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Consolidated B-24 Liberator

The Consolidated B-24 Liberator is an American heavy bomber, designed by Consolidated Aircraft of San Diego, California. It was known within the company as the Model 32, and some initial production aircraft were laid down as export models designated as various LB-30s, in the Land Bomber design category.

B-24 Liberator
United States Army Air Forces Consolidated B-24D Liberator over Maxwell Field, Alabama
Role
Manufacturer Consolidated Aircraft
First flight 29 December 1939
Introduction 1941
Retired 1968 (Indian Air Force)[1]
Primary users United States Army Air Forces
Produced 1940–1945
Number built 18,188[2]
Variants
Developed into

At its inception, the B-24 was a modern design featuring a highly efficient shoulder-mounted, high aspect ratio Davis wing. The wing gave the Liberator a high cruise speed, long range and the ability to carry a heavy bomb load. In comparison with its contemporaries, the B-24 was relatively difficult to fly and had poor low-speed performance; it also had a lower ceiling and was less robust than the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. While aircrews tended to prefer the B-17, General Staff favored the B-24 and procured it in huge numbers for a wide variety of roles.[3][4] At approximately 18,500 units – including 8,685 manufactured by Ford Motor Company – it holds records as the world's most produced bomber, heavy bomber, multi-engine aircraft, and American military aircraft in history.

The B-24 was used extensively in World War II where it served in every branch of the American armed forces, as well as several Allied air forces and navies. It saw use in every theater of operations. Along with the B-17, the B-24 was the mainstay of the US strategic bombing campaign in the Western European theater. Due to its range, it proved useful in bombing operations in the Pacific, including the bombing of Japan. Long-range anti-submarine Liberators played an instrumental role in closing the Mid-Atlantic gap in the Battle of the Atlantic. The C-87 transport derivative served as a longer range, higher capacity counterpart to the Douglas C-47 Skytrain.

By the end of World War II, the technological breakthroughs of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress and other modern types had surpassed the bombers that served from the start of the war. The B-24 was rapidly phased out of U.S. service, although the PB4Y-2 Privateer maritime patrol derivative carried on in service with the U.S. Navy in the Korean War.

Design and development

 
XB-24 in flight

Initial specifications

The Liberator originated from a United States Army Air Corps (USAAC) request in 1938 for Consolidated to produce the B-17 under license. After company executives including President Reuben Fleet visited the Boeing factory in Seattle, Washington, Consolidated decided instead to submit a more modern design of its own.[5]

The new Model 32 combined designer David R. Davis's wing, a high-efficiency airfoil design created by unorthodox means,[6] with the twin tail design from the Consolidated Model 31 flying boat, together on a new fuselage. This new fuselage was intentionally designed around twin bomb bays, each one being the same size and capacity of the B-17 bomb bays.

In January 1939, the USAAC, under Specification C-212, formally invited Consolidated[7] to submit a design study for a bomber with longer range, higher speed and greater ceiling than the B-17. The specification was written such that the Model 32 would automatically be the winning design. The program was run under the umbrella group, "Project A", an Air Corps requirement for an intercontinental bomber that had been conceived in the mid-1930s. Although the B-24 did not meet Project A goals, it was a step in that direction. Project A led to the development of the Boeing B-29 and Consolidated's own B-32 and B-36.[8]

Design

The B-24 had a shoulder-mounted high aspect ratio Davis wing. This wing was highly efficient allowing a relatively high airspeed and long range. Compared to the B-17, it had a 6 feet (1.8 m) larger wingspan but a lower wing area. This gave the B-24 a 35-percent higher wing loading. The relatively thick wing held the promise of increased tankage while delivering increased lift and speed, but it became unpleasant to fly when committed to heavier loadings as experienced at high altitude and in bad weather. The Davis wing was also more susceptible to ice formation than contemporary designs, causing distortions of the aerofoil section and resulting in the loss of lift, with unpleasant experiences drawing such comments as, "The Davis wing won't hold enough ice to chill your drink".[9] The wing was also more susceptible to damage than the B-17's wing, making the aircraft less able to absorb battle damage.[citation needed]

The wing carried four supercharged Pratt & Whitney R-1830-35 Twin Wasp engines mounted in cowlings borrowed from the PBY Catalina (similar except for being oval in cross-section allowing for oil coolers mounted on each side of the engine) that turned 3-bladed variable-pitch propellers.

The tailplane featured two large oval vertical stabilizers mounted at the ends of a rectangular horizontal stabilizer. As early as 1942, it was recognized that the Liberator's handling and stability could be improved by the use of a single vertical fin. The single fin was tested by Ford on a single B-24ST variant and an experimental XB-24K: it was found to improve handling. However, all Liberators were produced with twin oval fins, with the exception of eight preproduction B-24N aircraft. The B-24N was intended as a major production variant featuring a single tail. Over 5000 orders for this version were placed in 1945, but they were cancelled due to the end of the war. The single fin did appear in production on the PB4Y Privateer derivative.[10][11][12]

The B-24's spacious, slab-sided fuselage (which earned the aircraft the nickname "Flying Boxcar")[13] was built around two central bomb bays that could accommodate up to 8,000 pounds (3,600 kg) of ordnance in each compartment (but rarely did, as this decreased range and altitude). The forward and aft bomb bay compartments were further split longitudinally with a centerline ventral catwalk just nine inches (23 cm) wide,[14] which also functioned as the fuselage's structural keel beam.

An unusual four-panel set of all-metal, tambour-panel "roller-type" bomb bay doors, which operated very much like the movable enclosure of a rolltop desk, retracted into the fuselage. These types of doors created a minimum of aerodynamic drag to keep speed high over the target area; they also allowed the bomb bays to be opened while on the ground since the low ground clearance prevented the use of normal bomb bay doors.[15] The occasional need during a mission for crewmen to move from fore to aft within the B-24's fuselage over the narrow catwalk was a drawback shared with other bomber designs.

The Liberator carried a crew of up to ten. The pilot and co-pilot sat alongside each other in a well-glazed cockpit. The navigator and bombardier — who could also double as a nose or wiggly ear gunners (guns mounted in the sides of the aircraft nose) — sat in the nose, fronted on the pre-B-24H models with a well-framed "greenhouse" nose with some two dozen glazed panels and with two flexible ball-mounts built into it for forward defensive firepower using .30 caliber (7.62 mm) Browning M1919 machine guns (later versions were fitted with a powered twin-.50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine gun nose turret). The radio/radar operator sat behind the pilots, facing sideways and sometimes doubled as a waist gunner. The flight engineer sat adjacent to the radio operator behind the pilots; he operated the upper gun turret (when fitted), located just behind the cockpit and in front of the wing.

Up to four crew members could be located in the waist, operating waist guns, a retractable lower ball turret gun, and a tail gun turret matching the nose turret. The waist gun hatches were provided with doors. The ball turret was required to be retractable for ground clearance when preparing to land as well as for greater aerodynamic efficiency. The tail gunner's powered twin-gun turret was located at the end of the tail, behind the tailplane.

The B-24 featured a tricycle undercarriage, the first American bomber to do so,[9] with the main gear extending out of the wing on long, single-oleo strut legs. It used differential braking and differential thrust for ground steering, which made taxiing difficult.[16]

Armament

The defensive armament of the B-24 varied from transport variants, which were usually unarmed, to bombers armed with up to ten .50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns located in turrets and waist gun positions.

Early model Liberators were fitted with a top-mounted turret, a tail turret and single machine guns located in the waist and in the glazed nose. The B-24D initially featured upper, belly and tail turrets, plus swiveling single guns in the waist and on either side of the nose. The belly turret was a periscopically sighted Bendix model. The turret proved unsatisfactory and was soon replaced by a tunnel gun, which was itself omitted. Later D models were fitted with the retractable Sperry ball turret.

The B-24H saw the replacement of the glazed 'green house' nose with a nose turret, which reduced the B-24s vulnerability to head-on attacks. The bombsight was located below the turret.

Long-range naval patrol versions often carried a light defensive armament. Being on long-distance patrols, they generally flew outside the range of enemy fighters. Also, the necessity of range increased the importance of weight and aerodynamic efficiency. Thus naval patrol often omitted top, belly and nose turrets. Some were fitted with a belly pack containing fixed, forward-facing cannon.

Prototypes and service evaluation

The U.S. Army Air Corps awarded a contract for the prototype XB-24 in March 1939, with the requirement that one example should be ready before the end of the year. Consolidated finished the prototype and had it ready for its first flight two days before the end of 1939. The design was simple in concept but, nevertheless, advanced for its time. Consolidated incorporated innovative features such as a tricycle landing gear and Davis wing.

Compared to the B-17, the proposed Model 32 had a shorter fuselage and 25% less wing area, but had a 6 ft (1.8 m) greater wingspan and a substantially larger carrying capacity, as well as a distinctive twin tail. Whereas the B-17 used 9-cylinder Wright R-1820 Cyclone engines, the Consolidated design used twin-row, 14-cylinder Pratt & Whitney R-1830 "Twin Wasp" radials of 1,000 hp (750 kW). The maximum takeoff weight was one of the highest of the period.

The new design would be the first American heavy bomber in production to use tricycle landing gear – the North American B-25 Mitchell medium bomber's predecessor, the NA-40 introduced this feature in January 1939 – with the Consolidated Model 32 having long, thin wings with the efficient "Davis" high aspect ratio design (also used on the projected Model 31 twin-engined commercial flying boat)[17] promising to provide maximum fuel efficiency. Wind tunnel testing and experimental programs using an existing Consolidated Model 31 provided extensive data on the flight characteristics of the Davis airfoil.[18]

Early orders, placed before the XB-24 had flown, included 36 for the USAAC, 120 for the French Air Force and 164 for the Royal Air Force (RAF). The name "Liberator" was originally given to it by the RAF, and subsequently adopted by the USAAF as the official name for the Model 24.[19] When France fell in 1940, their aircraft were re-directed to the RAF. One outcome of the British and French purchasing commissions was a backlog of orders amounting to $680m, of which $400m was foreign orders, US official statistics indicating tooling, plant and expansion advanced the previously anticipated volume of US aircraft production by up to a year. A consequence of the British orders went beyond requests for specific modifications: as the RAF accepted some designs while rejecting others, American production was – to some extent – re-directed along specific lines that accorded with British doctrine, the B-24's capacious bomb bay and ability to carry 8,000 lb ordnance a case in point.[9]

After initial testing, the XB-24 was found to be deficient in several areas. One major failure of the prototype was that it failed to meet the top speed requirements specified in the contract. As built, the XB-24 top speed was only 273 mph instead of the specified 311 mph. As a result, the mechanically supercharged Pratt & Whitney R-1830-33s were replaced with the turbo-supercharged R-1830s. Additionally, the tail span was widened by 2 ft (0.61 m) and the pitot-static probes were relocated from the wings to the fuselage. The XB-24 was then re-designated XB-24B—these changes became standard on all B-24s built starting with the B-24C model.

 
An early B-24D

In April 1939, the USAAC initially ordered seven YB-24 under CAC contract # 12464. The US policy at the time, despite neutrality, was that American requirements could be deferred while its Allies could immediately put US production into the war effort. The added advantage was the American types could be assessed in the European war zone earlier. Thus the first six YB-24 were released for direct purchase under CAC contract # F-677 on 9 November 1940. These aircraft were redesignated LB-30A. The seventh aircraft was used by Consolidated and the USAAC to test armor installations as well as self-sealing fuel tanks. Initially, these aircraft were to be given USAAC serials 39–681 to 39-687. Due to deferments of the US requirements, the US purchase was twice postponed, and the serial numbers were changed to 40–696 to 40-702. When the RAF purchased the first six YB-24 aircraft, the serial numbers were reassigned to an early batch of B-24D funded by the deferment.

Flying the B-24

Lindell Hendrix, later a test pilot for Republic Aviation, flew B-24s for the Eighth Air Force.[20] Hendrix preferred the B-24 to the B-17. In Eighth Air Force combat configuration, the aircraft carried 8,000 pounds (3,600 kg) of bombs. It could manage an altitude of no more than 25,000 ft (7,600 m), three or four thousand feet less than a B-17, but it flew 10–15 mph (16–24 km/h) faster. Its lower altitude made it more vulnerable to flak. Hendrix figured that Germans understood it was easier to hit, and that it carried more bombs.

It was necessary when flying the B-24, to get "on step". This meant climbing to about 500 ft (150 m) above cruise altitude, levelling off, achieving a cruise speed of 165–170 mph (266–274 km/h), then descending to assigned altitude. Failing to do this meant that the B-24 flew slightly nose high, and it used more fuel. The Davis wing made the B-24 sensitive to weight distribution. Hendrix claimed that a lightly loaded B-24 could out-turn a P-38 Lightning. A heavily loaded B-24 was difficult to fly at speeds of less than 160 mph (260 km/h). The B-24's controls were heavy, especially if the control rigging was not properly tensioned.

B-24s leaked fuel. Crews flew with the bomb bay doors slightly open to dissipate potentially explosive fumes. Hendrix did not permit smoking on his B-24, even though he was a smoker. Chain smoker "Tex" Thornton, then in command of the US Army Air Corps' Statistical Control, flew across the Atlantic in a B-24, and was not permitted to smoke. Thornton's Statistical Control group demonstrated that Eighth Air Force B-24s were taking lower casualties than B-17s because they were being given shorter, safer missions. The B-17s actually delivered more bombs to the target than B-24s.[21]

Operational history

RAF

 
Consolidated LB-30A, s/n AM260, used by Atlantic Ferry Command

The first British Liberators had been ordered by the Anglo-French Purchasing Board in 1940. After the Fall of France the French orders were in most cases transferred to the United Kingdom. The RAF found, as did the US, that global war increased the need for air transports and early-type bombers and seaplanes were converted or completed as cargo carriers and transports. LB-30As were assigned to transatlantic flights by RAF Ferry Command, between Canada and Prestwick, Scotland. The first Liberators in British service were ex-USAAF YB-24s converted to Liberator GR Is (USAAF designation: LB-30A). The aircraft were all modified for logistic use in Montreal. Changes included the removal of all armament, provision for passenger seating, a revised cabin oxygen and heating system. Ferry Command's Atlantic Return Ferry Service flew civilian ferry pilots, who had delivered aircraft to the UK, back to North America.[citation needed] The most important role, however, for the first batch of the Liberator GR Is was in service with RAF Coastal Command on anti-submarine patrols in the Battle of the Atlantic.[22]

 
LB-30A (YB-24) in RAF service

Later in 1941, the first Liberators entered RAF service. This model introduced self-sealing fuel tanks, a 2 ft 7 in (79 cm) plug in the forward fuselage to create more space for crew members and, more vitally, ever more equipment such as ASV Mark II radar (anticipated early in the Liberator's development when Reuben Fleet told the engineering team he had a gut feeling the nose was too short). The Mark II was the first Liberator to be equipped with powered turrets, one plane having them installed before leaving San Diego, the remainder having them installed in the field: four Browning Boulton Paul A-type Mk IV with 600 rounds of .303 in the dorsal position; and a Boulton Paul E-type Mk II with 2200 rounds in the tail (later increased to 2500 rounds), supplemented by pairs of guns at the waist position, a single gun in the nose and another in the belly, for a total of fourteen guns. The maximum take-off weight was slightly raised to 64,250 pounds, the maximum altitude lifted from 21,200 to 24,000 feet but the maximum speed was reduced to 263 mph, largely as a result of increased drag.[9]

The Liberator II (referred to as the LB-30A by the USAAF[19]) were divided between Coastal Command, Bomber Command, and British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC). Both BOAC and the RAF used converted Liberator IIs as unarmed long-range cargo carriers. These aircraft flew between the United Kingdom and Egypt (with an extensive detour around Spain over the Atlantic), and they were used in the evacuation of Java in the East Indies. BOAC also flew trans-Atlantic services and other various long-range air transportation routes.

 
Consolidated Liberator Mk.I of 120 Squadron Coastal Command RAF, used from December 1941

Two RAF bomber squadrons with Liberators were deployed to the Middle East in early 1942. While RAF Bomber Command did not use B-24s as strategic bombers over mainland North West Europe, No. 223 Squadron RAF, one of Bomber Command's 100 (Bomber Support) Group squadrons, used 20 Liberator VIs to carry electronic jamming equipment to counter German radar.

In October 1944, two RAF Liberator squadrons (357 and 358) were deployed to Jessore India in support of British SAS, American OSS and French SIS underground operations throughout SE Asia. The aircraft were stripped of most armaments to allow for fuel for up to 26-hour return flights such as Jessore to Singapore.[23]

Liberators were also used as anti-submarine patrol aircraft by RAF Coastal Command. RAF Liberators were also operated as bombers from India by SEAC and would have been a part of Tiger Force if the war had continued. Many of the surviving Liberators originated in this Command.

Antisubmarine and maritime patrols

 
AAF Antisubmarine Command (AAFAC) modifications at the Consolidated-Vultee Plant, Fort Worth, Texas in the foreground in the olive drab and white paint scheme. To the rear of this front line are partly assembled C-87 "Liberator Express Transports".
 
Anti-Submarine Weapons: Leigh light used for spotting U-boats on the surface at night, fitted to a Liberator aircraft of Royal Air Force Coastal Command. 26 February 1944.

The Liberators made a significant contribution to Allied victory in the Battle of the Atlantic against German U-boats. Aircraft had the ability to undertake surprise air attacks against surfaced submarines. Liberators assigned to the RAF's Coastal Command in 1941, offensively to patrol against submarines in the eastern Atlantic Ocean, produced immediate results. The introduction of Very Long Range (VLR) Liberators vastly increased the reach of the UK's maritime reconnaissance force, closing the Mid Atlantic Gap where a lack of air cover had allowed U-boats to operate without risk of aerial attack.[24][25]

For 12 months, No. 120 Squadron RAF of Coastal Command with its handful of worn and modified early model Liberators supplied the only air cover for convoys in the Atlantic Gap, the Liberator being the only airplane with sufficient range. The VLR Liberators sacrificed some armor and often gun turrets to save weight, while carrying extra aviation gasoline in their bomb-bay tanks. Liberators were equipped with ASV Mk. II radar, which together with the Leigh light, gave them the ability to hunt U-boats by day and by night. Before the Leigh Light, not a single enemy submarine had been sunk in over five months, but in combination with radar, it was so overwhelmingly effective that many German submarine crews chose to surface during the day so that they could at least see the aircraft attacking them and have a chance to fire their anti-aircraft weaponry in defense.[26][27]

These Liberators operated from both sides of the Atlantic with the Royal Canadian Air Force and the Army Air Forces Antisubmarine Command and later, the US Navy conducting patrols along all three American coasts and the Canal Zone. The RAF and later American patrols ranged from the east, based in Northern Ireland, Scotland, Iceland and beginning in mid-1943 from the Azores. This role was dangerous, especially after many U-boats were armed with extra anti-aircraft guns, some adopting the policy of staying on the surface to fight, rather than submerging and risking being sunk by aerial weapons such as rockets, gunfire, torpedoes and depth charges from the bombers. American Liberators flew from Nova Scotia, Greenland, the Azores, Bermuda, the Bahamas, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Panama, Trinidad, Ascension Island and from wherever else they could fly far out over the Atlantic.

