144
Multi-purpose (mixed)
MPRL
(MER upgrade)[182]
1 1 1
* GBU-38, GBU-32, GBU-31 4 4 4 36
GBU-38 16 16 16 48
Ferry/range extension
Fuel tank
2,975 gal (11,262 L)[183]
1 1 1 3
9,157 gal (34,663 kg)[184]
Nuclear (uniform; out of use)
  • MPRL
    1,300 to 2,055 lb (590 to 932 kg)
1 1 1
B28[185] 4 4 4 12
  • AGM-69
  • B61
  • B83
8 8 8 24
Nuclear (mixed)(out of use)[186]
  • CSRL
1
AGM-86B Small fuel tank
8
8
External weapons loads (mostly unused due to radar cross-section)[181]
Bomb rack & stores Fwd stations 1–2 Int. stations 3–6 Aft stations 7–8 Total
Nuclear (out of use)
Dual-pylon 2 2 2
Single-pylon 2
  • AGM-86B
  • B-61
2×2 2×2 + 2 2×2 14[h]
Conventional (uniform)
Mk-82 2×6 2×6 + 2×6 2×6 44
Targeting[187]
Pylon
884 lb (400 kg)
1 (right station)
Sniper XR targeting pod 1 (right station) 1
440 lb (200 kg)
Ferry/range extension[184][188]
Fuel tank
each 923 gal (3,494 L)
2 2 2 6
5,538 gal (20,963 L)

Notable appearances in media edit

See also edit

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Notes edit

  1. ^ Production totals: B-1A: 4; B-1B: 100
  2. ^ The name "Lancer" was only applied to the B-1B variant in 1990.[1]
  3. ^ Use for weapons restricted by arms treaties.[101][171]
  4. ^ As per B-1B Weapons Loading Checklist T.O. 1B-1B-33-2-1CL-13
  5. ^ both Mk-84 general purpose and BLU-109 penetrating bombs
  6. ^ As per B-1B Weapons Loading Checklist T.O. 1B-1B-33-2-1CL-12 Section 3.4 (Only six each in forward and intermediate bays and three each in the aft bay)
  7. ^ 96 if using four-packs, 144 if using 6-packs. This capability has not yet been fielded on the B-1
  8. ^ Restricted to 12 under SALT II.[186]

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Bibliography edit

  • Casil, Amy Sterling (2003). The B-1 Lancer. New York: Rosen. ISBN 0-8239-3871-9.
  • Dao, James. "Much-Maligned B-1 Bomber Proves Hard to Kill." The New York Times, 1 August 2001.
  • Donald, David, ed. "Rockwell B-1B". The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1997. ISBN 0-7607-0592-5.
  • ——— (2004). The Pocket Guide to Military Aircraft: And the World's Airforces. London: Octopus. ISBN 0-681-03185-9..
  • Dorr, Robert F (1997). 7th Bombardment Group/Wing, 1918–1995. Turner, ME: Turner. ISBN 1-56311-278-7.
  • ——— (June 2010). Lancer Force. London: Ian Allan. {{cite book}}: |newspaper= ignored (help).
  • Gunston, William 'Bill' (1978), F-111, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, ISBN 0-684-15753-5.
  • Jenkins, Dennis R (1999). B-1 Lancer: The Most Complicated Warplane Ever Developed. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-134694-5.
  • Knaack, Marcelle Size (1988). (PDF). Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-16-002260-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 October 2007.
  • Lee, Tae-Woo (2008). Military Technologies of the World. Vol. 1. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-275-99535-5.
  • Pace, Steve (1998). Boeing North American B-1 Lancer. North Branch, MN: Specialty Press. ISBN 1-58007-012-4.
  • ——— (1999). B-2 Spirit: The Most Capable War Machine on the Planet. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-134433-0.
  • Schwartz, Stephen I (1998). Atomic Audit: The Costs and Consequences of U.S. Nuclear Weapons since 1940. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press. ISBN 0-8157-7773-6.
  • Skaarup, Harold A (2002). South Dakota Warbird Survivors 2003: A Handbook on Where to Find Them. Bloomington, IN: iUniverse. ISBN 0-595-26379-8.
  • Sorrels, Charles A. (1983). U.S. Cruise Missile Programs: Development, Deployment, and Implications for Arms Control. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-08-030527-X.
  • Spick, Michael 'Mike' (1986). B-1B. Modern Fighting Aircraft. New York: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-055237-2..
  • Spick, Mike, ed. (1987). The Great Book of Modern Warplanes. New York: Salamander Books. ISBN 0-517-63367-1.
  • Whitford, Ray (1987). Design for Air Combat. London: Jane's Information Group. ISBN 0-7106-0426-2.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. (2006). Military Aircraft of the Cold War – Rockwell B-1A. The Aviation Factfile. London: Grange Books. ISBN 1-84013-929-3.
  • Withington, Thomas (2006). B-1B Lancer Units in Combat. Combat Aircraft. Vol. 60. London: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-992-4.

External links edit

  • B-1B Fact Sheet on af.mil
  • B-1B product page and B-1B history page on Boeing.com
  • B-1B Lancer in Airman Magazine's Airframe Profiles
  • B-1B Lancer USAF 20-year history article at archive.today (archived 12 December 2012)

rockwell, lancer, supersonic, variable, sweep, wing, heavy, bomber, used, united, states, force, been, nicknamed, bone, from, three, strategic, bombers, serving, force, fleet, along, with, spirit, stratofortress, 2023, update, lancera, flightrole, supersonic, . The Rockwell B 1 Lancer b is a supersonic variable sweep wing heavy bomber used by the United States Air Force It has been nicknamed the Bone from B One 1 2 It is one of three strategic bombers serving in the U S Air Force fleet along with the B 2 Spirit and the B 52 Stratofortress as of 2023 update B 1 LancerA B 1B in flightRole Supersonic strategic heavy bomberNational origin United StatesManufacturer North American Rockwell Rockwell InternationalFirst flight 23 December 1974 48 years ago 1974 12 23 Introduction 1 October 1986Status In servicePrimary user United States Air ForceProduced 1973 1974 1983 1988Number built 104 a The B 1 was first envisioned in the 1960s as a platform that would combine the Mach 2 speed of the B 58 Hustler with the range and payload of the B 52 and was meant to ultimately replace both bombers After a long series of studies Rockwell International now part of Boeing won the design contest for what emerged as the B 1A This version had a top speed of Mach 2 2 at high altitude and the ability to fly for long distances at Mach 0 85 at very low altitudes The combination of the high cost of the aircraft the introduction of the AGM 86 cruise missile that flew the same basic speed and distance and early work on the B 2 stealth bomber reduced the need for the B 1 The program was canceled in 1977 after the B 1A prototypes had been built The program was restarted in 1981 largely as an interim measure due to delays in the B 2 stealth bomber program The B 1A design was altered reducing top speed to Mach 1 25 at high altitude increasing low altitude speed to Mach 0 96 extensively improving electronic components and upgrading the airframe to carry more fuel and weapons Dubbed the B 1B deliveries of the new variant began in 1985 the plane formally entered service with Strategic Air Command SAC as a nuclear bomber the following year By 1988 all 100 aircraft had been delivered With the disestablishment of SAC and its reassignment to the Air Combat Command in 1992 the B 1B was converted for a conventional bombing role It first served in combat during Operation Desert Fox in 1998 and again during the NATO action in Kosovo the following year The B 1B has supported U S and NATO military forces in Afghanistan and Iraq As of 2021 the Air Force has 45 B 1Bs 3 The Northrop Grumman B 21 Raider is to begin replacing the B 1B after 2025 all B 1s are planned to be retired by 2036 4 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Background 1 2 Design studies and delays 1 3 B 1A program 1 4 New problems and cancellation 1 5 Shifting priorities 1 6 B 1B program 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 Avionics 2 3 Upgrades 3 Operational history 3 1 Strategic Air Command 3 2 Air Combat Command 3 3 Air Force Global Strike Command 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Aircraft on display 7 Accidents and incidents 8 Specifications B 1B 8 1 Weapons loads 9 Notable appearances in media 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 13 External linksDevelopment editBackground edit Main article North American XB 70 Valkyrie In 1955 the USAF issued requirements for a new bomber combining the payload and range of the Boeing B 52 Stratofortress with the Mach 2 maximum speed of the Convair B 58 Hustler 5 In December 1957 the USAF selected North American Aviation s B 70 Valkyrie for this role a six engine bomber that could cruise at Mach 3 at high altitude 70 000 ft or 21 000 m 6 7 Soviet Union interceptor aircraft the only effective anti bomber weapon in the 1950s 8 were already unable to intercept the high flying Lockheed U 2 9 the Valkyrie would fly at similar altitudes but much higher speeds and was expected to fly right by the fighters 8 nbsp The XB 70 Valkyrie was chosen in 1957 to replace the Hustler but suffered as a result of a switch in doctrine from high to low altitude flying profilesBy the late 1950s however anti aircraft surface to air missiles SAMs could threaten high altitude aircraft 10 as demonstrated by the 1960 downing of Gary Powers U 2 11 The USAF Strategic Air Command SAC was aware of these developments and had begun moving its bombers to low level penetration even before the U 2 incident This tactic greatly reduces radar detection distances through the use of terrain masking using features of the terrain like hills and valleys the line of sight from the radar to the bomber can be broken rendering the radar and human observers incapable of seeing it 12 Additionally radars of the era were subject to clutter from stray returns from the ground and other objects which meant a minimum angle existed above the horizon where they could detect a target Bombers flying at low altitudes could remain under these angles simply by keeping their distance from the radar sites This combination of effects made SAMs of the era ineffective against low flying aircraft 12 13 The same effects also meant that low flying aircraft were difficult to detect by higher flying interceptors since their radar systems could not readily pick out aircraft against the clutter from ground reflections lack of look down shoot down capability The switch from high altitude to low altitude flight profiles severely affected the B 70 the design of which was tuned for high altitude performance Higher aerodynamic drag at low level limited the B 70 to subsonic speed while dramatically decreasing its range 10 The result would be an aircraft with somewhat higher subsonic speed than the B 52 but less range Because of this and a growing shift to the intercontinental ballistic missile ICBM force the B 70 bomber program was cancelled in 1961 by President John F Kennedy 8 14 and the two XB 70 prototypes were used in a supersonic research program 15 Although never intended for the low level role the B 52 s flexibility allowed it to outlast its intended successor as the nature of the air war environment changed The B 52 s huge fuel load allowed it to operate at lower altitudes for longer times and the large airframe allowed the addition of improved radar jamming and deception suites to deal with radars 16 During the Vietnam War the concept that all future wars would be nuclear was turned on its head and the big belly modifications increased the B 52 s total bomb load to 60 000 pounds 27 000 kg 17 turning it into a powerful tactical aircraft which could be used against ground troops along with strategic targets from high altitudes 13 The much smaller bomb bay of the B 70 would have made it much less useful in this role Design studies and delays edit Although effective the B 52 was not ideal for the low level role This led to a number of aircraft designs known as penetrators which were tuned specifically for long range low altitude flight The first of these designs to see operation was the supersonic F 111 fighter bomber which used variable sweep wings for tactical missions 18 A number of studies on a strategic range counterpart followed The first post B 70 strategic penetrator study was known as the Subsonic Low Altitude Bomber SLAB which was completed in 1961 This produced a design that looked more like an airliner than a bomber with a large swept wing T tail and large high bypass engines 19 This was followed by the similar Extended Range Strike Aircraft ERSA which added a variable sweep wing then en vogue in the aviation industry ERSA envisioned a relatively small aircraft with a 10 000 pound 4 500 kg payload and a range of 10 070 miles 16 210 km including 2 900 miles 4 700 km flown at low altitudes In August 1963 the similar Low Altitude Manned Penetrator design was completed which called for an aircraft with a 20 000 pound 9 100 kg bomb load and somewhat shorter range of 8 230 miles 13 240 km 20 21 These all culminated in the October 1963 Advanced Manned Precision Strike System AMPSS which led to industry studies at Boeing General Dynamics and North American 22 23 In mid 1964 the USAF had revised its requirements and retitled the project as Advanced Manned Strategic Aircraft AMSA which differed from AMPSS primarily in that it also demanded a high speed high altitude capability similar to that of the existing Mach 2 class F 111 24 Given the lengthy series of design studies Rockwell engineers joked that the new name actually stood for America s Most Studied Aircraft 25 The arguments that led to the cancellation of the B 70 program had led some to question the need for a new strategic bomber of any sort The USAF was adamant about retaining bombers as part of the nuclear triad concept that included bombers ICBMs and submarine launched ballistic missiles SLBMs in a combined package that complicated any potential defense They argued that the bomber was needed to attack hardened military targets and to provide a safe counterforce option because the bombers could be quickly launched into safe loitering areas where they could not be attacked However the introduction of the SLBM made moot the mobility and survivability argument and a newer generation of ICBMs such as the Minuteman III had the accuracy and speed needed to attack point targets During this time ICBMs were seen as a less costly option based on their lower unit cost 26 but development costs were much higher 10 Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara preferred ICBMs over bombers for the Air Force portion of the deterrent force 27 and felt a new expensive bomber was not needed 28 29 McNamara limited the AMSA program to studies and component development beginning in 1964 29 Program studies continued IBM and Autonetics were awarded AMSA advanced avionics study contracts in 1968 29 30 McNamara remained opposed to the program in favor of upgrading the existing B 52 fleet and adding nearly 300 FB 111s for shorter range roles then being filled by the B 58 13 29 He again vetoed funding for AMSA aircraft development in 1968 30 B 1A program edit nbsp AN APQ 140 radar for the B 1A 31 President Richard Nixon reestablished the AMSA program after taking office keeping with his administration s flexible response strategy that required a broad range of options short of general nuclear war 32 Nixon s Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird reviewed the programs and decided to lower the numbers of FB 111s since they lacked the desired range and recommended that the AMSA design studies be accelerated 32 In April 1969 the program officially became the B 1A 13 32 This was the first entry in the new bomber designation series created in 1962 The Air Force issued a request for proposals in November 1969 33 nbsp B 1A prototypeProposals were submitted by Boeing General Dynamics and North American Rockwell in January 1970 33 34 In June 1970 North American Rockwell was awarded the development contract 33 The original program called for two test airframes five flyable aircraft and 40 engines This was cut in 1971 to one ground and three flight test aircraft 35 The company changed its name to Rockwell International and named its aircraft division North American Aircraft Operations in 1973 36 A fourth prototype built to production standards was