The sudden and decisive turning of the Battle of the Atlantic in favor of the Allies in May 1943 was the result of many factors. The gradual arrival of many more VLR and in October, PB4Y navalized Liberators for anti-submarine missions over the Mid-Atlantic gap ("black pit") and the Bay of Biscay was an important contribution to the Allies' greater success. Liberators were credited in full or in part with sinking 93 U-boats.[28] The B-24 was vital for missions of a radius less than 1,000 mi (1,600 km), in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters where U.S. Navy PB4Y-1s and USAAF SB-24s took a heavy toll of enemy submarines and surface combatants and shipping.

USAAF

 
B-24s bomb the Ploiești oil fields in August 1943.

Introduction to service, 1941–1942

The United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) took delivery of its first B-24As in mid-1941. Over the next three years, B-24 squadrons deployed to all theaters of the war: African, European, China-Burma-India, the Anti-submarine Campaign, the Southwest Pacific Theater and the Pacific Theater. In the Pacific, to simplify logistics and to take advantage of its longer range, the B-24 (and its twin, the U.S. Navy PB4Y) was the chosen standard heavy bomber. By mid-1943, the shorter-range B-17 was phased out. The Liberators which had served early in the war in the Pacific continued the efforts from the Philippines, Australia, Espiritu Santo, Guadalcanal, Hawaii, and Midway Island. The Liberator peak overseas deployment was 45.5 bomb groups in June 1944. Additionally, the Liberator equipped a number of independent squadrons in a variety of special combat roles. The cargo versions, C-87 and C-109 tanker, further increased its overseas presence, especially in Asia in support of the XX Bomber Command air offensive against Japan.

So vital was the need for long-range operations, that at first USAAF used the type as transports. The sole B-24 in Hawaii was destroyed by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. It had been sent to the Central Pacific for a very long-range reconnaissance mission that was preempted by the Japanese attack.

The first USAAF Liberators to carry out combat missions were 12 repossessed LB-30s deployed to Java with the 11th Bombardment Squadron (7th Bombardment Group) that flew their first combat mission in mid-January. Two were shot up by Japanese fighters, but both managed to land safely. One was written off due to battle damage and the other crash-landed on a beach.

US-based Liberators entered combat service in 1942 when on 6 June, four LB-30s from Hawaii staging through Midway Island attempted an attack on Wake Island, but were unable to find it.[29] The B-24 came to dominate the heavy bombardment role in the Pacific because compared to the B-17, the B-24 was faster, had longer range, and could carry a ton more bombs.[30]

Strategic bombing, 1942–1945

 
The bomb bay of a surviving B-24J Liberator in 2016

On 12 June 1942, 13 B-24s of the Halverson Project (HALPRO) flying from Egypt attacked the Axis-controlled oil fields and refineries around Ploiești, Romania. Within weeks, the First Provisional Bombardment Group formed from the remnants of the Halverson and China detachments. This unit then was formalized as the 376th Bombardment Group, Heavy, and along with the 98th BG formed the nucleus of the IX Bomber Command of the Ninth Air Force, operating from Africa until absorbed into the Twelfth Air Force briefly, and then the Fifteenth Air Force, operating from Italy. The Ninth Air Force moved to England in late 1943. This was a major component of the USSTAF and took a major role in strategic bombing. Fifteen of the 15th AF's 21 bombardment groups flew B-24s.

For much of 1944, the B-24 was the predominant bomber of U.S. Strategic Air Forces (USSTAF) formerly the Eighth Air Force in the Combined Bomber Offensive against Germany, forming nearly half of its heavy bomber strength in the ETO prior to August and most of the Italian-based force. Thousands of B-24s flying from bases in Europe dropped hundreds of thousands of tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs on German military and industrial targets.

The 44th Bombardment Group was one of the first two heavy bombardment groups flying the B-24 with the 8th Air Force in the fall/winter air campaigns in the European Theater of Operations.[13] The 44th Bomb Group flew the first of its 344 combat missions against the Axis powers in World War II on 7 November 1942.[13]

 
15th Air Force B-24s attacking the Concordia Vega Oil refinery, Ploești, Romania fly through flak and over the destruction created by preceding waves of bombers.

The first B-24 loss over German territory occurred on 26 February 1943. Earlier in the war, both the Luftwaffe and the Royal Air Force had abandoned daylight bombing raids because neither could sustain the losses suffered. The Americans persisted, however, at great cost in men and aircraft. In the period between 7 November 1942 and 8 March 1943, the 44th Bomb Group lost 13 of its original 27 B-24s.[13] For some time, newspapers had been requesting permission for a reporter to go on one of the missions. Robert B. Post and five other reporters of The New York Times were granted permission. Post was the only reporter assigned to a B-24-equipped group, the 44th Bomb Group. He flew in B-24 41-23777 ("Maisey") on Mission No. 37 to Bremen, Germany. Intercepted just short of the target, the B-24 came under attack from JG 1's Messerschmitt Bf 109s. Leutnant Heinz Knoke (who finished the war with 31 kills) shot down the Liberator. Post and all but two of the 11 men aboard were killed. Knoke reported: "The fire spread out along the right wing. The inboard propeller windmilled to a stop. And then, suddenly, the whole wing broke off. At an altitude of 900 metres there was a tremendous explosion. The bomber had disintegrated. The blazing wreckage landed just outside Bad Zwischenahn airfield."[31]

 
A B-24M of the 448th Bombardment Group, breaks in half after attack by a Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter

A total of 177 B-24s carried out the famous second attack on Ploiești (Operation Tidal Wave) on 1 August 1943. This was the B-24's most costly mission. In late June 1943, the three B-24 Liberator groups of the 8th Air Force were sent to North Africa on temporary duty with the 9th Air Force:[13] the 44th Bomb Group joined the 93rd and the 389th Bomb Groups. These three units then joined the two 9th Air Force B-24 Liberator groups for low-level attack on the German-held Romanian oil complex at Ploiești. This daring assault by high-altitude bombers at treetop level was a costly success. The attack became disorganized after a navigational error which alerted the defenders and protracted the bomb run from the initial point. The 44th destroyed both of its assigned targets, but lost 11 of its 37 bombers and their crews. Colonel Leon W. Johnson, the 44th's commander, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his leadership, as was Col. John Riley "Killer" Kane, commander of the 98th Bomb Group. Kane and Johnson survived the mission but three other recipients of the Medal of Honor for their actions in the mission—Lt. Lloyd H. Hughes, Maj. John L. Jerstad and Col. Addison E. Baker—were killed in action. For its actions on the Ploiești mission, the 44th was awarded its second Distinguished Unit Citation.[13] Of the 177 B-24s that were dispatched on this operation, 54 were lost.[13]

Radar/Electronic warfare and PGM deployment

The B-24 advanced the use of electronic warfare and equipped Search Bomber (SB), Low Altitude (LAB) and Radar Counter Measure (RCM) squadrons in addition to high-altitude bombing. Among the specialized squadrons were the 20th RS (RCM), 36th BS (RCM), 406th NLS, 63rd BS (SB) SeaHawks, 373rdBS (LAB) and 868th BS (SB) Snoopers.

The 36th Bombardment Squadron was the Eighth Air Force's only electronic warfare squadron using specially equipped B-24s to jam German VHF communications during large Eighth Air Force daylight raids. In addition, the 36th BS flew night missions with RAF Bomber Command's own electronic warfare unit 100 Group at RAF Sculthorpe. Radar Counter Measures (RCM) was code-named Carpet, however, this should not be confused with agent and supply drops, code-named "Carpetbaggers".

The B-24 was the platform for the pioneering use of the Americans' Azon laterally-guidable precision-guided munition ordnance design, a pioneering Allied radio-guided munition system during World War II. The ordnance of 1,000 lb weight, was deployed operationally by USAAF B-24s in both Europe and the CBI theaters. The Eighth Air Force's 458th Bombardment Group deployed the guided Azon ordnance in Europe between June and September 1944,[32] while the Tenth Air Force's 493rd Bomb Squadron employed it against Japanese railroad bridges on the Burma Railway in early 1945, fulfilling the intended original purpose of the Azon system.[33]

Assembly ships

 
B-24D-30-CO assembly ship First Sergeant, 458th Bomb Group

In February 1944, the 2nd Division authorized the use of "Assembly Ships" (or "Formation Ships") specially fitted to aid the assembly of individual group formations. They were equipped with signal lighting, provision for quantity discharge of pyrotechnics, and were painted with distinctive group-specific high-contrast patterns of stripes, checkers or polka dots to enable easy recognition by their flock of bombers. The aircraft used in the first allocation were B-24Ds retired by the 44th, 93rd and 389th Groups. Arrangements for signal lighting varied from group to group, but generally consisted of white flashing lamps on both sides of the fuselage arranged to form the identification letter of the group. All armament and armor were removed and in some cases the tail turret. In the B-24Hs used for this purpose, the nose turret was removed and replaced by a "carpetbagger" type nose. Following incidents when flare guns were accidentally discharged inside the rear fuselage, some assembly (formation) ships had pyrotechnic guns fixed through the fuselage sides. As these aircraft normally returned to base once a formation had been established, a skeleton crew of two pilots, navigator, radio operator and one or two flare discharge operators were carried. In some groups an observer officer flew in the tail position to monitor the formation. These aircraft became known as Judas goats.[34]

"Carpetbaggers"

 
B-24 cockpit

From August 1943 until the end of the war in Europe, specially modified B-24Ds were used in classified missions. In a joint venture between the Army Air Forces and the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) code-named Operation Carpetbagger, pilots and crews flew specially modified B-24Ds painted with a glossy black anti-searchlight paint to supply friendly underground forces throughout German-occupied Europe. They also flew Douglas C-47s, Douglas A-26 Invaders, and British de Havilland Mosquitos.

Carpetbagger aircraft flew spies called "Joes" and commando groups prior to the Allied invasion of Europe on D-Day and afterward, and retrieved over 5,000 officers and enlisted men who had escaped capture after being shot down. The low-altitude, nighttime operation was extremely dangerous and took its toll on these airmen. The first aircrews chosen for this operation came from the anti-submarine bomb groups because of their special training in low altitude flying and pinpoint navigation skills. Because of their special skills, they were called upon to fly fuel to General George Patton's army during the summer and early autumn of 1944 when it outran its fuel supply. When this mission was completed, it was recorded that 822,791 US gallons (3,114,264 L) of 80 octane gasoline had been delivered to three different airfields in France and Belgium.[35]

The 859 BS was converted from day bombardment to these operations and then transferred to the 15th Air Force.

Transport variants

C-87 Liberator Express

In early 1942, with the need for a purpose-built transport with better high-altitude performance and longer range than the Douglas C-47 Skytrain, the San Diego plant began sending B-24D models to Fort Worth for conversion into the C-87 transport. The conversion had a hinged cargo door at the nose eliminating transparent nose and large cargo doors installed in the waist area. The C-87 had a large cargo floor, less powerful supercharged engines, no gun turrets, a floor in the bomb bay for freight, and some side windows. The navigator's position was relocated behind the pilot. Indigenous Fort Worth C-87 and AT-22 production began with the FY 1943 order for 80 serial-numbered airframes 43-30548 through 43–30627.

The C-87A was a dedicated VIP series built in small quantity. Early versions were fitted with a single .50 caliber (12.7 mm) Browning machine gun in their tails, and a XC-87B version proposed two .50 caliber (12.7 mm) fixed machine guns for the nose, operable by the pilot, though these were eventually removed. The XC-87B also designated a resurrected crash victim B-24D (42-40355) fitted with low altitude power packages and a forward fuselage extension. The extended nose earned it the name Pinocchio. Later modifications gave it a single tail and yet another type of engine packages bring it to near C-87C configuration. Other C-87 designations were the U.S. Navy designation RY and Lend Lease Liberator Cargo VII.

Although only 287 C-87 and eight U.S. Navy RY variants were produced, they were still important in the Army Air Forces' airlift operations early in the war when aircraft with high-altitude, long-range heavy hauling abilities were in short supply. The C-87 flew in many theaters of war, including much hazardous duty in flights from Labrador to Greenland and Iceland in the North Atlantic. In the China Burma India Theater (CBI), the C-87 was used to airlift cargo and fuel over the Hump (the Himalayas) from India to China. Early in the campaign, the C-87 was the only readily available American transport that could fly over the Himalayas while heavily loaded, rather than relying on circuitous and highly dangerous routes through valleys and mountain passes, but the type was not very popular with crews: they complained of various hazards including the fuel system, engines and cockpit accessories, while the type was notorious for leaking fuel tanks and mid-air fires a constant danger.[9] The C-87 also shared the Liberator's dangerous sensitivity to icing, particularly prevalent over Himalayan routes.[7] With these difficulties in mind it is little wonder the ATC India China Division was the only unit in the Command to be combat decorated during WWII, having been awarded a Distinguished Unit Citation.

The C-87 was not always popular with the aircrews assigned to fly it. The aircraft had the distressing habit of losing all cockpit electrical power on takeoff or at landings, its engine power and reliability with the less-powerful superchargers also often left much to be desired. It proved to be quite vulnerable to icing conditions, and was prone to fall into a spin with even small amounts of ice accumulated onto its Davis wing. Since the aircraft had been designed to be a bomber that dropped its loads while airborne, the C-87's nose landing gear was not designed for landing with a heavy load, and frequently it collapsed from the stress. Fuel leaks inside the crew compartment from the hastily modified long-range fuel system were an all-too-common occurrence. Lastly, unlike a typical purpose-designed transport, the B-24 was not designed to tolerate large loading variations because most of its load was held on fixed bomb racks. Consequently, it was relatively easy for a poorly trained ground crew to load a C-87 with its center of gravity too far forward or aft, rendering the aircraft difficult to control due to inadequate or excessive longitudinal stability. In his autobiography, Fate is the Hunter, the writer Ernest K. Gann reported that, while flying air cargo in India, he barely avoided crashing an improperly loaded C-87 into the Taj Mahal. As soon as more dependable Douglas C-54 Skymaster and Curtiss-Wright C-46 Commando transports became available in large numbers, C-87s were rapidly phased out of combat zone service, with some later used as VIP transports or B-24 flight crew trainers.

C-109 version

 
C-109 tanker unloading

The C-109 was a dedicated fuel transport version of the B-24 conceived as a support aircraft for Boeing B-29 Superfortress operations in central China.[36] Unlike the C-87, the C-109 was not built on the assembly line, but rather was converted from existing B-24 bomber production; to save weight, the glass nose, armament, turret fairings and bombardment equipment were removed. Several storage tanks were added, allowing a C-109 to carry 2,900 gal (11,000 L) of fuel weighing over 22,000 pounds (10,000 kg).

Plans originally called for 2,000 C-109s to support 10 groups of B-29s (approximately 400) in China, but the capture of the Mariana Islands provided a far more easily resupplied location for raids on mainland Japan, and the plans were greatly scaled back. Only 218 C-109s were actually converted. After the transfer of the B-29s, the C-109s were reassigned to the Air Transport Command. According to the history of the U.S. Army Air Forces in World War II, at least one squadron was assigned to the IX Troop Carrier Command in Europe to transport gasoline to advancing ground and air forces on the Continent after the Normandy invasion.

However, whereas a combat-loaded B-24 could safely take off with room to spare from a 6,000 ft (1,800 m) runway, a loaded C-109 required every foot of such a runway to break ground, and crashes on takeoff were not uncommon. The aircraft demonstrated unstable flight characteristics with all storage tanks filled, and proved very difficult to land fully loaded at airfields above 6,000 ft (1,800 m) MSL in elevation, such as those around Chengdu. After it was discovered that these problems could be alleviated by flying with the forward storage tank empty, this practice became fairly routine, enhancing aircrew safety at the cost of some fuel-carrying capacity.[37] Many C-109s were lost in flying the Hump airlift to China.

The Singing Cowboy Gene Autry served in the Air Transport Command (in the same squadron as Barry Goldwater), and described flying the C-109 over "The Hump" as "the thrill that lasts a lifetime".[38]

B-24 bombers were also extensively used in the Pacific area after the end of World War II to transport cargo and supplies during the rebuilding of Japan, China, and the Philippines.

U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps

PB4Y-1

 
PB4Y-1 Liberator

B-24s were also used by the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps for ASW, anti-ship patrol, and photographic reconnaissance in the Pacific Theater, and by the U.S. Coast Guard for patrol and SAR. Naval B-24s were redesignated PB4Y-1, meaning the fourth patrol bomber design built by Consolidated Aircraft. Navy PB4Y-1s assigned to Atlantic ASW and all Coast Guard PB4Y-1s had the ventral turret replaced by a retractable radome. Also, most naval aircraft had an Erco ball turret installed in the nose position, replacing the glass nose and other styles of turret.

The Consolidated Aircraft Company PB4Y-2 Privateer was a U.S. Navy patrol bomber that was derived directly from the B-24 Liberator. The U.S. Navy had been using B-24s with only minor modifications as the PB4Y-1 Liberator, and along with maritime patrol B-24s used by RAF Coastal Command this type of patrol plane had been quite successful. A fully navalized design was seen as advantageous, and Consolidated Aircraft developed a purpose-built long-range patrol bomber in 1943, designated PB4Y-2. The Privateer had non-turbosupercharged engines for weight savings and optimal performance at low to medium patrol altitudes, and was visually distinguishable from the B-24 and PB4Y-1 by its longer fuselage, single tall vertical stabilizer (rather than a twin tail), two dorsal turrets, and teardrop-shaped waist gun blisters (similar in appearance to those on Consolidated's own PBY Catalina).

Australia

 
The crew of a No. 21 Squadron RAAF Liberator with their aircraft

RAAF

Australian aircrew seconded to the Royal Air Force flew Liberators in all theatres of the war, including with RAF Coastal Command, in the Middle East, and with South East Asia Command, while some flew in South African Air Force squadrons. Liberators were introduced into service in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) in 1944, after the American commander of the Far East Air Forces (FEAF), General George C. Kenney, suggested that seven heavy bomber squadrons be raised to supplement the efforts of American Liberator squadrons. The USAAF transferred some aircraft to the RAAF, while the remainder would be delivered from the US under Lend-Lease. Some RAAF aircrew were given operational experience in Liberators while attached to USAAF squadrons. Seven flying squadrons, an operational training unit, and two special duties flights were equipped with the aircraft by the end of World War II in August 1945.

The RAAF Liberators saw service in the South West Pacific theatre of World War II. Flying mainly from bases in the Northern Territory, Queensland and Western Australia, aircraft conducted bombing raids against Japanese positions, ships and strategic targets in New Guinea, Borneo and the Netherlands East Indies. In addition, the small number of Liberators operated by No. 200 Flight played an important role in supporting covert operations conducted by the Allied Intelligence Bureau; and other Liberators were converted to VIP transports. A total of 287 B-24D, B-24J, B-24L and B-24M aircraft were supplied to the RAAF, of which 33 were lost in action or accidents, with more than 200 Australians killed. Following the Japanese surrender, the RAAF's Liberators participated in flying former prisoners of war and other personnel back to Australia. Liberators remained in service until 1948, when they were replaced by Avro Lincolns.[39]

Qantas

In June 1944, Qantas Empire Airways began service with the first of two converted LB-30 Liberators on the Perth to Colombo route to augment PBY Catalinas that had been used since May 1943. The Double Sunrise route across the Indian Ocean was 3,513 mi (5,654 km) long, the longest non-stop airline route in the world at the time. The Liberators flew a shorter 3,077 mi (4,952 km) over-water route from Learmonth to an airfield northeast of Colombo, but they could make the flight in 17 hours with a 5,500 pounds (2,500 kg) payload, whereas the Catalinas required 27 hours and had to carry so much auxiliary fuel that their payload was limited to only 1,000 pounds (450 kg). The route was named Kangaroo Service and marked the first time that Qantas's now-famous Kangaroo logo was used; passengers received a certificate proclaiming them as members of The Order of the Longest Hop. The Liberators were later replaced by Avro Lancastrians.[40]

SAAF

Two squadrons of the South African Air Force (SAAF) also flew B-24s: 31 and 34 Squadrons under No 2 Wing SAAF based at Foggia, Italy. These two squadrons engaged in relief flights to Warsaw and Kraków in Poland to support the Polish Uprising against Nazi Occupation.[41]

Luftwaffe use

Three B-24s were captured and then operated by the German secret operations unit KG 200, which also tested, evaluated and sometimes clandestinely operated captured enemy aircraft during World War II.[42]

One of these was captured at Venegono, Italy, on 29 March 1944. It was used on penetration missions in RAF bomber streams at night in Luftwaffe markings. On a ferry flight from Hildesheim to Bavaria on 6 April 1945, it was shot down – by German anti-aircraft fire.

Crashed B-24s were the source of the landing gear units for the strictly experimental Junkers Ju 287 V1 first prototype jet bomber airframe in 1945.

Romanian use

Following Operation Tidal Wave, it was decided to attempt the salvage of a B-24 bomber and use it for fighter pilot training. Three B-24s were recovered: Boiler Maker II, Honkey Tonk Gal, and Brewery Wagon. Of these, Boiler Maker II was repaired in the field using parts from the other two. Initially, the glazed nose of the bomber was replaced with sheet metal. The airplane was then flown to Brașov where it was painted in Romanian Air Force camouflage and markings at the IAR factory.[43]

The aircraft was handed over for operations to the LARES [ro] airline. It was destroyed on the ground during a German raid on 26 August 1944.[43]

Another proposal was to recover engines of other crashed B-24s and mount them on the IAR 80 fighters. However, the IAR engineers determined that the R-1830 engine did not offer any significant advantage over the IAR K14.[43]

Soviet use

Only one B-24 was officially delivered to the USSR according to the Lend-Lease agreements, stranded in Yakutsk while flying a government mission to the Soviet Union in November 1942. In addition, 73 Liberators of various models that had force-landed on European airfields were recovered and 30 of them were repaired and used by the 45th Bomber Aviation Division.[44] The regiment concerned appears to have been the 890th Bomber Aviation Regiment at Baranovichi until 1944, and then Kazan.

Chinese use

 
B-24 Bomber flying over China during WW2

The B-24 bombers of the 308th Bombardment Group (Heavy) joined the battlefield in March 1944 as the heavy bombers of the Fourteenth Air Force to fight against the Japanese during the Second Sino-Japanese War (WW2 in China). About 48 B-24Ms were provided by the U.S. to the Chinese Nationalist Air Force after WW2 and were used during the Chinese Civil War. The PLAAF had two B-24Ms captured from the Chinese Nationalists during the Chinese Civil War and operated until 1952.

Production

External image
  Watch video of B-24 production and testing

Approximately 18,500 B-24s were produced across a number of versions, including over 4,600 manufactured by Ford. It holds records as the world's most-produced bomber, heavy bomber, multi-engine aircraft, and American military aircraft in history.[45] Production took place at 5 plants. At Ford's Ypsilanti, Michigan based Willow Run Bomber plant alone, one B-24 was being produced every 59 minutes at its peak, a rate so large that production exceeded the military's ability to use the aircraft. Such were the production numbers it has been said that more aluminum, aircrew, and effort went into the B-24 than any other aircraft in history.[46]

 
Looking up one of the assembly lines at Ford's big Willow Run plant, where B-24E (Liberator) bombers are being made

Continued development work by Consolidated produced a handful of transitional B-24Cs with turbocharged instead of supercharged engines. The turbocharged engines were the reason for the flattened oval shape of the nacelles that distinguished all subsequent Liberator models.

The B-24D was the first mass-produced series. The B-24D was the Liberator III in British service. It entered US service in early 1942. It had turbocharged engines and increased fuel capacity. Three more 0.50 caliber (12.7 mm) machine guns brought the defensive armament up to 10 machine guns. At 59,524 pounds (27,000 kg)[dubious ] (29.76 short tons) maximum takeoff weight, it was one of the heaviest aircraft in the world; comparable with the British "heavies", with fully loaded weights of 30 short tons for (and nearly identical to) the Stirling, the 34 short ton Lancaster and the 27 short ton Halifax.

 
B-24s under construction at Ford Motor's Willow Run plant

Production of B-24s increased at an astonishing rate throughout 1942 and 1943. Consolidated Aircraft tripled the size of its plant in San Diego and built a large new plant outside Fort Worth, Texas in order to receive the massive amounts of knock-down kits that the Ford Motor Company shipped via truck from its Ypsilanti Michigan Facility.[citation needed] A new government plant was built in Tulsa, Oklahoma with Reconstruction Finance Corporation funds and leased to Douglas Aircraft for assembly of B-24s from Ford parts;[47] Douglas ultimately built a total of 962 of the D, E, H, and J models there.[48] Bell Aircraft built the B-24 under license at a factory near Marietta, Georgia, just northwest of Atlanta. Online by mid-1943, the new plant produced hundreds of B-24 Liberator bombers.[49] The aircraft was also built at North American plant B in the city of Grand Prairie, Texas having only starting production of the B-24G in 1943.[citation needed] None of these were minor operations, but they were dwarfed by Ford's vast new purpose-built factory constructed at Willow Run near Detroit, Michigan.

According to the Willow Run Reference Book published 1 February 1945, Ford broke ground on Willow Run on 18 April 1941, with the first plane coming off the line on 10 September 1942. Willow Run had the largest assembly line in the world (3,500,000 sq ft; 330,000 m2). At its peak in 1944, the Willow Run plant produced one B-24 per hour and 650 B-24s per month.[50] In mid-1944, the production of the B-24 was consolidated from several different companies (including some in Texas) to two large factories: the Consolidated Aircraft Company in San Diego and the Ford Motor Company's factory in Willow Run, near Detroit, Michigan, which had been specially designed to produce B-24s.[49] By 1945, Ford made 70% of all B-24s in two nine-hour shifts. Pilots and crews slept on 1,300 cots at Willow Run waiting for their B-24s to roll off the assembly line. At Willow Run, Ford produced half of 18,000 total B-24s alone.[50] Up into December 1944, Ford had also produced an additional 7242 KD or 'Knock Down' Kits that would be trucked to and assembled by Consolidated in Ft. Worth and Douglas Aircraft in Tulsa. Each of the B-24 factories was identified with a production code suffix: Consolidated/San Diego, CO; Consolidated/Fort Worth, CF; Ford/Willow Run, FO; North American, NT; and Douglas/Tulsa, DT.

 
WASP pilots (left to right) Eloise Huffines Bailey, Millie Davidson Dalrymple, Elizabeth McKethan Magid and Clara Jo Marsh Stember, with a B-24 in the background

In 1943, the model of Liberator considered by many the "definitive" version was introduced. The B-24H was 10 inches (25 cm) longer, had a powered gun turret in the upper nose to reduce vulnerability to head-on attack, and was fitted with an improved bomb sight (behind a simpler, three-panel glazed lower nose), autopilot, and fuel transfer system. Consolidated, Douglas and Ford all manufactured the B-24H, while North American made the slightly different B-24G. All five plants switched over to the almost identical B-24J in August 1943. The later B-24L and B-24M were lighter-weight versions and differed mainly in defensive armament.[citation needed]

As the war progressed, the complexity of servicing the Liberator continued to increase. The B-24 variants made by each company differed slightly, so repair depots had to stock many different parts to support various models. Fortunately, this problem was eased in the summer of 1944, when North American, Douglas and Consolidated Aircraft at Fort Worth stopped making B-24s, leaving only the Consolidated plant in San Diego and the Ford plant in Willow Run.[citation needed]

In all, 18,482 B-24s were built by September 1945. Twelve thousand saw service with the USAAF, with a peak inventory in September 1944 of 6,043. The U.S. Navy received 977 PB4Y-1s (Liberators originally ordered by the USAAF) and 739 PB4Y-2 Privateers, derived from the B-24. The Royal Air Force received about 2,100 B-24s equipping 46 bomber groups and 41 squadrons; the Royal Canadian Air Force 1,200 B-24Js; and the Royal Australian Air Force 287 B-24Js, B-24Ls, and B-24Ms. Liberators were the only heavy bomber flown by the RAAF in the Pacific.[citation needed]

Variants

U.S. Army Air Forces variants

XB-24
Single prototype ordered by Army Air Corps on 30 March 1939. Powered by four Pratt & Whitney R-1830-33 Twin Wasps rated at 1,200 horsepower (890 kW) for takeoff and 1,000 horsepower (750 kW) at 14,500 feet (4,400 m). Bombload of eight 1,000 lb (450 kg) bombs, with defensive armament of three 0.5 in (12.7 mm) and four 0.30 in (7.62 mm) machine guns. First flew 29 December 1939. Later converted to XB-24B.[51][52]
YB-24/LB-30A
Pre-production prototypes, six of which were sold to the UK directly as the LB-30A. US funds and serial numbers were deferred to the B-24D production. The seventh (40-702) remained in U.S. service as the sole YB-24 for service test. (Total: 7)
B-24
Ordered on 27 April 1939, less than 30 days after the XB-24 was ordered and before its completion. Minor modifications included eliminating leading-edge slots and adding de-icing boots. (Total: 1, converted YB-24.)
 
LB-30A Diamond Lil from the Commemorative Air Force. Airframe returned to B-24A configuration and renamed Ol' 927. She was renamed back to Diamond Lil in May 2012.[N 1]
B-24A/LB-30B
Ordered in 1939, the B-24A was the first production model. Due to the need for long-range aircraft, the B-24A was ordered before any version of the B-24 flew. Aerodynamics improvements over the XB-24 led to better performance. Nine built as transports, transferred to Ferrying Command; while twenty were sold to the UK (before Lend-Lease) as LB-30Bs. (Total: 20 LB-30B; 9 B-24A)
Liberator B Mk II/LB-30
The first combat-ready B-24. The modifications included a three-foot nose extension, a deeper rear fuselage, wider tailplane, self-sealing fuel tanks, and armor. Built to British specifications with British equipment so there was no B-24 equivalent but it was similar to the B-24C. Except for the first aircraft which was completed as a pattern aircraft, and subsequently lost in a test flight, the rest of the run was completed without armament, which the British would fit after being flown to the UK. With the US entry into the war in December 1941, some 75 were requisitioned by the USAAF during delivery and retained the LB-30 designation in service. These were delivered unarmed. Browning M2 .50 in (13 mm) guns were fitted throughout; single guns were mounted in the nose, both waist positions, and the ventral tunnel; and a twin manual mount in the tail replaced the British 4 .303 in (7.70 mm) Browning tail turret, and a Martin turret with two guns replaced the Boulton Paul dorsal turret. Fifteen were sent to the south west Pacific, including some to Java to assist the Dutch East Indies, while three went to Alaska, six to Midway Island immediately after the naval battle in June. Six were lost in various accidents. Twenty-three were later returned to the UK in 1943. Seventeen were fitted with ASV radar and used in the Panama Canal Zone. (Total production: 165)
XB-24B
A newly funded conversion of the XB-24 after it failed to reach its projected top speed. The 1,000 hp (750 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1830-33 radials were replaced with R-1830-41 turbo-supercharged radials rated at 1,200 hp (890 kW), increasing its top speed by 37 mph (60 km/h). The engine cowlings were made elliptical to accommodate the turbo-superchargers. The XB-24B also lacked the original's engine slots. It was re-serialed. (Total: one converted XB-24) XB-24B 39-680 was converted into a luxury airliner for Consairway which included gutting the interior, cutting new windows, and dividing the interior into compartments with individual and bench seating and two-tier Pullman-style sleeping berths. Trim was added for sound-proofing, and a galley with refrigerator and hot plates.[9]
B-24C
New production funded from deferred funds after LB-30A to the UK. Used the engine package tested in the XB-24B and the new fuselage of the LB-30. The tail air gunner position was improved by adding a hydraulically powered Consolidated A-6 turret with twin .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns; a Martin powered dorsal turret was added to the forward fuselage. One (#84) converted to prototype the "three in nose" armament for the B-24D. FY funds and serial numbers transferred from B-24A. (Total: nine)
 
B-24Ds of 93rd Bomb Group in formation. Nearest aircraft is Joisey Bounce, almost hidden is wingman The Duchess, next higher is Boomerang with wingman Thunder Mug.
B-24D
First to see large scale production; ordered from 1940 to 1942, as a B-24C with more powerful R-1830-43 supercharged engines. The D model was initially equipped with a remotely operated and periscopically sighted Bendix belly turret, as the first examples of the B-17E Flying Fortress and some early models of the B-25 Mitchell medium bomber had used, but this was unsatisfactory and was discontinued after the 287th aircraft. Later aircraft reverted to the earlier manually operated "tunnel" mounting with a single .50 in (12.7 mm) machine gun. The tunnel gun was eventually replaced by the Sperry ball turret, which had also been adopted by the later B-17E Fortresses, but made retractable for the Liberator as the fuselage was very close to the ground. Late B-24Ds had "cheek" guns mounted on either side of the nose, just behind the "greenhouse". (Total: 2,696: 2,381 Consolidated, San Diego; 305 Consolidated, Fort Worth; 10 Douglas, Tulsa, Oklahoma).
 
B-24E
B-24E
A slight alteration of the B-24D built by Ford, using R-1830-65 engines. The B-24E retained the belly tunnel gun. The USAAF used the B-24Es primarily as trainers as were the aircraft produced by Consolidated at San Diego (CO). Ford also built sub-assemblies for Douglas and Convair Fort Worth; these sub-assemblies were identical to Ford-built B-24Es, except that they used the same R-1830-43 radial engines as the B-24D. These sub-assemblies were called KD (knock down) kits and were trucked from Willow Run to the Southwest for the final assembly. (Total: 801)
XB-24F
A prototype made to test thermal de-icers to replace the standard inflatable rubber "boots". (Total: one converted B-24D)
B-24G
Designation for B-24D aircraft built by North American Aviation pursuant to a 1942 contract. Equipped with Sperry ball turret and three flexible .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns in nose. (Total: 25)
B-24G-1
as B-24G but with A-6 nose turret. Most were operated by the 15th Air Force in Italy. (Total: 405)
B-24H
Because of the vulnerability of the B-24 to head-on attack with the earlier "greenhouse" nose, the B-24H design incorporated an electrically powered Emerson A-15 nose turret above the bombardier's position, similar to where the Frazer-Nash FN5 nose turret on the Avro Lancaster was placed. Approximately 50 other airframe changes were made, including a redesigned bombardier compartment. The tail turret was given larger windows for better visibility and the Martin A-3 dorsal turret received an enlarged "high hat" dome. The waist gunner positions were enclosed with Plexiglass windows, and laterally offset to reduce interference between the waist gunners. Most H model aircraft were built by Ford at Willow Run. (Total: 3,100)
 
A 3-view line drawing of a B-24J
B-24J
The B-24J was similar to the B-24H, but shortages of the Emerson nose turret required use of a modified, hydraulically powered Consolidated A-6 turret in most J model aircraft built at Consolidated's San Diego and Fort Worth factories. The B-24J featured an improved autopilot (type C-1) and a M-1 series bombsight. B-24H sub-assemblies made by Ford and constructed by other companies and any model with a C-1 or M-1 retrofit, were all designated B-24J. The J model was the only version to be built by all five factories involved in B-24 production. (Total: 6,678)
XB-24K
Developed from the B-24ST, with a single fin and rudder replacing the twin tail on the standard Liberator.[11] The improved performance and handling of the B-24ST and XB-24K led to the decision to incorporate a single tail in the PB4Y-2 and B-24N. (Total: one converted B-24D)
B-24L
Because of the excessive weight of the B-24J, the Army requested a lightened version. In the B-24L, the Sperry ball turret was replaced by a floor ring mount with two .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns, and the A-6B tail turret by an M-6A. Later aircraft were delivered from the factory without tail guns. An A-6B or M-6A turret (190 total), a hand-held but hydraulically assisted twin .50 in (12.7 mm) mount (42) or a manually operated twin .50 in (12.7 mm) mounting was installed at a depot before delivery to operational units. The L model was built at Willow Run and Consolidated's San Diego factory. (Total: 1,667)
 
B-24M-20-CO Bolivar Jr. 431st Bomb Squadron, 11th Bomb Group
B-24M
Improved B-24L with further weight-savings. The B-24M used a lighter version of the A-6B tail turret; the waist gunner positions were left open, and the retractable Sperry ventral ball turret was reintroduced. For better visibility from the flight deck, the windshield in Ford-built aircraft was replaced by a version with less framing from Block 20 onward. The B-24M became the last production model of the B-24 and many flew only from the factory to the scrap yard. (Total: 2,593)
XB-24N
A redesign of the B-24J, made to accommodate a single tail. It also featured an Emerson 128 ball turret in the nose and a stationary tail gunner's position. While 5,168 B-24Ns were ordered, the end of the war resulted in cancellation of all contracts before production could begin. Its single tail was said to be the inspiration for the PB4Y-2 Privateer's similar single fin/rudder tail design. (Total: one)
YB-24N
Pre-production service test version of the XB-24N. (Total: seven)
XB-24P
A modified B-24D, used by Sperry Gyroscope Company to test airborne fire control systems. (Total: one converted B-24D)
XB-24Q
A General Electric conversion of the B-24L. Used to test a radar-controlled tail turret intended for use in the Boeing B-47 Stratojet. (Total: one converted B-24L)
XB-41
With no fighters capable of escorting bombers on deep strike missions early in World War II, the Army authorized heavily armed bombers as "gunship" escorts, which resulted in both the B-17 derived YB-40 Flying Fortress gunship and its Liberator-derived XB-41 counterpart. The XB-41 had fourteen .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns, including a Bendix chin turret and a second Martin A-3 turret on the upper fuselage. One aircraft was completed in 1942. Performance was degraded drastically with the additional turrets and were unable to keep up with bomber formations, particularly when bombs had been dropped. Following testing in 1943 the project was canceled. (Total: one converted B-24D)
B-24ST
An experimental aircraft, The B-24ST (for Single Tail, an unofficial designation applied by Ford) was made by Ford by fitting a single fin an rudder onto a B-24D airframe. The aircraft was more stable and had better handling than other models and was used as the basis of the XB-24K.[11]
AT-22 or TB-24
C-87 used for flight engineer training.
  • RB-24L: Developed for training B-29 gunners on an identical remote gun system installed on a B-24L.
  • TB-24L: As with the RB-24L, but with additional radar equipment.
 