ordered in the fiscal year 1976 budget Plans called for 240 B 1As to be built with initial operational capability set for 1979 37 Rockwell s design had features common to the General Dynamics F 111 Aardvark and North American XB 70 Valkyrie It used a crew escape capsule that ejected as a unit to improve crew survivability if the crew had to abandon the aircraft at high speed Additionally the design featured large variable sweep wings in order to provide both more lift during takeoff and landing and lower drag during a high speed dash phase 38 With the wings set to their widest position the aircraft had a much better airfield performance than the B 52 allowing it to operate from a wider variety of bases Penetration of the Soviet Union s defenses would take place at supersonic speed crossing them as quickly as possible before entering the more sparsely defended interior of the country where speeds could be reduced again 38 The large size and fuel capacity of the design would allow the dash portion of the flight to be relatively long In order to achieve the required Mach 2 performance at high altitudes the exhaust nozzles and air intake ramps were variable 39 Initially it had been expected that a Mach 1 2 performance could be achieved at low altitude which required that titanium be used in critical areas in the fuselage and wing structure The low altitude performance requirement was later lowered to Mach 0 85 reducing the amount of titanium and therefore cost 35 A pair of small vanes mounted near the nose are part of an active vibration damping system that smooths out the otherwise bumpy low altitude ride 40 The first three B 1As featured the escape capsule that ejected the cockpit with all four crew members inside The fourth B 1A was equipped with a conventional ejection seat for each crew member 41 The B 1A mockup review occurred in late October 1971 this resulted in 297 requests for alteration to the design due to failures to meet specifications and desired improvements for ease of maintenance and operation 42 The first B 1A prototype Air Force serial no 74 0158 flew on 23 December 1974 43 As the program continued the per unit cost continued to rise in part because of high inflation during that period In 1970 the estimated unit cost was 40 million and by 1975 this figure had climbed to 70 million 44 New problems and cancellation edit nbsp B 1A Prototype 4 showing its anti flash white underside in 1981 nbsp B 1A nose section with ejection capsule denoted Three of the four B 1As were fitted with escape capsules In 1976 Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko defected to Japan with his MiG 25 Foxbat 45 During debriefing he described a new super Foxbat almost certainly referring to the MiG 31 that had look down shoot down radar in order to attack cruise missiles This would also make any low level penetration aircraft visible and easy to attack 46 Given that the B 1 s armament suite was similar to the B 52 and it now appeared no more likely to survive Soviet airspace than the B 52 the program was increasingly questioned 47 In particular Senator William Proxmire continually derided the B 1 in public arguing it was an outlandishly expensive dinosaur During the 1976 federal election campaign Jimmy Carter made it one of the Democratic Party s platforms saying The B 1 bomber is an example of a proposed system which should not be funded and would be wasteful of taxpayers dollars 48 When Carter took office in 1977 he ordered a review of the entire program By this point the projected cost of the program had risen to over 100 million per aircraft although this was lifetime cost over 20 years He was informed of the relatively new work on stealth aircraft that had started in 1975 and he decided that this was a better approach than the B 1 Pentagon officials also stated that the AGM 86 Air Launched Cruise Missile ALCM launched from the existing B 52 fleet would give the USAF equal capability of penetrating Soviet airspace With a range of 1 500 miles 2 400 km the ALCM could be launched well outside the range of any Soviet defenses and penetrate at low altitude like a bomber with a much lower radar cross section RCS due to smaller size and in much greater numbers at a lower cost 49 A small number of B 52s could launch hundreds of ALCMs saturating the defense A program to improve the B 52 and develop and deploy the ALCM would cost at least 20 less than the planned 244 B 1As 48 On 30 June 1977 Carter announced that the B 1A would be canceled in favor of ICBMs SLBMs and a fleet of modernized B 52s armed with ALCMs 37 Carter called it one of the most difficult decisions that I ve made since I ve been in office No mention of the stealth work was made public with the program being top secret but it is now known that in early 1978 he authorized the Advanced Technology Bomber ATB project which eventually led to the B 2 Spirit 50 Domestically the reaction to the cancellation was split along partisan lines The Department of Defense was surprised by the announcement it expected that the number of B 1s ordered would be reduced to around 150 51 Congressman Robert Dornan R CA claimed They re breaking out the vodka and caviar in Moscow 52 However it appears the Soviets were more concerned by large numbers of ALCMs representing a much greater threat than a smaller number of B 1s Soviet news agency TASS commented that the implementation of these militaristic plans has seriously complicated efforts for the limitation of the strategic arms race 48 Western military leaders were generally happy with the decision NATO commander Alexander Haig described the ALCM as an attractive alternative to the B 1 French General Georges Buis stated The B 1 is a formidable weapon but not terribly useful For the price of one bomber you can have 200 cruise missiles 48 Flight tests of the four B 1A prototypes for the B 1A program continued through April 1981 The program included 70 flights totaling 378 hours A top speed of Mach 2 22 was reached by the second B 1A Engine testing also continued during this time with the YF101 engines totaling almost 7 600 hours 53 Shifting priorities edit nbsp A Rockwell B 1A in 1984It was during this period that the Soviets started to assert themselves in several new theaters of action in particular through Cuban proxies during the Angolan Civil War starting in 1975 and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 U S strategy to this point had been focused on containing Communism and preparation for war in Europe The new Soviet actions revealed that the military lacked capability outside these narrow confines citation needed The U S Department of Defense responded by accelerating its Rapid Deployment Forces concept but suffered from major problems with airlift and sealift capability 54 In order to slow an enemy invasion of other countries air power was critical however the key Iran Afghanistan border was outside the range of the U S Navy s carrier based attack aircraft leaving this role to the U S Air Force During the 1980 presidential campaign Ronald Reagan campaigned heavily on the platform that Carter was weak on defense citing the cancellation of the B 1 program as an example a theme he continued using into the 1980s 55 During this time Carter s defense secretary Harold Brown announced the stealth bomber project apparently implying that this was the reason for the B 1 cancellation 56 verification needed B 1B program edit nbsp The first B 1B debuted outside a hangar in Palmdale California 1984 On taking office Reagan was faced with the same decision as Carter before whether to continue with the B 1 for the short term or to wait for the development of the ATB a much more advanced aircraft Studies suggested that the existing B 52 fleet with ALCM would remain a credible threat until 1985 It was predicted that 75 of the B 52 force would survive to attack its targets 57 After 1985 the introduction of the SA 10 missile the MiG 31 interceptor and the first effective Soviet Airborne Early Warning and Control AWACS systems would make the B 52 increasingly vulnerable 58 During 1981 funds were allocated to a new study for a bomber for the 1990s time frame which led to developing the Long Range Combat Aircraft LRCA project The LRCA evaluated the B 1 F 111 and ATB as possible solutions an emphasis was placed on multi role capabilities as opposed to purely strategic operations 57 In 1981 it was believed the B 1 could be in operation before the ATB covering the transitional period between the B 52 s increasing vulnerability and the ATB s introduction Reagan decided the best solution was to procure both the B 1 and ATB and on 2 October 1981 he announced that 100 B 1s were to be ordered to fill the LRCA role 38 59 In January 1982 the U S Air Force awarded two contracts to Rockwell worth a combined 2 2 billion for the development and production of 100 new B 1 bombers 60 Numerous changes were made to the design to make it better suited to the now expected missions resulting in the B 1B 49 These changes included a reduction in maximum speed 56 which allowed the variable aspect intake ramps to be replaced by simpler fixed geometry intake ramps This reduced the B 1B s radar cross section which was seen as a good trade off for the speed decrease 38 High subsonic speeds at low altitude became a focus area for the revised design 56 and low level speeds were increased from about Mach 0 85 to 0 92 The B 1B has a maximum speed of Mach 1 25 at higher altitudes 38 61 The B 1B s maximum takeoff weight was increased to 477 000 pounds 216 000 kg from the B 1A s 395 000 pounds 179 000 kg 38 62 The weight increase was to allow for takeoff with a full internal fuel load and for external weapons to be carried Rockwell engineers were able to reinforce critical areas and lighten non critical areas of the airframe so the increase in empty weight was minimal 62 To deal with the introduction of the MiG 31 equipped with the new Zaslon radar system and other aircraft with look down capability the B 1B s electronic warfare suite was significantly upgraded 38 nbsp A B 1B banking during a demonstration in 2004Opposition to the plan was widespread within Congress Critics pointed out that many of the original problems remained in both areas of performance and expense 63 In particular it seemed the B 52 fitted with electronics similar to the B 1B would be equally able to avoid interception as the speed advantage of the B 1 was now minimal It also appeared that the interim time frame served by the B 1B would be less than a decade being rendered obsolete shortly after the introduction of a much more capable ATB design 64 The primary argument in favor of the B 1 was its large conventional weapon payload and that its takeoff performance allowed it to operate with a credible bomb load from a much wider variety of airfields Production subcontracts were spread across many congressional districts making the aircraft more popular on Capitol Hill citation needed B 1A No 1 was disassembled and used for radar testing at the Rome Air Development Center in the former Griffiss Air Force Base New York 65 B 1As No 2 and No 4 were then modified to include B 1B systems The first B 1B was completed and began flight testing in March 1983 The first production B 1B was rolled out on 4 September 1984 and first flew on 18 October 1984 66 The 100th and final B 1B was delivered on 2 May 1988 67 before the last B 1B was delivered the USAF had determined that the aircraft was vulnerable to Soviet air defenses 68 Design editOverview edit The B 1 has a blended wing body configuration with variable sweep wing four turbofan engines triangular ride control fins and cruciform tail The wings can sweep from 15 degrees to 67 5 degrees full forward to full sweep Forward swept wing settings are used for takeoff landings and high altitude economical cruise Aft swept wing settings are used in high subsonic and supersonic flight 69 The B 1 s variable sweep wings and thrust to weight ratio provide it with improved takeoff performance allowing it to use shorter runways than previous bombers 70 The length of the aircraft presented a flexing problem due to air turbulence at low altitude To alleviate this Rockwell included small triangular fin control surfaces or vanes near the nose on the B 1 The B 1 s Structural Mode Control System moves the vanes and lower rudder to counteract the effects of turbulence and smooth out the ride 71 nbsp Rear view of a B 1B in flight 2004Unlike the B 1A the B 1B cannot reach Mach 2 speeds its maximum speed is Mach 1 25 about 950 mph or 1 530 km h at altitude 72 but its low level speed increased to Mach 0 92 700 mph 1 130 km h 61 The speed of the current version of the aircraft is limited by the need to avoid damage to its structure and air intakes To help lower its radar cross section the B 1B uses serpentine air intake ducts see S duct and fixed intake ramps which limit its speed compared to the B 1A Vanes in the intake ducts serve to deflect and shield radar returns from the highly reflective engine compressor blades 73 The B 1A s engine was modified slightly to produce the GE F101 102 for the B 1B with an emphasis on durability and increased efficiency 74 The core from this engine was subsequently used in several other engines including the GE F110 used in the F 14 Tomcat F 15K SG variants and later versions of the General Dynamics F 16 Fighting Falcon 75 It is also the basis for the non afterburning GE F118 used in the B 2 Spirit and the U 2S 75 The F101 engine core is also used in the CFM56 civil engine 76 The nose gear door is the location for ground crew control of the auxiliary power unit APU which can be used during a scramble for quick starting the APU 77 78 Avionics edit nbsp A B 1B cockpit at night nbsp AN APQ 164 passive electronically scanned arrayThe B 1 s main computer is the IBM AP 101 which was also used on the Space Shuttle orbiter and the B 52 bomber 79 The computer is programmed with the JOVIAL programming language 80 The Lancer s offensive avionics include the Westinghouse now Northrop Grumman AN APQ 164 forward looking offensive passive electronically scanned array radar set with electronic beam steering and a fixed antenna pointed downward for reduced radar observability synthetic aperture radar ground moving target indication GMTI and terrain following radar modes Doppler navigation radar altimeter and an inertial navigation suite 81 The B 1B Block D upgrade added a Global Positioning System GPS receiver beginning in 1995 82 The B 1 s defensive electronics include the Eaton AN ALQ 161A radar warning and defensive jamming equipment 83 which has three sets of antennas one at the front base of each wing and the third rear facing in the tail radome 84 85 Also in the tail radome is the AN ALQ 153 missile approach warning system pulse Doppler radar 86 The ALQ 161 is linked to a total of eight AN ALE 49 flare dispensers located on top behind the canopy which are handled by the AN ASQ 184 avionics management system 87 Each AN ALE 49 dispenser has a capacity of 12 MJU 23A B flares The MJU 23A B flare is one of the world s largest infrared countermeasure flares at a weight of over 3 3 pounds 1 5 kg 88 The B 1 has also been equipped to carry the ALE 50 towed decoy system 89 Also aiding the B 1 s survivability is its relatively low RCS Although not technically a stealth aircraft thanks to the aircraft s structure serpentine intake paths and use of radar absorbent material its RCS is about 1 50th that of the similar sized B 52 This is approximately 26 ft2 or 2 4 m2 comparable to that of a small fighter aircraft 87 90 91 The B 1 holds 61 FAI world records for speed payload distance and time to climb in different aircraft weight classes 92 93 In November 1993 three B 1Bs set a long distance record for the aircraft which demonstrated its ability to conduct extended mission lengths to strike anywhere in the world and return to base without any stops 94 