Experimental B-24J-15-CO with B-17G nose grafted on, with a chin turret, a modification not adopted for production
C-87 Liberator Express
Transports with accommodation for 20 passengers.
  • C-87A: VIP transports with R-1830-45 instead of -43 engines and sleeping berths for 16 passengers.
  • C-87B: Projected armed transport with nose guns, dorsal turret, and ventral tunnel gun; not produced.
  • C-87C: U.S. Army Air Force/Air Force designation for the RY-3.
XC-109/C-109
Tankers used to ferry fuel from India to China to support early B-29 raids against Japan.
XF-7
Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B-24D.
F-7
Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B-24H; -FO block.
F-7A
Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B-24J; three cameras in the nose and three in the bomb bay.
F-7B
Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B-24J; six cameras in the bomb bay.
BQ-8
A number of worn-out B-24D and B-24Js were converted as radio-controlled flying bombs to attack German targets. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. was killed in a BQ-8 during Operation Anvil.[54]

U.S. Navy nomenclature and sub-variants

PB4Y-1
U.S. Navy designation applied to 976 navalized B-24D, J, L and M models built at Consolidated's San Diego factory, as well as one North American-built B-24G. Later aircraft were equipped with an ERCO nose turret.[55]
PB4Y-1P
Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the PB4Y-1.
PB4Y-2 Privateer
A developed PB4Y with a large single fin, a lengthened fuselage and many other improvements and changes.
P5Y
Proposed twin-engined patrol version of PB4Y-1. Unbuilt.[56]
RY-1
U.S. Navy designation for the C-87A.
RY-2
U.S. Navy designation for the C-87.
RY-3
Transport variant of the PB4Y-2.
R2Y
Liberator Liner built using a new fuselage for the US Navy as an airliner with 48 seats

British Commonwealth nomenclature and sub-variants

 
Color photograph of an RAF B.Mk.II
Liberator C Mk.I
YB-24/LB-30A RAF direct purchase aircraft. (Total: 9) Unsuitable for combat, rebuilt as transports and used by BOAC between the UK and Canada, including transferring aircrew ferrying Lend-Lease aircraft.
Liberator B Mk.I
B-24A/LB-30B, RAF direct purchase aircraft. (Total: 20) Unsuitable for combat, some rebuilt for other roles.
Liberator GR Mk.I
Mk.I rebuilt as General Reconnaissance for anti-submarine patrol. Fitted with belly pannier with an additional four fixed forward firing 20 mm (0.787 in) Hispano cannon and ASV radar which included two underwing Yagi–Uda antennas and four large antenna "stickleback" masts above the rear fuselage.
Liberator B Mk.II
LB-30. First combat-ready Liberator. Modifications included a three-foot nose extension as well as a deeper aft fuselage and wider tailplane and self-sealing fuel tanks and armor. Built to British specifications with British equipment and Boulton Paul turrets, so there was no B-24 equivalent but similar to the B-24C. The top turret was further back on the fuselage compared to any US variant, and in line with the trailing edge of the wing. Except for the first aircraft (completed as a pattern but lost in a test flight), the rest were completed without armament, which the British fitted in the UK. With the American entry into the war, the USAAF requisitioned about 75, which it operated under Consolidated's LB-30 designation, but 23 were returned in 1943. (Total production: 165)
Liberator C Mk.II
Mk.II transport. Some B Mk.IIs were rebuilt as transports, including one as the personal transport of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, which was named 'Commando', which was later extensively rebuilt to C Mk.IX standard, with a single fin.
Liberator B Mk.III
B-24D with one nose .303 in (7.70 mm) Browning machine gun, two in each waist position, and four in a Boulton Paul tail turret similar to that used on the Handley Page Halifax. The Martin dorsal turret was retained. (Total: 156)
  • Liberator B Mk IIIA: Mk.III with American equipment and weapons.
Liberator GR Mk.III
Mk.III General Reconnaissance for RAF Coastal Command for anti-submarine role with radar (with Yagi–Uda antenna) and Leigh Light.
  • Liberator GR Mk IIIA: GR.III with American equipment and weapons.
 
RAF Coastal Command ASV Mk.II-equipped Liberator GR.III of No. 120 Squadron RAF
Liberator B Mk.IV
Unused designation reserved for B-24E.
Liberator B Mk.V
B-24D bomber with more fuel but less armor, armed as per Mk.III.
Liberator GR Mk.V
General Reconnaissance Mk.V for RAF Coastal Command for anti-submarine role with radar (some mounted under the nose) and Leigh Light. Some fitted with eight zero-length rocket launchers, four on each wing, with others being fitted with stub-wings either side of the lower forward fuselage to hold eight RP-3 rails.
Liberator B Mk.VI
B-24H bomber with nose turret, and Boulton Paul tail turret and retaining the rest of their armament.
Liberator GR Mk.VI
B-24G/H/J RAF Coastal Command anti-submarine patrol. Some had top turret removed in service, and early examples had Yagi–Uda antenna on older greenhouse nose.
Liberator C Mk.VI/C Mk.VIT
Mk.VI converted as a cargo aircraft.
Liberator C Mk.VII
RAF C-87 transport.
Liberator B Mk.VIII
RAF B-24J bomber.
Liberator GR Mk.VIII
Mk.VIII for RAF Coastal Command anti-submarine patrol. Some had top turret removed in service, and belly turret replaced with semi-recessed radar dome.
Liberator C Mk.VIII
Mk.VIII converted as a cargo aircraft.
Liberator C Mk.IX
RAF RY-3/C-87C transport with a single fin replacing the twin fins on most Liberator versions.

Late in the war RAF Liberator aircraft modified in England for use in South East Asia had the suffix "Snake" stenciled below the serial number to give them priority delivery through the Mediterranean and the Middle East.[57]

Operators

Accidents and incidents

Surviving aircraft

Specifications (B-24J)

 
3-view line drawing of the Consolidated B-24 Liberator

Data from Quest for Performance,[58] Jane's Fighting aircraft of World War II,[59] General Dynamics aircraft and their predecessors[60]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 11 (pilot, co-pilot, navigator, bombardier, radio operator, nose turret, top turret, 2 waist gunners, ball turret, tail gunner)
  • Length: 67 ft 2 in (20.47 m)
  • Wingspan: 110 ft (34 m)
  • Height: 17 ft 7.5 in (5.372 m)
  • Wing area: 1,048 sq ft (97.4 m2)
  • Aspect ratio: 11.55
  • Zero-lift drag coefficient: CD0.0406
  • Frontal area: 42.54 sq ft (3.952 m2)
  • Airfoil: root: Davis (22%); tip: Davis (9.3%)[61]
  • Empty weight: 36,500 lb (16,556 kg)
  • Gross weight: 55,000 lb (24,948 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 65,000 lb (29,484 kg) plus
  • Fuel capacity: 2,344 US gal (1,952 imp gal; 8,870 L) normal capacity; 3,614 US gal (3,009 imp gal; 13,680 L) with long-range tanks in the bomb bay; Oil capacity 131.6 US gal (109.6 imp gal; 498 L) in four self-sealing nacelle hopper tanks
  • Powerplant: 4 × Pratt & Whitney R-1830-35 Twin Wasp, R-1830-41 or R-1830-65 14-cylinder two-row air-cooled turbo-supercharged radial piston engines, 1,200 hp (890 kW) each
  • Propellers: 3-bladed Hamilton Standard, 11 ft 7 in (3.53 m) diameter constant-speed fully-feathering propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 297 mph (478 km/h, 258 kn) at 25,000 ft (7,600 m)
  • Cruise speed: 215 mph (346 km/h, 187 kn)
  • Stall speed: 95 mph (153 km/h, 83 kn)
  • Range: 1,540 mi (2,480 km, 1,340 nmi) at 237 mph (206 kn; 381 km/h) and 25,000 ft (7,600 m) with normal fuel and maximum internal bomb load
  • Ferry range: 3,700 mi (6,000 km, 3,200 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 28,000 ft (8,500 m)
  • Rate of climb: 1,025 ft/min (5.21 m/s)
  • Time to altitude: 20,000 ft (6,100 m) in 25 minutes
  • Lift-to-drag: 12.9
  • Wing loading: 52.5 lb/sq ft (256 kg/m2)
  • Power/mass: 0.0873 hp/lb (0.1435 kW/kg)

Armament

  • Guns: 10 × .50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns in 4 turrets and two waist positions
  • Bombs:
    • Short range (400 mi [640 km]): 8,000 pounds (3,600 kg)
    • Long range (800 mi [1,300 km]): 5,000 pounds (2,300 kg)
    • Very long range (1,200 mi [1,900 km]): 2,700 pounds (1,200 kg)

Notable B-24 crewmen

  • Robert Altman, film director, was a B-24 co-pilot, flying over 50 bombing missions in Borneo and the Dutch East Indies.
  • William Charles Anderson, author of BAT-21 and Bomber Crew 369, piloted Liberators based in Italy as a member of the 451st Bomb Group of the 15th AF.
  • Chuck Bednarik, NFL Hall of Fame member, former Philadelphia Eagle and the last full-time two-way player, served as a B-24 waist-gunner with the Eighth Air Force 467th Bomb Group. Bednarik participated in 30 combat missions over Germany as a S/Sgt and eventually attained the rank of First Lieutenant. Bednarik was awarded the Air Medal and four Oak Leaf Clusters, the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal and four Battle Stars.
  • Hal Clement, science fiction author, was a pilot and copilot on B-24s and flew 35 combat missions over Europe with the 68th Bomb Squadron, 44th Bomb Group, based in England with Eighth Air Force.
  • Ernest K. Gann, early airline pilot and author, flew C-87 Cargo Express aircraft in Southern Asia and China, including flying cargo over "The Hump". He detailed his flying experiences in Fate is the Hunter.
  • Don Herbert, television pioneer "Mr. Wizard", flew 56 missions as a Liberator pilot over northern Italy, Germany, and Yugoslavia, winning the Distinguished Flying Cross.
  • Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., elder brother of U.S. President John F. Kennedy, was killed in Operation Anvil when his PB4Y-1 Liberator, modified to be a remote-controlled bomb, exploded in flight.
  • Ben Kuroki, top turret gunner, was the only Japanese-American in the United States Army Air Forces to serve in combat operations in the Pacific theater of World War II.
  • Walter Matthau, actor, was a radioman and nose gunner in the 453rd Bomb Group[62]
  • George McGovern, U.S. Senator and 1972 presidential candidate, served as a B-24 pilot on his plane, Dakota Queen, in missions over Germany from Cerignola, Italy, as a member of the 455th Bomb Group of the Fifteenth Air Force. His wartime exploits and some of the characteristics of the B-24 are the focus of Stephen Ambrose's book The Wild Blue.
  • Actor Jimmy Stewart flew B-24s as commanding officer of the 703rd Bomber Squadron, 445th Bombardment Group, out of RAF Tibenham, UK. (He was later promoted to operations officer of the 453rd BG.) From 1943 to 1944, Stewart was credited with 20 combat missions as a pilot, including one over Berlin. Stewart flew several (possibly as many as 20) additional uncredited missions, filling in for pilots as duties and space would allow. Stewart's leadership qualities were highly regarded; the men who served under him praised his coolness under fire. He entered service as a private in early 1941 and rose to the rank of colonel by 1945.
  • Flying Officer Lloyd Trigg VC (1914-1943), New Zealand pilot in the RNZAF, died during a successful attack on a German U-boat off West Africa. His medal was uniquely awarded solely on the recommendation of the enemy captain and other eyewitnesses.
  • Stewart Udall, author, conservationist, U.S. Representative, and Secretary of Interior, served as a waist gunner on a B-24 in 1944. He was based in Southern Italy; 15th Army AF, 454th Bombardment Group. His Liberator's nickname was "Flyin' Home". He is credited with 50 missions. The 454th received a Unit Citation for leading an attack on the Hermann Goering Steel Works in Linz, Austria on 25 July 1944. Udall's crew suffered one casualty on the mission. The dead crew member was serving at the waist-gunner position normally manned by Udall; by chance, the pilot assigned Udall to the nose gun for this mission, saving his life.
  • Jim Wright, former Speaker of the House, served as a B-24 bombardier in the Pacific. He recounted his experience in his book The Flying Circus: Pacific War – 1943 – as Seen Through a Bombsight.
  • Louis Zamperini, Olympic runner, and later war prisoner and hero, served as a bombardier on two B-24s. The first, "Super Man", was damaged, and the crew was assigned to B-24D "Green Hornet" to conduct search and rescue. On 27 May 1943, the aircraft crashed into the Pacific Ocean. Eight of the 11 crewmembers were killed. Zamperini, pilot Russell A. Phillips, and Francis McNamara survived the crash. Only Zamperini and Phillips survived their 47 days adrift on a life raft on the sea.[63] Zamperini is the subject of two biographies and the 2014 film Unbroken.

Notable appearances in media

  • The book One Damned Island After Another (1946) contains the official history of the 7th Bomber Command of the Seventh Air Force. It describes B-24 operations in the Central Pacific. B-24s from the Seventh Air Force were the first B-24s to bomb the Japanese home islands.
  • Authors Cassius Mullen and Betty Byron wrote the story of the first American heavy bomber crew to complete a 25-mission combat tour in the European Theater during World War II. The book Before the Belle (2015) tells the story of Capt Robert Shannon and his aircraft, which completed a combat tour only to be lost in an accident while transporting Lt Gen Frank Maxwell Andrews back to Washington on 3 May 1943.[64]
  • Laura Hillenbrand's Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption (2010) tells the story of B-24D bombardier Louis Zamperini and how he survived crashing in the Pacific, being adrift on the ocean for 47 days, and then more than two years in Japanese POW camps.[65]
  • Damnyankee: A WWII Story of Tragedy and Survival off the West of Ireland by Thomas L. Walsh (2009) tells the story of a US Navy PB4Y-1 (B-24 Liberator) submarine patrol bomber that ditched off the west coast of Ireland in 1944; five of the ten crew survived 33 hours adrift in a seething North Atlantic storm before drifting ashore in Clifden, County Galway, Ireland.[66]
  • The Sinking of the Laconia depicts the Laconia Incident and a B-24's attempts to sink the German submarine U-156.
  • Shady Lady: Mission Accomplished, Running on Empty (2012) tells the true story of the USAAF's B-24D Shady Lady,. It was one of 11 planes that took off from Darwin, Australia, on Friday, 13 August 1943, to bomb a Japanese oil refinery at Balikpapan, Borneo, a distance of more than 1,300 miles. This mission was the longest overwater bombing mission up to that time.[67]

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

Notes

  1. ^ Quote: "One of the primary reasons we decided to go with the 'A' model, vs the LB-30, was that this airplane was originally a B-24A."[53]