The National Aeronautic Association recognized the B 1B for completing one of the 10 most memorable record flights for 1994 89 Upgrades edit nbsp Nose of a B 1 showing the Sniper XR pod hanging below and triangular ride control finsThe B 1 has been upgraded since production beginning with the Conventional Mission Upgrade Program CMUP which added a new MIL STD 1760 smart weapons interface to enable the use of precision guided conventional weapons CMUP was delivered through a series of upgrades Block A was the standard B 1B with the capability to deliver non precision gravity bombs Block B brought an improved Synthetic Aperture Radar and upgrades to the Defensive Countermeasures System and was fielded in 1995 citation needed Block C provided an enhanced capability for delivery of up to 30 cluster bomb units CBUs per sortie with modifications made to 50 bomb racks 95 Block D added a Near Precision Capability via improved weapons and targeting systems and added advanced secure communications capabilities 95 The first part of the electronic countermeasures upgrade added Joint Direct Attack Munition JDAM ALE 50 towed decoy system and anti jam radios 83 96 97 Block E upgraded the avionics computers and incorporated the Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser WCMD the AGM 154 Joint Standoff Weapon JSOW and the AGM 158 JASSM Joint Air to Surface Standoff Munition substantially improving the bomber s capability Upgrades were completed in September 2006 98 Block F was the Defensive Systems Upgrade Program DSUP to improve the aircraft s electronic countermeasures and jamming capabilities but it was canceled in December 2002 due to cost overruns and delays 99 In 2007 the Sniper XR targeting pod was integrated on the B 1 fleet The pod is mounted on an external hardpoint at the aircraft s chin near the forward bomb bay 100 Following accelerated testing the Sniper pod was fielded in summer 2008 101 102 Future precision munitions include the Small Diameter Bomb 103 The USAF commenced the Integrated Battle Station IBS modification in 2012 as a combination of three separate upgrades when it realised the benefits of completing them concurrently the Fully Integrated Data Link FIDL Vertical Situational Display Unit VSDU and Central Integrated Test System CITS 104 FIDL enables electronic data sharing eliminating the need to enter information between systems by hand 105 VSDU replaces existing flight instruments with multifunction color displays a second display aids with threat evasion and targeting and acts as a back up display CITS saw a new diagnostic system installed that allows crew to monitor over 9 000 parameters on the aircraft 106 Other additions are to replace the two spinning mass gyroscopic inertial navigation system with ring laser gyroscopic systems and a GPS antenna replacement of the APQ 164 radar with the Scalable Agile Beam Radar Global Strike SABR GS active electronically scanned array and a new attitude indicator 107 The IBS upgrades were completed in 2020 104 In August 2019 the Air Force unveiled a modification to the B 1B to allow it to carry more weapons internally and externally Using the moveable forward bulkhead space in the intermediate bay was increased from 180 to 269 in 457 to 683 cm Expanding the internal bay to make use of the Common Strategic Rotary Launcher CSRL as well as utilizing six of the eight external hardpoints that had been previously out of use to keep in line with the New START Treaty would increase the B 1B s weapon load from 24 to 40 The configuration also enables it to carry heavier weapons in the 5 000 lb 2 300 kg range such as hypersonic missiles the AGM 183 ARRW is planned for integration onto the bomber In the future the HAWC could be used by the bomber which combining both internal and external weapon carriage could conceivably bring the total number of hypersonic weapons to 31 108 109 110 Operational history editStrategic Air Command edit The second B 1B The Star of Abilene was the first B 1B delivered to SAC in June 1985 Initial operational capability was reached on 1 October 1986 and the B 1B was placed on nuclear alert status 111 112 The B 1 received the official name Lancer on 15 March 1990 However the bomber has been commonly called the Bone a nickname that appears to stem from an early newspaper article on the aircraft wherein its name was phonetically spelled out as B ONE with the hyphen inadvertently omitted 1 nbsp A dismantled decommissioned B 1 being transported by flatbed truckIn late 1990 engine fires in two Lancers led to a grounding of the fleet The cause was traced back to problems in the first stage fan and the aircraft were placed on limited alert in other words they were grounded unless a nuclear war broke out Following inspections and repairs they were returned to duty beginning on 6 February 1991 113 114 By 1991 the B 1 had a fledgling conventional capability forty of them able to drop the 500 pound 230 kg Mk 82 General Purpose GP bomb although mostly from low altitude Despite being cleared for this role the problems with the engines prevented their use in Operation Desert Storm during the Gulf War 68 115 B 1s were primarily reserved for strategic nuclear strike missions at this time providing the role of airborne nuclear deterrent against the Soviet Union 115 The B 52 was more suited to the role of conventional warfare and it was used by coalition forces instead 115 Originally designed strictly for nuclear war the B 1 s development as an effective conventional bomber was delayed The collapse of the Soviet Union had brought the B 1 s nuclear role into question leading to President George H W Bush ordering a 3 billion conventional refit 116 After the inactivation of SAC and the establishment of the Air Combat Command ACC in 1992 the B 1 developed a greater conventional weapons capability Part of this development was the start up of the U S Air Force Weapons School B 1 Division 117 In 1994 two additional B 1 bomb wings were also created in the Air National Guard with former fighter wings in the Kansas Air National Guard and the Georgia Air National Guard converting to the aircraft 118 By the mid 1990s the B 1 could employ GP weapons as well as various CBUs By the end of the 1990s with the advent of the Block D upgrade the B 1 boasted a full array of guided and unguided munitions The B 1B no longer carries nuclear weapons 38 its nuclear capability was disabled by 1995 with the removal of nuclear arming and fuzing hardware 119 Under provisions of the New START treaty with Russia further conversions were performed These included modification of aircraft hardpoints to prevent nuclear weapon pylons from being attached removal of weapons bay wiring bundles for arming nuclear weapons and destruction of nuclear weapon pylons The conversion process was completed in 2011 and Russian officials inspect the aircraft every year to verify compliance 120 Air Combat Command edit nbsp A B 1B with wings swept full forwardThe B 1 was first used in combat in support of operations in Iraq during Operation Desert Fox in December 1998 employing unguided GP weapons B 1s have been subsequently used in Operation Allied Force Kosovo and most notably in Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and the 2003 invasion of Iraq 38 The B 1 has deployed an array of conventional weapons in war zones most notably the GBU 31 2 000 pound 910 kg JDAM 38 In the first six months of Operation Enduring Freedom eight B 1s dropped almost 40 percent of aerial ordnance including some 3 900 JDAMs 107 JDAM munitions were heavily used by the B 1 over Iraq notably on 7 April 2003 in an unsuccessful attempt to kill Saddam Hussein and his two sons 121 During Operation Enduring Freedom the B 1 was able to raise its mission capable rate to 79 89 Of the 100 B 1Bs built 93 remained in 2000 after losses in accidents In June 2001 the Pentagon sought to place one third of its then fleet into storage this proposal resulted in several U S Air National Guard officers and members of Congress lobbying against the proposal including the drafting of an amendment to prevent such cuts 68 The 2001 proposal was intended to allow money to be diverted to further upgrades to the remaining B 1Bs such as computer modernization 68 In 2003 accompanied by the removal of B 1Bs from the two bomb wings in the Air National Guard the USAF decided to retire 33 aircraft to concentrate its budget on maintaining availability of remaining B 1Bs 122 In 2004 a new appropriation bill called for some retired aircraft to return to service 123 and the USAF returned seven mothballed bombers to service to increase the fleet to 67 aircraft 124 nbsp Transferring a GBU 31 Joint Direct Attack Munition JDAM to a lift truck for loading onto a B 1B on 29 March 2007 in Southwest AsiaOn 14 July 2007 the Associated Press reported on the growing USAF presence in Iraq including reintroduction of B 1Bs as a close at hand platform to support Coalition ground forces 125 Beginning in 2008 B 1s were used in Iraq and Afghanistan in an armed overwatch role loitering for surveillance purposes while ready to deliver guided bombs in support of ground troops as required 126 127 The B 1B underwent a series of flight tests using a 50 50 mix of synthetic and petroleum fuel on 19 March 2008 a B 1B from Dyess Air Force Base Texas became the first USAF aircraft to fly at supersonic speed using a synthetic fuel during a flight over Texas and New Mexico This was conducted as part of an USAF testing and certification program to reduce reliance on traditional oil sources 128 On 4 August 2008 a B 1B flew the first Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod equipped combat sortie where the crew successfully targeted enemy ground forces and dropped a GBU 38 guided bomb in Afghanistan 101 In March 2011 B 1Bs from Ellsworth Air Force Base attacked undisclosed targets in Libya as part of Operation Odyssey Dawn 129 With upgrades to keep the B 1 viable the USAF may keep it in service until approximately 2038 130 Despite upgrades a single flight hour needs 48 4 hours of repair The fuel repairs and other needs for a 12 hour mission cost 720 000 948 003 in 2022 as of 2010 131 The 63 000 cost per flight hour is however less than the 72 000 for the B 52 and the 135 000 of the B 2 132 In June 2010 senior USAF officials met to consider retiring the entire fleet to meet budget cuts 133 The Pentagon plans to begin replacing the aircraft with the B 21 Raider after 2025 134 In the meantime its capabilities are particularly well suited to the vast distances and unique challenges of the Pacific region and we ll continue to invest in and rely on the B 1 in support of the focus on the Pacific as part of President Obama s Pivot to East Asia 135 In August 2012 the 9th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron returned from a six month tour in Afghanistan Its 9 B 1Bs flew 770 sorties the most of any B 1B squadron on a single deployment The squadron spent 9 500 hours airborne keeping one of its bombers in the air at all times They accounted for a quarter of all combat aircraft sorties over the country during that time and fulfilled an average of two to three air support requests per day 136 On 4 September 2013 a B 1B participated in a maritime evaluation exercise deploying munitions such as laser guided 500 lb GBU 54 bombs 500 lb and 2 000 lb JDAM and Long Range Anti Ship Missiles LRASM The aim was to detect and engage several small craft using existing weapons and tactics developed from conventional warfare against ground targets the B 1 is seen as a useful asset for maritime duties such as patrolling shipping lanes 137 Beginning in 2014 the B 1 was used against the Islamic State IS in the Syrian Civil War 138 139 From August 2014 to January 2015 the B 1 accounted for eight percent of USAF sorties during Operation Inherent Resolve 140 The 9th Bomb Squadron was deployed to Qatar in July 2014 to support missions in Afghanistan but when the air campaign against IS began on 8 August the aircraft were employed in Iraq During the Battle of Kobane in Syria the squadron s B 1s dropped 660 bombs over 5 months in support of Kurdish forces defending the city This amounted to one third of all bombs used during OIR during the period and they killed some 1 000 ISIL fighters The 9th Bomb Squadron s B 1s went Winchester dropping all weapons on board 31 times during their deployment They dropped over 2 000 JDAMs during the six month rotation 139 B 1s from the 28th Bomb Wing flew 490 sorties where they dropped 3 800 munitions on 3 700 targets during a six month deployment In February 2016 the B 1s were sent back to the U S for cockpit upgrades 141 Air Force Global Strike Command edit As part of a USAF reorganization announced in April 2015 all B 1s were reassigned from Air Combat Command to Global Strike Command GSC in October 2015 142 On 8 July 2017 the USAF flew two B 1s near the North Korean border in a show of force amid increasing tensions particularly in response to North Korea s 4 July test of an ICBM capable of reaching Alaska 143 On 14 April 2018 B 1s launched 19 JASSM missiles as part of the 2018 bombing of Damascus and Homs in Syria 144 145 146 In August 2019 six B 1Bs met full mission capability 15 were undergoing depot maintenance and 39 under repair and inspection 147 In February 2021 the USAF announced it will retire 17 B 1s leaving 45 aircraft in service Four of these will be stored in a condition that will allow their return to service if required 148 149 In March 2021 B 1s deployed to Norway s Orland Main Air Station for the first time During the deployment they conducted bombing training with Norwegian and Swedish ground force Joint terminal attack controllers One B 1 also conducted a warm pit refuel at Bodo Main Air Station marking the first landing inside Norway s Arctic Circle and integrated with four Swedish Air Force JAS 39 Gripen fighters 150 151 Variants edit nbsp The rear section showing the B 1A s pointed radomeB 1A The B 1A was the original B 1 design with variable engine intakes and Mach 2 2 top speed Four prototypes were built no production units were manufactured 124 152 B 1B The B 1B is a revised B 1 design with reduced radar signature and a top speed of Mach 1 25 It is optimized for low level penetration A total of 100 B 1Bs were produced 152 B 1R The B 1R was a 2004 proposed upgrade of existing B 1B aircraft 153 The B 1R R for regional would be fitted with advanced radars air to air missiles and new Pratt amp Whitney F119 engines from the Lockheed Martin F 22 Raptor This variant would have a top speed of Mach 2 2 but with 20 shorter range 154 Existing external hardpoints would be modified to allow multiple conventional weapons to be carried increasing overall loadout For air to air defense an active electronically scanned array AESA radar would be added and some existing hardpoints modified to carry air to air missiles 153 Operators edit nbsp A 28th Bomb Wing B 1B on the ramp in the early morning at Ellsworth Air Force Base South Dakota nbsp A B 1B on public display at Ellsworth AFB 2003 nbsp A B 1B arrives at Royal International Air Tattoo 2008See also List of B 1 units of the United States Air Force The USAF had 62 B 1Bs in service as of August 2017 155 nbsp United States United States Air Force Strategic Air Command 1985 1992 Air Combat Command 1992 2015 Air Force Global Strike Command 2015 present 7th Bomb Wing Dyess AFB Texas9th Bomb Squadron 1993 present13th Bomb Squadron 2000 200528th Bomb Squadron 1994 present337th Bomb Squadron 1993 199428th Bomb Wing Ellsworth AFB South Dakota34th Bomb Squadron 2002 present37th Bomb Squadron 1986 present77th Bomb Squadron 1985 95 1997 200253d Test and Evaluation Group Nellis AFB Nevada337th Test and Evaluation Squadron Dyess AFB Texas 2004 present57th Wing Nellis AFB Nevada77th Weapons Squadron Dyess AFB Texas 2003 present96th Bomb Wing Dyess AFB Texas337th Bomb Squadron 1985 1993338th Combat Crew