Citations

  1. ^ Bhargava, Kapil, Group Captain (ret'd). "India's Reclaimed B-24 Bombers". 12 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine bharat-rakshak.com. Retrieved: 16 June 2010.
  2. ^ Munson, Kenneth, "Bombers 1939-45, Patrol and Transport Aircraft", Macmillan Publishing Company, Inc., New York, Blandford Press Ltd., 1969, LCCN 77-92035, page 156.
  3. ^ Birdsall (1968). Famous Aircraft: The B-24 Liberator.
  4. ^ "The Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress vs. the Consolidated B-24 Liberator". warfarehistorynetwork.com. 30 June 2017.
  5. ^ Taylor 1969, p. 462.
  6. ^ Vincenti, Walter G. (1986), "The Davis Wing and the Problem of Airfoil Design: Uncertainty and Growth in Engineering Knowledge", Technology and Culture, 27 (4): 717–758, doi:10.2307/3105326, JSTOR 3105326, S2CID 112031158
  7. ^ a b Baugher, Joe. "The Consolidated XB-24." USAAC/USAAF/USAF Bombers: The Consolidated B-24 Liberator, 8 August 1999. Retrieved: 15 June 2010.
  8. ^ Craven and Cate 1949[page needed]
  9. ^ a b c d e f Simons, Graham M. (2012). Consolidated B-24 Liberator. Barnsley, UK: Pen & Sword. pp. 40–42. ISBN 9781848846449.
  10. ^ "Consolidated XB-24K Liberator".
  11. ^ a b c Consolidated page at Aerofiles.com retrieved 23 October 2013
  12. ^ Simons, G. (2012). Liberator: The Consolidated B-24. Pen & Sword Books Limited. ISBN 978-1-78303-591-5.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Allan, Chuck. "A Brief History of the 44th Bomb Group."chuckallan.com. Retrieved: 15 June 2010. 8 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Hillenbrand 2010[page needed]
  15. ^ Green 1975, p. 84.
  16. ^ Hillenbrand 2010, p. 64.
  17. ^ Donald 1997, p. 266.
  18. ^ Birdsall 1968, p. 40.
  19. ^ a b Taylor 1968, p. 463.
  20. ^ Hendrix, Lindell ("Lin"), "Requiem for a Heavyweight", Wings, February 1978, A Sentry Magazine, page 20.
  21. ^ Byrne, John A., The Whiz Kids: The Founding Fathers of American Business and the Legacy They Left Us, Currency Doubleday, Page 50
  22. ^ March 1998, p. 63.
  23. ^ Smith, Harry V. et al. "Escape from Siam." 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine rquirk.com. Retrieved: 27 May 2015.
  24. ^ Green 1975, p. 85.
  25. ^ Winchester 2004, p. 57.
  26. ^ Giorgerini, Giorgio (2002). Uomini sul fondo : storia del sommergibilismo italiano dalle origini a oggi. Milano: Mondadori. pp. 518–20. ISBN 8804505370.
  27. ^ The Secret War, by Brian Johnson, Pen And Sword Military Classics, 1978, ISBN 1-84415-102-6
  28. ^ Garner, Forest. "The Consolidated B-24 Liberator." uboat.net. Retrieved: 16 August 2012.
  29. ^ Lord 1967, p. 279.
  30. ^ Levine 1992, pp. 14–15.
  31. ^ Weal 2006, p. 16.
  32. ^ Reynolds, George. "The AZON Project." 6 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine 458bg.com, Retrieved: 25 December 2014.
  33. ^ Marion. "Old China Hands, Tales & Stories – The Azon Bomb." 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine oldchinahands. Retrieved: 20 March 2012.
  34. ^ Freeman 1984, p. 176.
  35. ^ Parnell 1993, pp. inside cover, p. 91.
  36. ^ Consolidated C-109
  37. ^ Baugher, Joe. "Consolidated C-109". USAAC/USAAF/USAF Bombers: The Consolidated B-24 Liberator, 16 August 1999. Retrieved: 15 June 2010.
  38. ^ Autry, Gene with Herskowitz, Mickey. (1978). Back in the Saddle Again. Doubleday & Company, Inc. ISBN 038503234X Page 85
  39. ^ RAAF Museum website A72 Avro Lincoln Retrieved 1 May 2016
  40. ^ "Indian Ocean – New Guinea – Kangaroo Service – 1950–1946." Flight Global website, 16 November 1950. Retrieved: 29 August 2009.
  41. ^ Isemonger, L.
  42. ^ Gilman and Clive 1978, p. 314.
  43. ^ a b c "Istoria unui B 24 Liberator "românesc"". iar80flyagain.org (in Romanian). 16 March 2023.
  44. ^ Gordon 2008, p. 479.
  45. ^ St. John, Philip A. (1990). The Liberator Legend: The Plane and the People. Turner Publishing Company. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-938021-99-5.
  46. ^ Johnsen, Frederick (1996). Consolidated B-24 Liberator – Warbird Tech Vol. 1. Specialty Press. ISBN 978-1580070546.
  47. ^ Francillon 1988, p.26
  48. ^ Francillon 1988, p.580
  49. ^ a b Peck, Merton J. & Scherer, Frederic M. The Weapons Acquisition Process: An Economic Analysis (1962) Harvard Business School p.619
  50. ^ a b Nolan, Jenny. "Michigan History: Willow Run and the Arsenal of Democracy." Archived 4 December 2012 at archive.today The Detroit News, 28 January 1997. Retrieved: 7 August 2010.
  51. ^ Wegg 1990, pp. 82–83.
  52. ^ Dorr and Lake 2002, p. 129.
  53. ^ "Ol 927: CAF's B-24A Liberator." 16 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Warbird Digest, Issue 15, July–August 2007, pp. 17–30.
  54. ^ Andrade 1979, p. 60.
  55. ^ Baugher, Joe. "Consolidated PB4Y-1." USAAC/USAAF/USAF Bombers: The Consolidated B-24 Liberator, 18 August 1999. Retrieved: 15 June 2010.
  56. ^ Wegg 1990, p. 90.
  57. ^ Robertson 1998
  58. ^ Loftin, L.K. Jr. (1985), Quest for Performance: The Evolution of Modern Aircraft. NASA SP-468, NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch, retrieved 22 April 2006
  59. ^ Bridgman, Leonard, ed. (1989). Jane's Fighting aircraft of World War II (1995 ed.). New York: Military Press. pp. 215–216. ISBN 0517679647.
  60. ^ Wegg, John (1990). General Dynamics aircraft and their predecessors (1st ed.). Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press. pp. 82–90. ISBN 0-87021-233-8.
  61. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  62. ^ "Walter Matthau". The Telegraph. 3 July 2000. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  63. ^ Hillenbrand 2010[page needed]
  64. ^ Mullen, Cassius; Byron, Betty (2015). Before the Belle. Page Publishing Inc. ISBN 978-1-68213-622-5.
  65. ^ Margolick, David. "Zamperini’s War." The New York Times, 19 November 2010.
  66. ^ "'Damnyankee'." amazon.com. Retrieved: 4 February 2013.
  67. ^ "B-24D-53-CO "Shady Lady" Serial Number 42-40369". pacificwrecks.com. Retrieved: 26 June 2016.

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  • Taylor, John W. R. "Consolidated B-24/PB4 Y Liberator." Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1969. ISBN 0-425-03633-2.
  • Wagner, Ray. American Combat Planes. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1968. ISBN 0-385-04134-9.
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External links