Training Squadron 1986 19934018th Combat Crew Training Squadron 1985 1986319th Bomb Wing Grand Forks AFB North Dakota 1987 199446th Bomb Squadron366th Wing Mountain Home AFB Idaho 1994 1996 geographically separated at Ellsworth AFB SD 1997 200234th Bomb Squadron384th Bomb Wing McConnell AFB Kansas 1987 199428th Bomb Squadron Air National Guard116th Bomb Wing Robins AFB Georgia 1996 2002128th Bomb Squadron184th Bomb Wing McConnell AFB Kansas 1994 2002127th Bomb Squadron Air Force Flight Test Center Edwards AFB California412th Operations Group 1989 1992410th Flight Test Squadron412th Test Wing 1992 present419th Flight Test Squadron6510th Test Wing 1974 19896519th Flight Test Squadron dd dd Aircraft on display edit nbsp A B 1B at the Museum of Aviation Robins AFB nbsp A B 1B at the National Museum of the USAF Dayton OHB 1A 74 0160 Wings Over the Rockies Museum at the former Lowry Air Force Base in Denver Colorado 156 76 0174 Strategic Air Command amp Aerospace Museum near Ashland Nebraska This aircraft has conventional ejection seats and other features used on the B 1B variant 157 B 1B 83 0065 Star of Abilene Dyess Linear Air Park at Dyess Air Force Base Texas This was the first aircraft delivered to the U S Air Force Dyess AFB is home to one of two active Air Force B 1B wings 158 83 0066 Ole Puss Heritage Park at Mountain Home Air Force Base Idaho with wheels in the wells 159 83 0067 Texas Raider South Dakota Air and Space Museum at Ellsworth Air Force Base South Dakota Ellsworth AFB is home to one of two active Air Force B 1B wings 160 83 0068 Spuds Reflections of Freedom Air Park at McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita Kansas a former Air Force and Air National Guard B 1B base 161 83 0069 Silent Penetrator Museum of Aviation at Robins Air Force Base in Warner Robins Georgia a former Air National Guard B 1B base This aircraft was the sixth B 1 produced and was delivered to the 96th Bomb Wing at Dyess AFB Texas on 13 March 1986 This aircraft arrived at Robins AFB in September 2002 Robins AFB was previously home to one of two Air National Guard B 1B wings 162 Renamed Midnight Train From Georgia by April 201583 0070 7 Wishes Hill Aerospace Museum at Hill Air Force Base in Ogden Utah 163 83 0071 Spit Fire near the main gate at Tinker Air Force Base Oklahoma This aircraft was one of two that suffered an in flight engine failure in 1990 that led to grounding of the fleet 164 84 0051 Boss Hawg National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson AFB near Dayton Ohio It is displayed in the museum s Cold War Gallery and replaces the B 1A 76 0174 formerly on display 165 Accidents and incidents edit nbsp A B 1B with a brake fire after a hard landing at Rhein Main AB Germany June 1994 From 1984 to 2001 ten B 1s were lost due to accidents with 17 crew members or people on board killed 166 In September 1987 B 1B serial number 84 0052 from the 96th Bomb Wing 338th Combat Crew Training Squadron Dyess AFB crashed near La Junta Colorado while flying on a low level training route This was the only B 1B crash to occur with six crew members aboard The two crew members in jump seats and one of the four crew members in ejection seats perished The root cause of the accident was thought to be a bird strike on a wing s leading edge during the low level flight The impact was severe enough to sever fuel and hydraulic lines on one side of the aircraft while the other side s engines functioned long enough to allow for ejection The B 1B fleet was later modified to protect these supply lines 167 In October 1990 while flying a training route in eastern Colorado B 1B 86 0128 from the 384th Bomb Wing 28th Bomb Squadron McConnell AFB experienced an explosion as the engines reached full power without afterburners Fire on the aircraft s left was spotted The No 1 engine was shut down and its fire extinguisher was activated The accident investigation determined that the engine had suffered catastrophic failure engine blades had cut through the engine mounts and the engine became detached from the aircraft 167 In December 1990 B 1B 83 0071 from the 96th Bomb Wing 337th Bomb Squadron Dyess AFB Texas experienced a jolt that caused the No 3 engine to shut down with its fire extinguisher activating This event coupled with the October 1990 engine incident led to a 50 day grounding of the B 1Bs not on nuclear alert status The problem was eventually traced back to problems in the first stage fan and all B 1Bs were equipped with modified engines 167 Specifications B 1B edit nbsp B 1A orthographic projection nbsp B 1B cockpit nbsp B 1B forward bomb bay fitted with a rotary launcherData from USAF Fact Sheet 89 Jenkins 168 Pace 61 Lee 83 General characteristicsCrew 4 Aircraft Commander Pilot Offensive Systems Officer and Defensive Systems Officer Length 146 ft 45 m Wingspan 137 ft 42 m Swept wingspan 79 ft 24 m swept Height 34 ft 10 m Wing area 1 950 sq ft 181 m2 Airfoil NACA69 190 2 Empty weight 192 000 lb 87 090 kg Gross weight 326 000 lb 147 871 kg Max takeoff weight 477 000 lb 216 364 kg nbsp A B 1B flying over the Pacific ocean Powerplant 4 General Electric F101 GE 102 afterburning turbofan engines 17 390 lbf 77 4 kN thrust each dry 30 780 lbf 136 9 kN with afterburnerPerformance Maximum speed 721 kn 830 mph 1 335 km h at 40 000 ft 12 000 m 608 kn 1 126 km h at 200 500 ft 61 152 m Maximum speed Mach 1 25 Range 5 100 nmi 5 900 mi 9 400 km with weapon load of 37 000 lb 16 800 kg Max range is 6 500 nmi 12 000 km 169 Combat range 2 993 nmi 3 444 mi 5 543 km Service ceiling 60 000 ft 18 000 m Rate of climb 5 678 ft min 28 84 m s Wing loading 167 lb sq ft 820 kg m2 Thrust weight 0 38 at gross weightArmament Hardpoints 6 external hardpoints for ordnance c with a capacity of 50 000 pounds 23 000 kg with provisions to carry combinations of Missiles AGM 154 Joint Standoff Weapon JSOW AGM 158C Long Range Anti Ship Missile LRASM 172 AGM 158 Joint Air to Surface Standoff Missile JASSM AGM 183 Air Launched Rapid Response Weapon ARRW 173 Bombs Mk 82 air inflatable retarder AIR general purpose GP bombs 174 Mk 82 low drag general purpose LDGP bombs 175 Mk 62 Quickstrike sea mines 176 Mk 84 general purpose bombs Mk 65 naval mines 177 CBU 87 89 CBU 97 Cluster Bomb Units CBU d CBU 103 104 105 Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser WCMD CBUs GBU 31 JDAM GPS guided bombs Mk 84 GP or BLU 109 warhead e GBU 38 JDAM GPS guided bombs Mk 82 GP warhead f GBU 38 JDAM using rotary launcher mounted multiple ejector racks 178 GBU 54 LaserJDAM using rotary launcher mounted multiple ejector racks 178 GBU 39 Small Diameter Bomb GPS guided bombs g not fielded on B 1 yet Previously B61 or B83 nuclear bombs could be carried 177 dd Bombs 3 internal bomb bays for 75 000 pounds 34 000 kg of ordnance 170 Avionics 1 AN APQ 164 forward looking offensive passive electronically scanned array radar 1 AN ALQ 161 radar warning receiver and defensive jamming equipment 1 AN ASQ 184 defensive management system 1 Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod optional 179 180 Weapons loads edit B 1B Lancer internal weapons loads Bomb rack amp stores 181 Bay 1 Bay 2 Bay 3 TotalConventionalCBM2 816 to 3 513 lb 1 277 to 1 593 kg 1 1 1Mk 82 Mk 82 AIR Mk 36 Mk 62 28 28 28 84ConventionalSECBM CBM w TMD upgrade 2 816 lb 1 277 kg empty 1 1 1CBU 87 CBU 89 CBU 97 CBU 103 CBU 104 CBU 105 10 10 10 30GBU 38 6 6 3 15Multi purposeMPRL1 300 to 2 055 lb 590 kg 1 1 1Mk 84 GBU 31 AGM 154 AGM 158 8 8 8 24Mk 65 naval mines 4 4 4 124 pack GBU 39 6 pack GBU 39 8 8 8 96 or 144Multi purpose mixed MPRL MER upgrade 182 1 1 1 GBU 38 GBU 32 GBU 31 4 4 4 36GBU 38 16 16 16 48Ferry range extensionFuel tank2 975 gal 11 262 L 183 1 1 1 39 157 gal 34 663 kg 184 Nuclear uniform out of use MPRL1 300 to 2 055 lb 590 to 932 kg 1 1 1B28 185 4 4 4 12AGM 69 B61 B83 8 8 8 24Nuclear mixed out of use 186 CSRL 1AGM 86B Small fuel tank8 8External weapons loads mostly unused due to radar cross section 181 Bomb rack amp stores Fwd stations 