consolidated, liberator, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, american, heavy, bomber, designed, consolidated, aircraft, diego, california, known, within, company, model, some, initial, production, aircraft, were, laid, down, export, models, designate. B 24 redirects here For other uses see B 24 disambiguation The Consolidated B 24 Liberator is an American heavy bomber designed by Consolidated Aircraft of San Diego California It was known within the company as the Model 32 and some initial production aircraft were laid down as export models designated as various LB 30s in the Land Bomber design category B 24 LiberatorUnited States Army Air Forces Consolidated B 24D Liberator over Maxwell Field AlabamaRole Heavy bomber Anti submarine warfare Maritime patrol aircraftManufacturer Consolidated AircraftFirst flight 29 December 1939Introduction 1941Retired 1968 Indian Air Force 1 Primary users United States Army Air ForcesUnited States Navy Royal Air Force Royal Australian Air ForceProduced 1940 1945Number built 18 188 2 Variants Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer Consolidated C 87 Liberator Express Consolidated Liberator IDeveloped into Consolidated R2Y Consolidated B 32 DominatorAt its inception the B 24 was a modern design featuring a highly efficient shoulder mounted high aspect ratio Davis wing The wing gave the Liberator a high cruise speed long range and the ability to carry a heavy bomb load In comparison with its contemporaries the B 24 was relatively difficult to fly and had poor low speed performance it also had a lower ceiling and was less robust than the Boeing B 17 Flying Fortress While aircrews tended to prefer the B 17 General Staff favored the B 24 and procured it in huge numbers for a wide variety of roles 3 4 At approximately 18 500 units including 8 685 manufactured by Ford Motor Company it holds records as the world s most produced bomber heavy bomber multi engine aircraft and American military aircraft in history The B 24 was used extensively in World War II where it served in every branch of the American armed forces as well as several Allied air forces and navies It saw use in every theater of operations Along with the B 17 the B 24 was the mainstay of the US strategic bombing campaign in the Western European theater Due to its range it proved useful in bombing operations in the Pacific including the bombing of Japan Long range anti submarine Liberators played an instrumental role in closing the Mid Atlantic gap in the Battle of the Atlantic The C 87 transport derivative served as a longer range higher capacity counterpart to the Douglas C 47 Skytrain By the end of World War II the technological breakthroughs of the Boeing B 29 Superfortress and other modern types had surpassed the bombers that served from the start of the war The B 24 was rapidly phased out of U S service although the PB4Y 2 Privateer maritime patrol derivative carried on in service with the U S Navy in the Korean War Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Initial specifications 1 2 Design 1 3 Armament 1 4 Prototypes and service evaluation 1 5 Flying the B 24 2 Operational history 2 1 RAF 2 2 Antisubmarine and maritime patrols 2 3 USAAF 2 3 1 Introduction to service 1941 1942 2 3 2 Strategic bombing 1942 1945 2 3 3 Radar Electronic warfare and PGM deployment 2 3 4 Assembly ships 2 3 5 Carpetbaggers 2 4 Transport variants 2 4 1 C 87 Liberator Express 2 4 2 C 109 version 2 5 U S Navy and U S Marine Corps 2 5 1 PB4Y 1 2 6 Australia 2 6 1 RAAF 2 6 2 Qantas 2 7 SAAF 2 8 Luftwaffe use 2 9 Romanian use 2 10 Soviet use 2 11 Chinese use 3 Production 4 Variants 4 1 U S Army Air Forces variants 4 2 U S Navy nomenclature and sub variants 4 3 British Commonwealth nomenclature and sub variants 5 Operators 6 Accidents and incidents 7 Surviving aircraft 8 Specifications B 24J 9 Notable B 24 crewmen 10 Notable appearances in media 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Citations 12 3 Bibliography 13 External linksDesign and development nbsp XB 24 in flightInitial specifications The Liberator originated from a United States Army Air Corps USAAC request in 1938 for Consolidated to produce the B 17 under license After company executives including President Reuben Fleet visited the Boeing factory in Seattle Washington Consolidated decided instead to submit a more modern design of its own 5 The new Model 32 combined designer David R Davis s wing a high efficiency airfoil design created by unorthodox means 6 with the twin tail design from the Consolidated Model 31 flying boat together on a new fuselage This new fuselage was intentionally designed around twin bomb bays each one being the same size and capacity of the B 17 bomb bays In January 1939 the USAAC under Specification C 212 formally invited Consolidated 7 to submit a design study for a bomber with longer range higher speed and greater ceiling than the B 17 The specification was written such that the Model 32 would automatically be the winning design The program was run under the umbrella group Project A an Air Corps requirement for an intercontinental bomber that had been conceived in the mid 1930s Although the B 24 did not meet Project A goals it was a step in that direction Project A led to the development of the Boeing B 29 and Consolidated s own B 32 and B 36 8 Design The B 24 had a shoulder mounted high aspect ratio Davis wing This wing was highly efficient allowing a relatively high airspeed and long range Compared to the B 17 it had a 6 feet 1 8 m larger wingspan but a lower wing area This gave the B 24 a 35 percent higher wing loading The relatively thick wing held the promise of increased tankage while delivering increased lift and speed but it became unpleasant to fly when committed to heavier loadings as experienced at high altitude and in bad weather The Davis wing was also more susceptible to ice formation than contemporary designs causing distortions of the aerofoil section and resulting in the loss of lift with unpleasant experiences drawing such comments as The Davis wing won t hold enough ice to chill your drink 9 The wing was also more susceptible to damage than the B 17 s wing making the aircraft less able to absorb battle damage citation needed The wing carried four supercharged Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 35 Twin Wasp engines mounted in cowlings borrowed from the PBY Catalina similar except for being oval in cross section allowing for oil coolers mounted on each side of the engine that turned 3 bladed variable pitch propellers The tailplane featured two large oval vertical stabilizers mounted at the ends of a rectangular horizontal stabilizer As early as 1942 it was recognized that the Liberator s handling and stability could be improved by the use of a single vertical fin The single fin was tested by Ford on a single B 24ST variant and an experimental XB 24K it was found to improve handling However all Liberators were produced with twin oval fins with the exception of eight preproduction B 24N aircraft The B 24N was intended as a major production variant featuring a single tail Over 5000 orders for this version were placed in 1945 but they were cancelled due to the end of the war The single fin did appear in production on the PB4Y Privateer derivative 10 11 12 The B 24 s spacious slab sided fuselage which earned the aircraft the nickname Flying Boxcar 13 was built around two central bomb bays that could accommodate up to 8 000 pounds 3 600 kg of ordnance in each compartment but rarely did as this decreased range and altitude The forward and aft bomb bay compartments were further split longitudinally with a centerline ventral catwalk just nine inches 23 cm wide 14 which also functioned as the fuselage s structural keel beam An unusual four panel set of all metal tambour panel roller type bomb bay doors which operated very much like the movable enclosure of a rolltop desk retracted into the fuselage These types of doors created a minimum of aerodynamic drag to keep speed high over the target area they also allowed the bomb bays to be opened while on the ground since the low ground clearance prevented the use of normal bomb bay doors 15 The occasional need during a mission for crewmen to move from fore to aft within the B 24 s fuselage over the narrow catwalk was a drawback shared with other bomber designs The Liberator carried a crew of up to ten The pilot and co pilot sat alongside each other in a well glazed cockpit The navigator and bombardier who could also double as a nose or wiggly ear gunners guns mounted in the sides of the aircraft nose sat in the nose fronted on the pre B 24H models with a well framed greenhouse nose with some two dozen glazed panels and with two flexible ball mounts built into it for forward defensive firepower using 30 caliber 7 62 mm Browning M1919 machine guns later versions were fitted with a powered twin 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine gun nose turret The radio radar operator sat behind the pilots facing sideways and sometimes doubled as a waist gunner The flight engineer sat adjacent to the radio operator behind the pilots he operated the upper gun turret when fitted located just behind the cockpit and in front of the wing Up to four crew members could be located in the waist operating waist guns a retractable lower ball turret gun and a tail gun turret matching the nose turret The waist gun hatches were provided with doors The ball turret was required to be retractable for ground clearance when preparing to land as well as for greater aerodynamic efficiency The tail gunner s powered twin gun turret was located at the end of the tail behind the tailplane The B 24 featured a tricycle undercarriage the first American bomber to do so 9 with the main gear extending out of the wing on long single oleo strut legs It used differential braking and differential thrust for ground steering which made taxiing difficult 16 Armament This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The defensive armament of the B 24 varied from transport variants which were usually unarmed to bombers armed with up to ten 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine guns located in turrets and waist gun positions Early model Liberators were fitted with a top mounted turret a tail turret and single machine guns located in the waist and in the glazed nose The B 24D initially featured upper belly and tail turrets plus swiveling single guns in the waist and on either side of the nose The belly turret was a periscopically sighted Bendix model The turret proved unsatisfactory and was soon replaced by a tunnel gun which was itself omitted Later D models were fitted with the retractable Sperry ball turret The B 24H saw the replacement of the glazed green house nose with a nose turret which reduced the B 24s vulnerability to head on attacks The bombsight was located below the turret Long range naval patrol versions often carried a light defensive armament Being on long distance patrols they generally flew outside the range of enemy fighters Also the necessity of range increased the importance of weight and aerodynamic efficiency Thus naval patrol often omitted top belly and nose turrets Some were fitted with a belly pack containing fixed forward facing cannon Prototypes and service evaluation This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The U S Army Air Corps awarded a contract for the prototype XB 24 in March 1939 with the requirement that one example should be ready before the end of the year Consolidated finished the prototype and had it ready for its first flight two days before the end of 1939 The design was simple in concept but nevertheless advanced for its time Consolidated incorporated innovative features such as a tricycle landing gear and Davis wing Compared to the B 17 the proposed Model 32 had a shorter fuselage and 25 less wing area but had a 6 ft 1 8 m greater wingspan and a substantially larger carrying capacity as well as a distinctive twin tail Whereas the B 17 used 9 cylinder Wright R 1820 Cyclone engines the Consolidated design used twin row 14 cylinder Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 Twin Wasp radials of 1 000 hp 750 kW The maximum takeoff weight was one of the highest of the period The new design would be the first American heavy bomber in production to use tricycle landing gear the North American B 25 Mitchell medium bomber s predecessor the NA 40 introduced this feature in January 1939 with the Consolidated Model 32 having long thin wings with the efficient Davis high aspect ratio design also used on the projected Model 31 twin engined commercial flying boat 17 promising to provide maximum fuel efficiency Wind tunnel testing and experimental programs using an existing Consolidated Model 31 provided extensive data on the flight characteristics of the Davis airfoil 18 Early orders placed before the XB 24 had flown included 36 for the USAAC 120 for the French Air Force and 164 for the Royal Air Force RAF The name Liberator was originally given to it by the RAF and subsequently adopted by the USAAF as the official name for the Model 24 19 When France fell in 1940 their aircraft were re directed to the RAF One outcome of the British and French purchasing commissions was a backlog of orders amounting to 680m of which 400m was foreign orders US official statistics indicating tooling plant and expansion advanced the previously anticipated volume of US aircraft production by up to a year A consequence of the British orders went beyond requests for specific modifications as the RAF accepted some designs while rejecting others American production was to some extent re directed along specific lines that accorded with British doctrine the B 24 s capacious bomb bay and ability to carry 8 000 lb ordnance a case in point 9 After initial testing the XB 24 was found to be deficient in several areas One major failure of the prototype was that it failed to meet the top speed requirements specified in the contract As built the XB 24 top speed was only 273 mph instead of the specified 311 mph As a result the mechanically supercharged Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 33s were replaced with the turbo supercharged R 1830s Additionally the tail span was widened by 2 ft 0 61 m and the pitot static probes were relocated from the wings to the fuselage The XB 24 was then re designated XB 24B these changes became standard on all B 24s built starting with the B 24C model nbsp An early B 24DIn April 1939 the USAAC initially ordered seven YB 24 under CAC contract 12464 The US policy at the time despite neutrality was that American requirements could be deferred while its Allies could immediately put US production into the war effort The added advantage was the American types could be assessed in the European war zone earlier Thus the first six YB 24 were released for direct purchase under CAC contract F 677 on 9 November 1940 These aircraft were redesignated LB 30A The seventh aircraft was used by Consolidated and the USAAC to test armor installations as well as self sealing fuel tanks Initially these aircraft were to be given USAAC serials 39 681 to 39 687 Due to deferments of the US requirements the US purchase was twice postponed and the serial numbers were changed to 40 696 to 40 702 When the RAF purchased the first six YB 24 aircraft the serial numbers were reassigned to an early batch of B 24D funded by the deferment Flying the B 24 Lindell Hendrix later a test pilot for Republic Aviation flew B 24s for the Eighth Air Force 20 Hendrix preferred the B 24 to the B 17 In Eighth Air Force combat configuration the aircraft carried 8 000 pounds 3 600 kg of bombs It could manage an altitude of no more than 25 000 ft 7 600 m three or four thousand feet less than a B 17 but it flew 10 15 mph 16 24 km h faster Its lower altitude made it more vulnerable to flak Hendrix figured that Germans understood it was easier to hit and that it carried more bombs It was necessary when flying the B 24 to get on step This meant climbing to about 500 ft 150 m above cruise altitude levelling off achieving a cruise speed of 165 170 mph 266 274 km h then descending to assigned altitude Failing to do this meant that the B 24 flew slightly nose high and it used more fuel The Davis wing made the B 24 sensitive to weight distribution Hendrix claimed that a lightly loaded B 24 could out turn a P 38 Lightning A heavily loaded B 24 was difficult to fly at speeds of less than 160 mph 260 km h The B 24 s controls were heavy especially if the control rigging was not properly tensioned B 24s leaked fuel Crews flew with the bomb bay doors slightly open to dissipate potentially explosive fumes Hendrix did not permit smoking on his B 24 even though he was a smoker Chain smoker Tex Thornton then in command of the US Army Air Corps Statistical Control flew across the Atlantic in a B 24 and was not permitted to smoke Thornton s Statistical Control group demonstrated that Eighth Air Force B 24s were taking lower casualties than B 17s because they were being given shorter safer missions The B 17s actually delivered more bombs to the target than B 24s 21 Operational historyRAF nbsp Consolidated LB 30A s n AM260 used by Atlantic Ferry CommandThe first British Liberators had been ordered by the Anglo French Purchasing Board in 1940 After the Fall of France the French orders were in most cases transferred to the United Kingdom The RAF found as did the US that global war increased the need for air transports and early type bombers and seaplanes were converted or completed as cargo carriers and transports LB 30As were assigned to transatlantic flights by RAF Ferry Command between Canada and Prestwick Scotland The first Liberators in British service were ex USAAF YB 24s converted to Liberator GR Is USAAF designation LB 30A The aircraft were all modified for logistic use in Montreal Changes included the removal of all armament provision for passenger seating a revised cabin oxygen and heating system Ferry Command s Atlantic Return Ferry Service flew civilian ferry pilots who had delivered aircraft to the UK back to North America citation needed The most important role however for the first batch of the Liberator GR Is was in service with RAF Coastal Command on anti submarine patrols in the Battle of the Atlantic 22 nbsp LB 30A YB 24 in RAF serviceLater in 1941 the first Liberators entered RAF service This model introduced self sealing fuel tanks a 2 ft 7 in 79 cm plug in the forward fuselage to create more space for crew members and more vitally ever more equipment such as ASV Mark II radar anticipated early in the Liberator s development when Reuben Fleet told the engineering team he had a gut feeling the nose was too short The Mark II was the first Liberator to be equipped with powered turrets one plane having them installed before leaving San Diego the remainder having them installed in the field four Browning Boulton Paul A type Mk IV with 600 rounds of 303 in the dorsal position and a Boulton Paul E type Mk II with 2200 rounds in the tail later increased to 2500 rounds supplemented by pairs of guns at the waist position a single gun in the nose and another in the belly for a total of fourteen guns The maximum take off weight was slightly raised to 64 250 pounds the maximum altitude lifted from 21 200 to 24 000 feet but the maximum speed was reduced to 263 mph largely as a result of increased drag 9 The Liberator II referred to as the LB 30A by the USAAF 19 were divided between Coastal Command Bomber Command and British Overseas Airways Corporation BOAC Both BOAC and the RAF used converted Liberator IIs as unarmed long range cargo carriers These aircraft flew between the United Kingdom and Egypt with an extensive detour around Spain over the Atlantic and they were used in the evacuation of Java in the East Indies BOAC also flew trans Atlantic services and other various long range air transportation routes nbsp Consolidated Liberator Mk I of 120 Squadron Coastal Command RAF used from December 1941Two RAF bomber squadrons with Liberators were deployed to the Middle East in early 1942 While RAF Bomber Command did not use B 24s as strategic bombers over mainland North West Europe No 223 Squadron RAF one of Bomber Command s 100 Bomber Support Group squadrons used 20 Liberator VIs to carry electronic jamming equipment to counter German radar In October 1944 two RAF Liberator squadrons 357 and 358 were deployed to Jessore India in support of British SAS American OSS and French SIS underground operations throughout SE Asia The aircraft were stripped of most armaments to allow for fuel for up to 26 hour return flights such as Jessore to Singapore 23 Liberators were also used as anti submarine patrol aircraft by RAF Coastal Command RAF Liberators were also operated as bombers from India by SEAC and would have been a part of Tiger Force if the war had continued Many of the surviving Liberators originated in this Command Antisubmarine and maritime patrols nbsp AAF Antisubmarine Command AAFAC modifications at the Consolidated Vultee Plant Fort Worth Texas in the foreground in the olive drab and white paint scheme To the rear of this front line are partly assembled C 87 Liberator Express Transports nbsp Anti Submarine Weapons Leigh light used for spotting U boats on the surface at night fitted to a Liberator aircraft of Royal Air Force Coastal Command 26 February 1944 The Liberators made a significant contribution to Allied victory in the Battle of the Atlantic against German U boats Aircraft had the ability to undertake surprise air attacks against surfaced submarines Liberators assigned to the RAF s Coastal Command in 1941 offensively to patrol against submarines in the eastern Atlantic Ocean produced immediate results The introduction of Very Long Range VLR Liberators vastly increased the reach of the UK s maritime reconnaissance force closing the Mid Atlantic Gap where a lack of air cover had allowed U boats to operate without risk of aerial attack 24 25 For 12 months No 120 Squadron RAF of Coastal Command with its handful of worn and modified early model Liberators supplied the only air cover for convoys in the Atlantic Gap the Liberator being the only airplane with sufficient range The VLR Liberators sacrificed some armor and often gun turrets to save weight while carrying extra aviation gasoline in their bomb bay tanks Liberators were equipped with ASV Mk II radar which together with the Leigh light gave them the ability to hunt U boats by day and by night Before the Leigh Light not a single enemy submarine had been sunk in over five months but in combination with radar it was so overwhelmingly effective that many German submarine crews chose to surface during the day so that they could at least see the aircraft attacking them and have a chance to fire their anti aircraft weaponry in defense 26 27 These Liberators operated from both sides of the Atlantic with the Royal Canadian Air Force and the Army Air Forces Antisubmarine Command and later the US Navy conducting patrols along all three American coasts and the Canal Zone The RAF and later American patrols ranged from the east based in Northern Ireland Scotland Iceland and beginning in mid 1943 from the Azores This role was dangerous especially after many U boats were armed with extra anti aircraft guns some adopting the policy of staying on the surface to fight rather than submerging and risking being sunk by aerial weapons such as rockets gunfire torpedoes and depth charges from the bombers American Liberators flew from Nova Scotia Greenland the Azores Bermuda the Bahamas Puerto Rico Cuba Panama Trinidad Ascension Island and from wherever else they could fly far out over the Atlantic The sudden and decisive turning of the Battle of the Atlantic in favor of the Allies in May 1943 was the result of many factors The gradual arrival of many more VLR and in October PB4Y navalized Liberators for anti submarine missions over the Mid Atlantic gap black pit and the Bay of Biscay was an important contribution to the Allies greater success Liberators were credited in full or in part with sinking 93 U boats 28 The B 24 was vital for missions of a radius less than 1 000 mi 1 600 km in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters where U S Navy PB4Y 1s and USAAF SB 24s took a heavy toll of enemy submarines and surface combatants and shipping USAAF nbsp B 24s bomb the Ploiești oil fields in August 1943 Introduction to service 1941 1942 The United States Army Air Forces USAAF took delivery of its first B 24As in mid 1941 Over the next three years B 24 squadrons deployed to all theaters of the war African European China Burma India the Anti submarine Campaign the Southwest Pacific Theater and the Pacific Theater In the Pacific to simplify logistics and to take advantage of its longer range the B 24 and its twin the U S Navy PB4Y was the chosen standard heavy bomber By mid 1943 the shorter range B 17 was phased out The Liberators which had served early in the war in the Pacific continued the efforts from the Philippines Australia Espiritu Santo Guadalcanal Hawaii and Midway Island The Liberator peak overseas deployment was 45 5 bomb groups in June 1944 Additionally the Liberator equipped a number of independent squadrons in a variety of special combat roles The cargo versions C 87 and C 109 tanker further increased its overseas presence especially in Asia in support of the XX Bomber Command air offensive against Japan So vital was the need for long range operations that at first USAAF used the type as transports The sole B 24 in Hawaii was destroyed by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 It had been sent to the Central Pacific for a very long range reconnaissance mission that was preempted by the Japanese attack The first USAAF Liberators to carry out combat missions were 12 repossessed LB 30s deployed to Java with the 11th Bombardment Squadron 7th Bombardment Group that flew their first combat mission in mid January Two were shot up by Japanese fighters but both managed to land safely One was written off due to battle damage and the other crash landed on a beach US based Liberators entered combat service in 1942 when on 6 June four LB 30s from Hawaii staging through Midway Island attempted an attack on Wake Island but were unable to find it 29 The B 24 came to dominate the heavy bombardment role in the Pacific because compared to the B 17 the B 24 was faster had longer range and could carry a ton more bombs 30 Strategic bombing 1942 1945 nbsp The bomb bay of a surviving B 24J Liberator in 2016On 12 June 1942 13 B 24s of the Halverson Project HALPRO flying from Egypt attacked the Axis controlled oil fields and refineries around Ploiești Romania Within weeks the First Provisional Bombardment Group formed from the remnants of the Halverson and China detachments This unit then was formalized as the 376th Bombardment Group Heavy and along with the 98th BG formed the nucleus of the IX Bomber Command of the Ninth Air Force operating from Africa until absorbed into the Twelfth Air Force briefly and then the Fifteenth Air Force operating from Italy The Ninth Air Force moved to England in late 1943 This was a major component of the USSTAF and took a major role in strategic bombing Fifteen of the 15th AF s 21 bombardment groups flew B 24s For much of 1944 the B 24 was the predominant bomber of U S Strategic Air Forces USSTAF formerly the Eighth Air Force in the Combined Bomber Offensive against Germany forming nearly half of its heavy bomber strength in the ETO prior to August and most of the Italian based force Thousands of B 24s flying from bases in Europe dropped hundreds of thousands of tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs on German military and industrial targets The 44th Bombardment Group was one of the first two heavy bombardment groups flying the B 24 with the 8th Air Force in the fall winter air campaigns in the European Theater of Operations 13 The 44th Bomb Group flew the first of its 344 combat missions against the Axis powers in World War II on 7 November 1942 13 nbsp 15th Air Force B 24s attacking the Concordia Vega Oil refinery Ploești Romania fly through flak and over the destruction created by preceding waves of bombers The first B 24 loss over German territory occurred on 26 February 1943 Earlier in the war both the Luftwaffe and the Royal Air Force had abandoned daylight bombing raids because neither could sustain the losses suffered The Americans persisted however at great cost in men and aircraft In the period between 7 November 1942 and 8 March 1943 the 44th Bomb Group lost 13 of its original 27 B 24s 13 For some time newspapers had been requesting permission for a reporter to go on one of the missions Robert B Post and five other reporters of The New York Times were granted permission Post was the only reporter assigned to a B 24 equipped group the 44th Bomb Group He flew in B 24 41 23777 Maisey on Mission No 37 to Bremen Germany Intercepted just short of the target the B 24 came under attack from JG 1 s Messerschmitt Bf 109s Leutnant Heinz Knoke who finished the war with 31 kills shot down the Liberator Post and all but two of the 11 men aboard were killed Knoke reported The fire spread out along the right wing The inboard propeller windmilled to a stop And then suddenly the whole wing broke off At an altitude of 900 metres there was a tremendous explosion The bomber had disintegrated The blazing wreckage landed just outside Bad Zwischenahn airfield 31 nbsp A B 24M of the 448th Bombardment Group breaks in half after attack by a Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighterA total of 177 B 24s carried out the famous second attack on Ploiești Operation Tidal Wave on 1 August 1943 This was the B 24 s most costly mission In late June 1943 the three B 24 Liberator groups of the 8th Air Force were sent to North Africa on temporary duty with the 9th Air Force 13 the 44th Bomb Group joined the 93rd and the 389th Bomb Groups These three units then joined the two 9th Air Force B 24 Liberator groups for low level attack on the German held Romanian oil complex at Ploiești This daring assault by high altitude bombers at treetop level was a costly success The attack became disorganized after a navigational error which alerted the defenders and protracted the bomb run from the initial point The 44th destroyed both of its assigned targets but lost 11 of its 37 bombers and their crews Colonel Leon W Johnson the 44th s commander was awarded the Medal of Honor for his leadership as was Col John Riley Killer Kane commander of the 98th Bomb Group Kane and Johnson survived the mission but three other recipients of the Medal of Honor for their actions in the mission Lt Lloyd H Hughes Maj John L Jerstad and Col Addison E Baker were killed in action For its actions on the Ploiești mission the 44th was awarded its second Distinguished Unit Citation 13 Of the 177 B 24s that were dispatched on this operation 54 were lost 13 Radar Electronic warfare and PGM deployment The B 24 advanced the use of electronic warfare and equipped Search Bomber SB Low Altitude LAB and Radar Counter Measure RCM squadrons in addition to high altitude bombing Among the specialized squadrons were the 20th RS RCM 36th BS RCM 406th NLS 63rd BS SB SeaHawks 373rdBS LAB and 868th BS SB Snoopers The 36th Bombardment Squadron was the Eighth Air Force s only electronic warfare squadron using specially equipped B 24s to jam German VHF communications during large Eighth Air Force daylight raids In addition the 36th BS flew night missions with RAF Bomber Command s own electronic warfare unit 100 Group at RAF Sculthorpe Radar Counter Measures RCM was code named Carpet however this should not be confused with agent and supply drops code named Carpetbaggers The B 24 was the platform for the pioneering use of the Americans Azon laterally guidable precision guided munition ordnance design a pioneering Allied radio guided munition system during World War II The ordnance of 1 000 lb weight was deployed operationally by USAAF B 24s in both Europe and the CBI theaters The Eighth Air Force s 458th Bombardment Group deployed the guided Azon ordnance in Europe between June and September 1944 32 while the Tenth Air Force s 493rd Bomb Squadron employed it against Japanese railroad bridges on the Burma Railway in early 1945 fulfilling the intended original purpose of the Azon system 33 Assembly ships Main article Assembly ship nbsp B 24D 30 CO assembly ship First Sergeant 458th Bomb GroupIn February 1944 the 2nd Division authorized the use of Assembly Ships or Formation Ships specially fitted to aid the assembly of individual group formations They were equipped with signal lighting provision for quantity discharge of pyrotechnics and were painted with distinctive group specific high contrast patterns of stripes checkers or polka dots to enable easy recognition by their flock of bombers The aircraft used in the first allocation were B 24Ds retired by the 44th 93rd and 389th Groups Arrangements for signal lighting varied from group to group but generally consisted of white flashing lamps on both sides of the fuselage arranged to form the identification letter of the group All armament and armor were removed and in some cases the tail turret In the B 24Hs used for this purpose the nose turret was removed and replaced by a carpetbagger type nose Following incidents when flare guns were accidentally discharged inside the rear fuselage some assembly formation ships had pyrotechnic guns fixed through the fuselage sides As these aircraft normally returned to base once a formation had been established a skeleton crew of two pilots navigator radio operator and one or two flare discharge operators were carried In some groups an observer officer flew in the tail position to monitor the formation These aircraft became known as Judas goats 34 Carpetbaggers nbsp B 24 cockpitFrom August 1943 until the end of the war in Europe specially modified B 24Ds were used in classified missions In a joint venture between the Army Air Forces and the Office of Strategic Services OSS code named Operation Carpetbagger pilots and crews flew specially modified B 24Ds painted with a glossy black anti searchlight paint to supply friendly underground forces throughout German occupied Europe They also flew Douglas C 47s Douglas A 26 Invaders and British de Havilland Mosquitos Carpetbagger aircraft flew spies called Joes and commando groups prior to the Allied invasion of Europe on D Day and afterward and retrieved over 5 000 officers and enlisted men who had escaped capture after being shot down The low altitude nighttime operation was extremely dangerous and took its toll on these airmen The first aircrews chosen for this operation came from the anti submarine bomb groups because of their special training in low altitude flying and pinpoint navigation skills Because of their special skills they were called upon to fly fuel to General George Patton s army during the summer and early autumn of 1944 when it outran its fuel supply When this mission was completed it was recorded that 822 791 US gallons 3 114 264 L of 80 octane gasoline had been delivered to three different airfields in France and Belgium 35 The 859 BS was converted from day bombardment to these operations and then transferred to the 15th Air Force Transport variants C 87 Liberator Express Main article Consolidated C 87 Liberator Express In early 1942 with the need for a purpose built transport with better high altitude performance and longer range than the Douglas C 47 Skytrain the San Diego plant began sending B 24D models to Fort Worth for conversion into the C 87 transport The conversion had a hinged cargo door at the nose eliminating transparent nose and large cargo doors installed in the waist area The C 87 had a large cargo floor less powerful supercharged engines no gun turrets a floor in the bomb bay for freight and some side windows The navigator s position was relocated behind the pilot Indigenous Fort Worth C 87 and AT 22 production began with the FY 1943 order for 80 serial numbered airframes 43 30548 through 43 30627 The C 87A was a dedicated VIP series built in small quantity Early versions were fitted with a single 50 caliber 12 7 mm Browning machine gun in their tails and a XC 87B version proposed two 50 caliber 12 7 mm fixed machine guns for the nose operable by the pilot though these were eventually removed The XC 87B also designated a resurrected crash victim B 24D 42 40355 fitted with low altitude power packages and a forward fuselage extension The extended nose earned it the name Pinocchio Later modifications gave it a single tail and yet another type of engine packages bring it to near C 87C configuration Other C 87 designations were the U S Navy designation RY and Lend Lease Liberator Cargo VII Although only 287 C 87 and eight U S Navy RY variants were produced they were still important in the Army Air Forces airlift operations early in the war when aircraft with high altitude long range heavy hauling abilities were in short supply The C 87 flew in many theaters of war including much hazardous duty in flights from Labrador to Greenland and Iceland in the North Atlantic In the China Burma India Theater CBI the C 87 was used to airlift cargo and fuel over the Hump the Himalayas from India to China Early in the campaign the C 87 was the only readily available American transport that could fly over the Himalayas while heavily loaded rather than relying on circuitous and highly dangerous routes through valleys and mountain passes but the type was not very popular with crews they complained of various hazards including the fuel system engines and cockpit accessories while the type was notorious for leaking fuel tanks and mid air fires a constant danger 9 The C 87 also shared the Liberator s dangerous sensitivity to icing particularly prevalent over Himalayan routes 7 With these difficulties in mind it is little wonder the ATC India China Division was the only unit in the Command to be combat decorated during WWII having been awarded a Distinguished Unit Citation This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The C 87 was not always popular with the aircrews assigned to fly it The aircraft had the distressing habit of losing all cockpit electrical power on takeoff or at landings its engine power and reliability with the less powerful superchargers also often left much to be desired It proved to be quite vulnerable to icing conditions and was prone to fall into a spin with even small amounts of ice accumulated onto its Davis wing Since the aircraft had been designed to be a bomber that dropped its loads while airborne the C 87 s nose landing gear was not designed for landing with a heavy load and frequently it collapsed from the stress Fuel leaks inside the crew compartment from the hastily modified long range fuel system were an all too common occurrence Lastly unlike a typical purpose designed transport the B 24 was not designed to tolerate large loading variations because most of its load was held on fixed bomb racks Consequently it was relatively easy for a poorly trained ground crew to load a C 87 with its center of gravity too far forward or aft rendering the aircraft difficult to control due to inadequate or excessive longitudinal stability In his autobiography Fate is the Hunter the writer Ernest K Gann reported that while flying air cargo in India he barely avoided crashing an improperly loaded C 87 into the Taj Mahal As soon as more dependable Douglas C 54 Skymaster and Curtiss Wright C 46 Commando transports became available in large numbers C 87s were rapidly phased out of combat zone service with some later used as VIP transports or B 24 flight crew trainers C 109 version nbsp C 109 tanker unloadingThe C 109 was a dedicated fuel transport version of the B 24 conceived as a support aircraft for Boeing B 29 Superfortress operations in central China 36 Unlike the C 87 the C 109 was not built on the assembly line but rather was converted from existing B 24 bomber production to save weight the glass nose armament turret fairings and bombardment equipment were removed Several storage tanks were added allowing a C 109 to carry 2 900 gal 11 000 L of fuel weighing over 22 000 pounds 10 000 kg Plans originally called for 2 000 C 109s to support 10 groups of B 29s approximately 400 in China but the capture of the Mariana Islands provided a far more easily resupplied location for raids on mainland Japan and the plans were greatly scaled back Only 218 C 109s were actually converted After the transfer of the B 29s the C 109s were reassigned to the Air Transport Command According to the history of the U S Army Air Forces in World War II at least one squadron was assigned to the IX Troop Carrier Command in Europe to transport gasoline to advancing ground and air forces on the Continent after the Normandy invasion However whereas a combat loaded B 24 could safely take off with room to spare from a 6 000 ft 1 800 m runway a loaded C 109 required every foot of such a runway to break ground and crashes on takeoff were not uncommon The aircraft demonstrated unstable flight characteristics with all storage tanks filled and proved very difficult to land fully loaded at airfields above 6 000 ft 1 800 m MSL in elevation such as those around Chengdu After it was discovered that these problems could be alleviated by flying with the forward storage tank empty this practice became fairly routine enhancing aircrew safety at the cost of some fuel carrying capacity 37 Many C 109s were lost in flying the Hump airlift to China The Singing Cowboy Gene Autry served in the Air Transport Command in the same squadron as Barry Goldwater and described flying the C 109 over The Hump as the thrill that lasts a lifetime 38 B 24 bombers were also extensively used in the Pacific area after the end of World War II to transport cargo and supplies during the rebuilding of Japan China and the Philippines U S Navy and U S Marine Corps PB4Y 1 nbsp PB4Y 1 LiberatorB 24s were also used by the U S Navy and U S Marine Corps for ASW anti ship patrol and photographic reconnaissance in the Pacific Theater and by the U S Coast Guard for patrol and SAR Naval B 24s were redesignated PB4Y 1 meaning the fourth patrol bomber design built by Consolidated Aircraft Navy PB4Y 1s assigned to Atlantic ASW and all Coast Guard PB4Y 1s had the ventral turret replaced by a retractable radome Also most naval aircraft had an Erco ball turret installed in the nose position replacing the glass nose and other styles of turret The Consolidated Aircraft Company PB4Y 2 Privateer was a U S Navy patrol bomber that was derived directly from the B 24 Liberator The U S Navy had been using B 24s with only minor modifications as the PB4Y 1 Liberator and along with maritime patrol B 24s used by RAF Coastal Command this type of patrol plane had been quite successful A fully navalized design was seen as advantageous and Consolidated Aircraft developed a purpose built long range patrol bomber in 1943 designated PB4Y 2 The Privateer had non turbosupercharged engines for weight savings and optimal performance at low to medium patrol altitudes and was visually distinguishable from the B 24 and PB4Y 1 by its longer fuselage single tall vertical stabilizer rather than a twin tail two dorsal turrets and teardrop shaped waist gun blisters similar in appearance to those on Consolidated s own PBY Catalina Australia nbsp The crew of a No 21 Squadron RAAF Liberator with their aircraftRAAF Australian aircrew seconded to the Royal Air Force flew Liberators in all theatres of the war including with RAF Coastal Command in the Middle East and with South East Asia Command while some flew in South African Air Force squadrons Liberators were introduced into service in the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF in 1944 after the American commander of the Far East Air Forces FEAF General George C Kenney suggested that seven heavy bomber squadrons be raised to supplement the efforts of American Liberator squadrons The USAAF transferred some aircraft to the RAAF while the remainder would be delivered from the US under Lend Lease Some RAAF aircrew were given operational experience in Liberators while attached to USAAF squadrons Seven flying squadrons an operational training unit and two special duties flights were equipped with the aircraft by the end of World War II in August 1945 The RAAF Liberators saw service in the South West Pacific theatre of World War II Flying mainly from bases in the Northern Territory Queensland and Western Australia aircraft conducted bombing raids against Japanese positions ships and strategic targets in New Guinea Borneo and the Netherlands East Indies In addition the small number of Liberators operated by No 200 Flight played an important role in supporting covert operations conducted by the Allied Intelligence Bureau and other Liberators were converted to VIP transports A total of 287 B 24D B 24J B 24L and B 24M aircraft were supplied to the RAAF of which 33 were lost in action or accidents with more than 200 Australians killed Following the Japanese surrender the RAAF s Liberators participated in flying former prisoners of war and other personnel back to Australia Liberators remained in service until 1948 when they were replaced by Avro Lincolns 39 Qantas In June 1944 Qantas Empire Airways began service with the first of two converted LB 30 Liberators on the Perth to Colombo route to augment PBY Catalinas that had been used since May 1943 The Double Sunrise route across the Indian Ocean was 3 513 mi 5 654 km long the longest non stop airline route in the world at the time The Liberators flew a shorter 3 077 mi 4 952 km over water route from Learmonth to an airfield northeast of Colombo but they could make the flight in 17 hours with a 5 500 pounds 2 500 kg payload whereas the Catalinas required 27 hours and had to carry so much auxiliary fuel that their payload was limited to only 1 000 pounds 450 kg The route was named Kangaroo Service and marked the first time that Qantas s now famous Kangaroo logo was used passengers received a certificate proclaiming them as members of The Order of the Longest Hop The Liberators were later replaced by Avro Lancastrians 40 SAAF Two squadrons of the South African Air Force SAAF also flew B 24s 31 and 34 Squadrons under No 2 Wing SAAF based at Foggia Italy These two squadrons engaged in relief flights to Warsaw and Krakow in Poland to support the Polish Uprising against Nazi Occupation 41 Luftwaffe use Three B 24s were captured and then operated by the German secret operations unit KG 200 which also tested evaluated and sometimes clandestinely operated captured enemy aircraft during World War II 42 One of these was captured at Venegono Italy on 29 March 1944 It was used on penetration missions in RAF bomber streams at night in Luftwaffe markings On a ferry flight from Hildesheim to Bavaria on 6 April 1945 it was shot down by German anti aircraft fire Crashed B 24s were the source of the landing gear units for the strictly experimental Junkers Ju 287 V1 first prototype jet bomber airframe in 1945 Romanian use Following Operation Tidal Wave it was decided to attempt the salvage of a B 24 bomber and use it for fighter pilot training Three B 24s were recovered Boiler Maker II Honkey Tonk Gal and Brewery Wagon Of these Boiler Maker II was repaired in the field using parts from the other two Initially the glazed nose of the bomber was replaced with sheet metal The airplane was then flown to Brașov where it was painted in Romanian Air Force camouflage and markings at the IAR factory 43 The aircraft was handed over for operations to the LARES ro airline It was destroyed on the ground during a German raid on 26 August 1944 43 Another proposal was to recover engines of other crashed B 24s and mount them on the IAR 80 fighters However the IAR engineers determined that the R 1830 engine did not offer any significant advantage over the IAR K14 43 Soviet use Only one B 24 was officially delivered to the USSR according to the Lend Lease agreements stranded in Yakutsk while flying a government mission to the Soviet Union in November 1942 In addition 73 Liberators of various models that had force landed on European airfields were recovered and 30 of them were repaired and used by the 45th Bomber Aviation Division 44 The regiment concerned appears to have been the 890th Bomber Aviation Regiment at Baranovichi until 1944 and then Kazan Chinese use nbsp B 24 Bomber flying over China during WW2The B 24 bombers of the 308th Bombardment Group Heavy joined the battlefield in March 1944 as the heavy bombers of the Fourteenth Air Force to fight against the Japanese during the Second Sino Japanese War WW2 in China About 48 B 24Ms were provided by the U S to the Chinese Nationalist Air Force after WW2 and were used during the Chinese Civil War The PLAAF had two B 24Ms captured from the Chinese Nationalists during the Chinese Civil War and operated until 1952 ProductionExternal image nbsp Watch video of B 24 production and testingApproximately 18 500 B 24s were produced across a number of versions including over 4 600 manufactured by Ford It holds records as the world s most produced bomber heavy bomber multi engine aircraft and American military aircraft in history 45 Production took place at 5 plants At Ford s Ypsilanti Michigan based Willow Run Bomber plant alone one B 24 was being produced every 59 minutes at its peak a rate so large that production exceeded the military s ability to use the aircraft Such were the production numbers it has been said that more aluminum aircrew and effort went into the B 24 than any other aircraft in history 46 nbsp Looking up one of the assembly lines at Ford s big Willow Run plant where B 24E Liberator bombers are being madeContinued development work by Consolidated produced a handful of transitional B 24Cs with turbocharged instead of supercharged engines The turbocharged engines were the reason for the flattened oval shape of the nacelles that distinguished all subsequent Liberator models The B 24D was the first mass produced series The B 24D was the Liberator III in British service It entered US service in early 1942 It had turbocharged engines and increased fuel capacity Three more 0 50 caliber 12 7 mm machine guns brought the defensive armament up to 10 machine guns At 59 524 pounds 27 000 kg dubious discuss 29 76 short tons maximum takeoff weight it was one of the heaviest aircraft in the world comparable with the British heavies with fully loaded weights of 30 short tons for and nearly identical to the Stirling the 34 short ton Lancaster and the 27 short ton Halifax nbsp B 24s under construction at Ford Motor s Willow Run plantProduction of B 24s increased at an astonishing rate throughout 1942 and 1943 Consolidated Aircraft tripled the size of its plant in San Diego and built a large new plant outside Fort Worth Texas in order to receive the massive amounts of knock down kits that the Ford Motor Company shipped via truck from its Ypsilanti Michigan Facility citation needed A new government plant was built in Tulsa Oklahoma with Reconstruction Finance Corporation funds and leased to Douglas Aircraft for assembly of B 24s from Ford parts 47 Douglas ultimately built a total of 962 of the D E H and J models there 48 Bell Aircraft built the B 24 under license at a factory near Marietta Georgia just northwest of Atlanta Online by mid 1943 the new plant produced hundreds of B 24 Liberator bombers 49 The aircraft was also built at North American plant B in the city of Grand Prairie Texas having only starting production of the B 24G in 1943 citation needed None of these were minor operations but they were dwarfed by Ford s vast new purpose built factory constructed at Willow Run near Detroit Michigan According to the Willow Run Reference Book published 1 February 1945 Ford broke ground on Willow Run on 18 April 1941 with the first plane coming off the line on 10 September 1942 Willow Run had the largest assembly line in the world 3 500 000 sq ft 330 000 m2 At its peak in 1944 the Willow Run plant produced one B 24 per hour and 650 B 24s per month 50 In mid 1944 the production of the B 24 was consolidated from several different companies including some in Texas to two large factories the Consolidated Aircraft Company in San Diego and the Ford Motor Company s factory in Willow Run near Detroit Michigan which had been specially designed to produce B 24s 49 By 1945 Ford made 70 of all B 24s in two nine hour shifts Pilots and crews slept on 1 300 cots at Willow Run waiting for their B 24s to roll off the assembly line At Willow Run Ford produced half of 18 000 total B 24s alone 50 Up into December 1944 Ford had also produced an additional 7242 KD or Knock Down Kits that would be trucked to and assembled by Consolidated in Ft Worth and Douglas Aircraft in Tulsa Each of the B 24 factories was identified with a production code suffix Consolidated San Diego CO Consolidated Fort Worth CF Ford Willow Run FO North American NT and Douglas Tulsa DT nbsp WASP pilots left to right Eloise Huffines Bailey Millie Davidson Dalrymple Elizabeth McKethan Magid and Clara Jo Marsh Stember with a B 24 