1 2 Int stations 3 6 Aft stations 7 8 TotalNuclear out of use Dual pylon 2 2 2Single pylon 2AGM 86B B 61 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 14 h Conventional uniform Mk 82 2 6 2 6 2 6 2 6 44Targeting 187 Pylon884 lb 400 kg 1 right station Sniper XR targeting pod 1 right station 1440 lb 200 kg Ferry range extension 184 188 Fuel tankeach 923 gal 3 494 L 2 2 2 65 538 gal 20 963 L Notable appearances in media editMain article Aircraft in fiction B 1 LancerSee also edit nbsp Aviation portalPolitical positions of Ronald Reagan ASALM Advanced Strategic Air Launched MissileAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Tupolev Tu 22M Tupolev Tu 160 General Dynamics FB 111Related lists List of active United States military aircraft List of bomber aircraftNotes edit Production totals B 1A 4 B 1B 100 The name Lancer was only applied to the B 1B variant in 1990 1 Use for weapons restricted by arms treaties 101 171 As per B 1B Weapons Loading Checklist T O 1B 1B 33 2 1CL 13 both Mk 84 general purpose and BLU 109 penetrating bombs As per B 1B Weapons Loading Checklist T O 1B 1B 33 2 1CL 12 Section 3 4 Only six each in forward and intermediate bays and three each in the aft bay 96 if using four packs 144 if using 6 packs This capability has not yet been fielded on the B 1 Restricted to 12 under SALT II 186 References edit a b c Jenkins 1999 p 67 Cohen Rachel 24 September 2021 Farewell Bones Air Force finishes latest round of B 1B bomber retirements Air Force Times Retrieved 20 October 2023 Losey Stephen 24 September 2021 Last of 17 Retired B 1s Sent to Boneyard as Air Force Preps for B 21s Military com Retrieved 9 October 2021 USAF to Retire B 1 B 2 in Early 2030s as B 21 Comes On Line Air Force Magazine 11 February 2018 Jenkins 1999 p 10 Jenkins 1999 pp 12 13 Jenkins 1999 pp 15 17 a b c Schwartz 1998 p 118 Rich Ben and Leo Janos Skunk Works Boston Little Brown amp Company 1994 ISBN 0 316 74300 3 a b c Jenkins 1999 p 21 May 1960 The U 2 Incident Soviet and American Statements Keesing s Record of World Events Volume 6 1960 a b Spick 1986 pp 6 8 a b c d Schwartz 1998 p 119 NASA CR 115702 B 70 Aircraft Study Final Report Vol I p I 38 NASA 1972 Jenkins 1999 pp 14 16 Knaack 1988 pp 279 280 Knaack 1988 p 256 Gunston 1978 pp 12 13 Taylor Gordon Subsonic Low Altitude Bomber Archived 19 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Wright Patterson Air Force Base ASD TDR 62 426 June 1962 Pace 1998 pp 11 14 Knaack 1988 pp 575 576 Casil 2003 p 8 Knaack 1988 p 576 Knaack 1988 p 575 Hibma R A Wegner E D 12 14 May 1981 The Evolution of a Strategic Bomber 16th Annual Meeting and Technical Display AIAA 16th Annual Meeting and Technical Display Long Beach CA doi 10 2514 6 1981 919 Pace 1998 p 10 Knaack 1988 pp 576 577 B 1A page fas org Retrieved 20 March 2008 a b c d Knaack 1988 pp 576 578 a b Jenkins 1999 pp 23 26 AN APQ Airborne Multipurpose Special Radars Designation systems net 1 July 2007 Retrieved 27 January 2015 a b c Knaack 1988 p 579 a b c Pace 1998 pp 22 23 Kocivar Ben Our New B 1 Bomber High Low Fast and Slow Popular Science Volume 197 Issue 5 November 1970 p 86 a b Knaack 1988 p 584 Rockwell International history 1970 1986 Archived 11 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Boeing Retrieved 8 October 2009 a b Sorrels 1983 p 27 a b c d e f g h i j Lee 2008 p 13 Whitford 1987 p 136 Schefter Jim The Other Story About The Controversial B 1 Popular Science Volume 210 Issue 5 May 1977 p 112 Spick 1986 pp 30 32 Knaack 1988 p 586 Jane s All The World s Aircraft 1975 76 John W R Taylor ISBN 0531032507 p 439 Jenkins 1999 p 44 Willis David K Japan s scrutiny of Soviet jet jars detente Archived 16 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Christian Science Monitor 16 September 1976 Retrieved 23 May 2010 Donald 2004 p 120 Knaack 1988 p 590 a b c d Carter s Big Decision Down Goes the B 1 Here Comes the Cruise Time 11 July 1977 Retrieved 8 October 2009 a b Withington 2006 p 7 Pace 1999 pp 20 27 Sorrels 1983 p 23 Belcher Jerry Dropping B 1 Would Bring World War III Dornan Says Archived 2 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times 11 June 1977 Jenkins 1999 p 46 Moore John Leo 1980 U S Defense Policy Weapons Strategy and Commitments Congressional Quarterly pp 65 79 ISBN 978 0 87187 158 9 Reagan President Ronald Reagan s Radio Address to the Nation on Foreign Policy Archived 17 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine presidentreagan info 20 October 1984 a b c Schwartz 1998 p 120 a b Mitchell Douglas D IB81107 Bomber Options for Replacing B 52s Library of Congress Congressional Research Service via Digital Library UNT 3 May 1982 Retrieved 16 July 2011 Jumper John P Global Strike Task Force A Transforming Concept Forged by Experience Archived 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Aerospace Power Journal 15 no 1 Spring 2001 pp 30 31 Originally published by Air University Maxwell Air Force Base 2001 Coates James Reagan approves B 1 alters basing for MX Archived 3 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Tribune 3 October 1981 Retrieved 28 July 2010 Jenkins 1999 p 62 a b c Pace 1998 p 64 a b Spick 1986 p 28 Casil 2003 p 7 Germani Clara ed Former defense chief raps B 1 bomber plan Christian 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The Pocket Guide to Military Aircraft And the World s Airforces London Octopus ISBN 0 681 03185 9 Dorr Robert F 1997 7th Bombardment Group Wing 1918 1995 Turner ME Turner ISBN 1 56311 278 7 June 2010 Lancer Force London Ian Allan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a newspaper ignored help Gunston William Bill 1978 F 111 New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 0 684 15753 5 Jenkins Dennis R 1999 B 1 Lancer The Most Complicated Warplane Ever Developed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 134694 5 Knaack Marcelle Size 1988 Post World War II Bombers 1945 1973 PDF Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 0 16 002260 6 Archived from the original PDF on 25 October 2007 Lee Tae Woo 2008 Military Technologies of the World Vol 1 Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 275 99535 5 Pace Steve 1998 Boeing North American B 1 Lancer North Branch MN Specialty Press ISBN 1 58007 012 4 1999 B 2 Spirit The Most Capable War Machine on the Planet New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 134433 0 Schwartz Stephen I 1998 Atomic Audit The Costs and Consequences of U S Nuclear Weapons since 1940 Washington DC Brookings Institution Press ISBN 0 8157 7773 6 Skaarup Harold A 2002 South Dakota Warbird Survivors 2003 A Handbook on Where to Find Them Bloomington IN iUniverse ISBN 0 595 26379 8 Sorrels Charles A 1983 U S Cruise Missile Programs Development Deployment and Implications for Arms Control New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 08 030527 X Spick Michael Mike 1986 B 1B Modern Fighting Aircraft New York Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 055237 2 Spick Mike ed 1987 The Great Book of Modern Warplanes New York Salamander Books ISBN 0 517 63367 1 Whitford Ray 1987 Design for Air Combat London Jane s Information Group ISBN 0 7106 0426 2 Winchester Jim ed 2006 Military Aircraft of the Cold War Rockwell B 1A The Aviation Factfile London Grange Books ISBN 1 84013 929 3 Withington Thomas 2006 B 1B Lancer Units in Combat Combat Aircraft Vol 60 London Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 992 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to B 1 Lancer category B 1B Fact Sheet on af mil B 1B product page and B 1B history page on Boeing com B 1 history page on NASA Langley Research Center site B 1B Lancer in Airman Magazine s Airframe Profiles B 1B Lancer USAF 20 year history article at archive today archived 12 December 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rockwell B 1 Lancer amp oldid 1184930500 B 1B program, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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