in the backgroundIn 1943 the model of Liberator considered by many the definitive version was introduced The B 24H was 10 inches 25 cm longer had a powered gun turret in the upper nose to reduce vulnerability to head on attack and was fitted with an improved bomb sight behind a simpler three panel glazed lower nose autopilot and fuel transfer system Consolidated Douglas and Ford all manufactured the B 24H while North American made the slightly different B 24G All five plants switched over to the almost identical B 24J in August 1943 The later B 24L and B 24M were lighter weight versions and differed mainly in defensive armament citation needed As the war progressed the complexity of servicing the Liberator continued to increase The B 24 variants made by each company differed slightly so repair depots had to stock many different parts to support various models Fortunately this problem was eased in the summer of 1944 when North American Douglas and Consolidated Aircraft at Fort Worth stopped making B 24s leaving only the Consolidated plant in San Diego and the Ford plant in Willow Run citation needed In all 18 482 B 24s were built by September 1945 Twelve thousand saw service with the USAAF with a peak inventory in September 1944 of 6 043 The U S Navy received 977 PB4Y 1s Liberators originally ordered by the USAAF and 739 PB4Y 2 Privateers derived from the B 24 The Royal Air Force received about 2 100 B 24s equipping 46 bomber groups and 41 squadrons the Royal Canadian Air Force 1 200 B 24Js and the Royal Australian Air Force 287 B 24Js B 24Ls and B 24Ms Liberators were the only heavy bomber flown by the RAAF in the Pacific citation needed VariantsU S Army Air Forces variants XB 24 Single prototype ordered by Army Air Corps on 30 March 1939 Powered by four Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 33 Twin Wasps rated at 1 200 horsepower 890 kW for takeoff and 1 000 horsepower 750 kW at 14 500 feet 4 400 m Bombload of eight 1 000 lb 450 kg bombs with defensive armament of three 0 5 in 12 7 mm and four 0 30 in 7 62 mm machine guns First flew 29 December 1939 Later converted to XB 24B 51 52 YB 24 LB 30A Pre production prototypes six of which were sold to the UK directly as the LB 30A US funds and serial numbers were deferred to the B 24D production The seventh 40 702 remained in U S service as the sole YB 24 for service test Total 7 B 24 Ordered on 27 April 1939 less than 30 days after the XB 24 was ordered and before its completion Minor modifications included eliminating leading edge slots and adding de icing boots Total 1 converted YB 24 nbsp LB 30A Diamond Lil from the Commemorative Air Force Airframe returned to B 24A configuration and renamed Ol 927 She was renamed back to Diamond Lil in May 2012 N 1 B 24A LB 30B Ordered in 1939 the B 24A was the first production model Due to the need for long range aircraft the B 24A was ordered before any version of the B 24 flew Aerodynamics improvements over the XB 24 led to better performance Nine built as transports transferred to Ferrying Command while twenty were sold to the UK before Lend Lease as LB 30Bs Total 20 LB 30B 9 B 24A Liberator B Mk II LB 30 The first combat ready B 24 The modifications included a three foot nose extension a deeper rear fuselage wider tailplane self sealing fuel tanks and armor Built to British specifications with British equipment so there was no B 24 equivalent but it was similar to the B 24C Except for the first aircraft which was completed as a pattern aircraft and subsequently lost in a test flight the rest of the run was completed without armament which the British would fit after being flown to the UK With the US entry into the war in December 1941 some 75 were requisitioned by the USAAF during delivery and retained the LB 30 designation in service These were delivered unarmed Browning M2 50 in 13 mm guns were fitted throughout single guns were mounted in the nose both waist positions and the ventral tunnel and a twin manual mount in the tail replaced the British 4 303 in 7 70 mm Browning tail turret and a Martin turret with two guns replaced the Boulton Paul dorsal turret Fifteen were sent to the south west Pacific including some to Java to assist the Dutch East Indies while three went to Alaska six to Midway Island immediately after the naval battle in June Six were lost in various accidents Twenty three were later returned to the UK in 1943 Seventeen were fitted with ASV radar and used in the Panama Canal Zone Total production 165 XB 24B A newly funded conversion of the XB 24 after it failed to reach its projected top speed The 1 000 hp 750 kW Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 33 radials were replaced with R 1830 41 turbo supercharged radials rated at 1 200 hp 890 kW increasing its top speed by 37 mph 60 km h The engine cowlings were made elliptical to accommodate the turbo superchargers The XB 24B also lacked the original s engine slots It was re serialed Total one converted XB 24 XB 24B 39 680 was converted into a luxury airliner for Consairway which included gutting the interior cutting new windows and dividing the interior into compartments with individual and bench seating and two tier Pullman style sleeping berths Trim was added for sound proofing and a galley with refrigerator and hot plates 9 B 24C New production funded from deferred funds after LB 30A to the UK Used the engine package tested in the XB 24B and the new fuselage of the LB 30 The tail air gunner position was improved by adding a hydraulically powered Consolidated A 6 turret with twin 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns a Martin powered dorsal turret was added to the forward fuselage One 84 converted to prototype the three in nose armament for the B 24D FY funds and serial numbers transferred from B 24A Total nine nbsp B 24Ds of 93rd Bomb Group in formation Nearest aircraft is Joisey Bounce almost hidden is wingman The Duchess next higher is Boomerang with wingman Thunder Mug B 24D First to see large scale production ordered from 1940 to 1942 as a B 24C with more powerful R 1830 43 supercharged engines The D model was initially equipped with a remotely operated and periscopically sighted Bendix belly turret as the first examples of the B 17E Flying Fortress and some early models of the B 25 Mitchell medium bomber had used but this was unsatisfactory and was discontinued after the 287th aircraft Later aircraft reverted to the earlier manually operated tunnel mounting with a single 50 in 12 7 mm machine gun The tunnel gun was eventually replaced by the Sperry ball turret which had also been adopted by the later B 17E Fortresses but made retractable for the Liberator as the fuselage was very close to the ground Late B 24Ds had cheek guns mounted on either side of the nose just behind the greenhouse Total 2 696 2 381 Consolidated San Diego 305 Consolidated Fort Worth 10 Douglas Tulsa Oklahoma nbsp B 24EB 24E A slight alteration of the B 24D built by Ford using R 1830 65 engines The B 24E retained the belly tunnel gun The USAAF used the B 24Es primarily as trainers as were the aircraft produced by Consolidated at San Diego CO Ford also built sub assemblies for Douglas and Convair Fort Worth these sub assemblies were identical to Ford built B 24Es except that they used the same R 1830 43 radial engines as the B 24D These sub assemblies were called KD knock down kits and were trucked from Willow Run to the Southwest for the final assembly Total 801 XB 24F A prototype made to test thermal de icers to replace the standard inflatable rubber boots Total one converted B 24D B 24G Designation for B 24D aircraft built by North American Aviation pursuant to a 1942 contract Equipped with Sperry ball turret and three flexible 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns in nose Total 25 B 24G 1 as B 24G but with A 6 nose turret Most were operated by the 15th Air Force in Italy Total 405 B 24H Because of the vulnerability of the B 24 to head on attack with the earlier greenhouse nose the B 24H design incorporated an electrically powered Emerson A 15 nose turret above the bombardier s position similar to where the Frazer Nash FN5 nose turret on the Avro Lancaster was placed Approximately 50 other airframe changes were made including a redesigned bombardier compartment The tail turret was given larger windows for better visibility and the Martin A 3 dorsal turret received an enlarged high hat dome The waist gunner positions were enclosed with Plexiglass windows and laterally offset to reduce interference between the waist gunners Most H model aircraft were built by Ford at Willow Run Total 3 100 nbsp A 3 view line drawing of a B 24JB 24J The B 24J was similar to the B 24H but shortages of the Emerson nose turret required use of a modified hydraulically powered Consolidated A 6 turret in most J model aircraft built at Consolidated s San Diego and Fort Worth factories The B 24J featured an improved autopilot type C 1 and a M 1 series bombsight B 24H sub assemblies made by Ford and constructed by other companies and any model with a C 1 or M 1 retrofit were all designated B 24J The J model was the only version to be built by all five factories involved in B 24 production Total 6 678 XB 24K Developed from the B 24ST with a single fin and rudder replacing the twin tail on the standard Liberator 11 The improved performance and handling of the B 24ST and XB 24K led to the decision to incorporate a single tail in the PB4Y 2 and B 24N Total one converted B 24D B 24L Because of the excessive weight of the B 24J the Army requested a lightened version In the B 24L the Sperry ball turret was replaced by a floor ring mount with two 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns and the A 6B tail turret by an M 6A Later aircraft were delivered from the factory without tail guns An A 6B or M 6A turret 190 total a hand held but hydraulically assisted twin 50 in 12 7 mm mount 42 or a manually operated twin 50 in 12 7 mm mounting was installed at a depot before delivery to operational units The L model was built at Willow Run and Consolidated s San Diego factory Total 1 667 nbsp B 24M 20 CO Bolivar Jr 431st Bomb Squadron 11th Bomb GroupB 24M Improved B 24L with further weight savings The B 24M used a lighter version of the A 6B tail turret the waist gunner positions were left open and the retractable Sperry ventral ball turret was reintroduced For better visibility from the flight deck the windshield in Ford built aircraft was replaced by a version with less framing from Block 20 onward The B 24M became the last production model of the B 24 and many flew only from the factory to the scrap yard Total 2 593 XB 24N A redesign of the B 24J made to accommodate a single tail It also featured an Emerson 128 ball turret in the nose and a stationary tail gunner s position While 5 168 B 24Ns were ordered the end of the war resulted in cancellation of all contracts before production could begin Its single tail was said to be the inspiration for the PB4Y 2 Privateer s similar single fin rudder tail design Total one YB 24N Pre production service test version of the XB 24N Total seven XB 24P A modified B 24D used by Sperry Gyroscope Company to test airborne fire control systems Total one converted B 24D XB 24Q A General Electric conversion of the B 24L Used to test a radar controlled tail turret intended for use in the Boeing B 47 Stratojet Total one converted B 24L XB 41 With no fighters capable of escorting bombers on deep strike missions early in World War II the Army authorized heavily armed bombers as gunship escorts which resulted in both the B 17 derived YB 40 Flying Fortress gunship and its Liberator derived XB 41 counterpart The XB 41 had fourteen 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns including a Bendix chin turret and a second Martin A 3 turret on the upper fuselage One aircraft was completed in 1942 Performance was degraded drastically with the additional turrets and were unable to keep up with bomber formations particularly when bombs had been dropped Following testing in 1943 the project was canceled Total one converted B 24D B 24ST An experimental aircraft The B 24ST for Single Tail an unofficial designation applied by Ford was made by Ford by fitting a single fin an rudder onto a B 24D airframe The aircraft was more stable and had better handling than other models and was used as the basis of the XB 24K 11 AT 22 or TB 24 C 87 used for flight engineer training RB 24L Developed for training B 29 gunners on an identical remote gun system installed on a B 24L TB 24L As with the RB 24L but with additional radar equipment nbsp Experimental B 24J 15 CO with B 17G nose grafted on with a chin turret a modification not adopted for productionC 87 Liberator Express Transports with accommodation for 20 passengers C 87A VIP transports with R 1830 45 instead of 43 engines and sleeping berths for 16 passengers C 87B Projected armed transport with nose guns dorsal turret and ventral tunnel gun not produced C 87C U S Army Air Force Air Force designation for the RY 3 XC 109 C 109 Tankers used to ferry fuel from India to China to support early B 29 raids against Japan XF 7 Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B 24D F 7 Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B 24H FO block F 7A Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B 24J three cameras in the nose and three in the bomb bay F 7B Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the B 24J six cameras in the bomb bay BQ 8 A number of worn out B 24D and B 24Js were converted as radio controlled flying bombs to attack German targets Joseph P Kennedy Jr was killed in a BQ 8 during Operation Anvil 54 U S Navy nomenclature and sub variants PB4Y 1 U S Navy designation applied to 976 navalized B 24D J L and M models built at Consolidated s San Diego factory as well as one North American built B 24G Later aircraft were equipped with an ERCO nose turret 55 PB4Y 1P Photographic reconnaissance variant developed from the PB4Y 1 PB4Y 2 Privateer A developed PB4Y with a large single fin a lengthened fuselage and many other improvements and changes P5Y Proposed twin engined patrol version of PB4Y 1 Unbuilt 56 RY 1 U S Navy designation for the C 87A RY 2 U S Navy designation for the C 87 RY 3 Transport variant of the PB4Y 2 R2Y Liberator Liner built using a new fuselage for the US Navy as an airliner with 48 seatsBritish Commonwealth nomenclature and sub variants nbsp Color photograph of an RAF B Mk IILiberator C Mk I YB 24 LB 30A RAF direct purchase aircraft Total 9 Unsuitable for combat rebuilt as transports and used by BOAC between the UK and Canada including transferring aircrew ferrying Lend Lease aircraft Liberator B Mk I B 24A LB 30B RAF direct purchase aircraft Total 20 Unsuitable for combat some rebuilt for other roles Liberator GR Mk I Mk I rebuilt as General Reconnaissance for anti submarine patrol Fitted with belly pannier with an additional four fixed forward firing 20 mm 0 787 in Hispano cannon and ASV radar which included two underwing Yagi Uda antennas and four large antenna stickleback masts above the rear fuselage Liberator B Mk II LB 30 First combat ready Liberator Modifications included a three foot nose extension as well as a deeper aft fuselage and wider tailplane and self sealing fuel tanks and armor Built to British specifications with British equipment and Boulton Paul turrets so there was no B 24 equivalent but similar to the B 24C The top turret was further back on the fuselage compared to any US variant and in line with the trailing edge of the wing Except for the first aircraft completed as a pattern but lost in a test flight the rest were completed without armament which the British fitted in the UK With the American entry into the war the USAAF requisitioned about 75 which it operated under Consolidated s LB 30 designation but 23 were returned in 1943 Total production 165 Liberator C Mk II Mk II transport Some B Mk IIs were rebuilt as transports including one as the personal transport of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill which was named Commando which was later extensively rebuilt to C Mk IX standard with a single fin Liberator B Mk III B 24D with one nose 303 in 7 70 mm Browning machine gun two in each waist position and four in a Boulton Paul tail turret similar to that used on the Handley Page Halifax The Martin dorsal turret was retained Total 156 Liberator B Mk IIIA Mk III with American equipment and weapons Liberator GR Mk III Mk III General Reconnaissance for RAF Coastal Command for anti submarine role with radar with Yagi Uda antenna and Leigh Light Liberator GR Mk IIIA GR III with American equipment and weapons nbsp RAF Coastal Command ASV Mk II equipped Liberator GR III of No 120 Squadron RAFLiberator B Mk IV Unused designation reserved for B 24E Liberator B Mk V B 24D bomber with more fuel but less armor armed as per Mk III Liberator GR Mk V General Reconnaissance Mk V for RAF Coastal Command for anti submarine role with radar some mounted under the nose and Leigh Light Some fitted with eight zero length rocket launchers four on each wing with others being fitted with stub wings either side of the lower forward fuselage to hold eight RP 3 rails Liberator B Mk VI B 24H bomber with nose turret and Boulton Paul tail turret and retaining the rest of their armament Liberator GR Mk VI B 24G H J RAF Coastal Command anti submarine patrol Some had top turret removed in service and early examples had Yagi Uda antenna on older greenhouse nose Liberator C Mk VI C Mk VIT Mk VI converted as a cargo aircraft Liberator C Mk VII RAF C 87 transport Liberator B Mk VIII RAF B 24J bomber Liberator GR Mk VIII Mk VIII for RAF Coastal Command anti submarine patrol Some had top turret removed in service and belly turret replaced with semi recessed radar dome Liberator C Mk VIII Mk VIII converted as a cargo aircraft Liberator C Mk IX RAF RY 3 C 87C transport with a single fin replacing the twin fins on most Liberator versions Late in the war RAF Liberator aircraft modified in England for use in South East Asia had the suffix Snake stenciled below the serial number to give them priority delivery through the Mediterranean and the Middle East 57 OperatorsMain article List of Consolidated B 24 Liberator operatorsAccidents and incidentsMain article Accidents and incidents involving the Consolidated B 24 LiberatorSurviving aircraftMain article List of surviving Consolidated B 24 LiberatorsSpecifications B 24J nbsp 3 view line drawing of the Consolidated B 24 LiberatorData from Quest for Performance 58 Jane s Fighting aircraft of World War II 59 General Dynamics aircraft and their predecessors 60 General characteristicsCrew 11 pilot co pilot navigator bombardier radio operator nose turret top turret 2 waist gunners ball turret tail gunner Length 67 ft 2 in 20 47 m Wingspan 110 ft 34 m Height 17 ft 7 5 in 5 372 m Wing area 1 048 sq ft 97 4 m2 Aspect ratio 11 55 Zero lift drag coefficient CD0 0406 Frontal area 42 54 sq ft 3 952 m2 Airfoil root Davis 22 tip Davis 9 3 61 Empty weight 36 500 lb 16 556 kg Gross weight 55 000 lb 24 948 kg Max takeoff weight 65 000 lb 29 484 kg plus Fuel capacity 2 344 US gal 1 952 imp gal 8 870 L normal capacity 3 614 US gal 3 009 imp gal 13 680 L with long range tanks in the bomb bay Oil capacity 131 6 US gal 109 6 imp gal 498 L in four self sealing nacelle hopper tanks Powerplant 4 Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 35 Twin Wasp R 1830 41 or R 1830 65 14 cylinder two row air cooled turbo supercharged radial piston engines 1 200 hp 890 kW each Propellers 3 bladed Hamilton Standard 11 ft 7 in 3 53 m diameter constant speed fully feathering propellersPerformance Maximum speed 297 mph 478 km h 258 kn at 25 000 ft 7 600 m Cruise speed 215 mph 346 km h 187 kn Stall speed 95 mph 153 km h 83 kn Range 1 540 mi 2 480 km 1 340 nmi at 237 mph 206 kn 381 km h and 25 000 ft 7 600 m with normal fuel and maximum internal bomb load Ferry range 3 700 mi 6 000 km 3 200 nmi Service ceiling 28 000 ft 8 500 m Rate of climb 1 025 ft min 5 21 m s Time to altitude 20 000 ft 6 100 m in 25 minutes Lift to drag 12 9 Wing loading 52 5 lb sq ft 256 kg m2 Power mass 0 0873 hp lb 0 1435 kW kg Armament Guns 10 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine guns in 4 turrets and two waist positions Bombs Short range 400 mi 640 km 8 000 pounds 3 600 kg Long range 800 mi 1 300 km 5 000 pounds 2 300 kg Very long range 1 200 mi 1 900 km 2 700 pounds 1 200 kg Notable B 24 crewmenThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Robert Altman film director was a B 24 co pilot flying over 50 bombing missions in Borneo and the Dutch East Indies William Charles Anderson author of BAT 21 and Bomber Crew 369 piloted Liberators based in Italy as a member of the 451st Bomb Group of the 15th AF Chuck Bednarik NFL Hall of Fame member former Philadelphia Eagle and the last full time two way player served as a B 24 waist gunner with the Eighth Air Force 467th Bomb Group Bednarik participated in 30 combat missions over Germany as a S Sgt and eventually attained the rank of First Lieutenant Bednarik was awarded the Air Medal and four Oak Leaf Clusters the European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal and four Battle Stars Hal Clement science fiction author was a pilot and copilot on B 24s and flew 35 combat missions over Europe with the 68th Bomb Squadron 44th Bomb Group based in England with Eighth Air Force Ernest K Gann early airline pilot and author flew C 87 Cargo Express aircraft in Southern Asia and China including flying cargo over The Hump He detailed his flying experiences in Fate is the Hunter Don Herbert television pioneer Mr Wizard flew 56 missions as a Liberator pilot over northern Italy Germany and Yugoslavia winning the Distinguished Flying Cross Joseph P Kennedy Jr elder brother of U S President John F Kennedy was killed in Operation Anvil when his PB4Y 1 Liberator modified to be a remote controlled bomb exploded in flight Ben Kuroki top turret gunner was the only Japanese American in the United States Army Air Forces to serve in combat operations in the Pacific theater of World War II Walter Matthau actor was a radioman and nose gunner in the 453rd Bomb Group 62 George McGovern U S Senator and 1972 presidential candidate served as a B 24 pilot on his plane Dakota Queen in missions over Germany from Cerignola Italy as a member of the 455th Bomb Group of the Fifteenth Air Force His wartime exploits and some of the characteristics of the B 24 are the focus of Stephen Ambrose s book The Wild Blue Actor Jimmy Stewart flew B 24s as commanding officer of the 703rd Bomber Squadron 445th Bombardment Group out of RAF Tibenham UK He was later promoted to operations officer of the 453rd BG From 1943 to 1944 Stewart was credited with 20 combat missions as a pilot including one over Berlin Stewart flew several possibly as many as 20 additional uncredited missions filling in for pilots as duties and space would allow Stewart s leadership qualities were highly regarded the men who served under him praised his coolness under fire He entered service as a private in early 1941 and rose to the rank of colonel by 1945 Flying Officer Lloyd Trigg VC 1914 1943 New Zealand pilot in the RNZAF died during a successful attack on a German U boat off West Africa His medal was uniquely awarded solely on the recommendation of the enemy captain and other eyewitnesses Stewart Udall author conservationist U S Representative and Secretary of Interior served as a waist gunner on a B 24 in 1944 He was based in Southern Italy 15th Army AF 454th Bombardment Group His Liberator s nickname was Flyin Home He is credited with 50 missions The 454th received a Unit Citation for leading an attack on the Hermann Goering Steel Works in Linz Austria on 25 July 1944 Udall s crew suffered one casualty on the mission The dead crew member was serving at the waist gunner position normally manned by Udall by chance the pilot assigned Udall to the nose gun for this mission saving his life Jim Wright former Speaker of the House served as a B 24 bombardier in the Pacific He recounted his experience in his book The Flying Circus Pacific War 1943 as Seen Through a Bombsight Louis Zamperini Olympic runner and later war prisoner and hero served as a bombardier on two B 24s The first Super Man was damaged and the crew was assigned to B 24D Green Hornet to conduct search and rescue On 27 May 1943 the aircraft crashed into the Pacific Ocean Eight of the 11 crewmembers were killed Zamperini pilot Russell A Phillips and Francis McNamara survived the crash Only Zamperini and Phillips survived their 47 days adrift on a life raft on the sea 63 Zamperini is the subject of two biographies and the 2014 film Unbroken Notable appearances in mediaMain article Aircraft in fiction B 24 Liberator The book One Damned Island After Another 1946 contains the official history of the 7th Bomber Command of the Seventh Air Force It describes B 24 operations in the Central Pacific B 24s from the Seventh Air Force were the first B 24s to bomb the Japanese home islands Authors Cassius Mullen and Betty Byron wrote the story of the first American heavy bomber crew to complete a 25 mission combat tour in the European Theater during World War II The book Before the Belle 2015 tells the story of Capt Robert Shannon and his aircraft which completed a combat tour only to be lost in an accident while transporting Lt Gen Frank Maxwell Andrews back to Washington on 3 May 1943 64 Laura Hillenbrand s Unbroken A World War II Story of Survival Resilience and Redemption 2010 tells the story of B 24D bombardier Louis Zamperini and how he survived crashing in the Pacific being adrift on the ocean for 47 days and then more than two years in Japanese POW camps 65 Damnyankee A WWII Story of Tragedy and Survival off the West of Ireland by Thomas L Walsh 2009 tells the story of a US Navy PB4Y 1 B 24 Liberator submarine patrol bomber that ditched off the west coast of Ireland in 1944 five of the ten crew survived 33 hours adrift in a seething North Atlantic storm before drifting ashore in Clifden County Galway Ireland 66 The Sinking of the Laconia depicts the Laconia Incident and a B 24 s attempts to sink the German submarine U 156 Shady Lady Mission Accomplished Running on Empty 2012 tells the true story of the USAAF s B 24D Shady Lady It was one of 11 planes that took off from Darwin Australia on Friday 13 August 1943 to bomb a Japanese oil refinery at Balikpapan Borneo a distance of more than 1 300 miles This mission was the longest overwater bombing mission up to that time 67 See also nbsp Aviation portal1943 Gibraltar B 24 crash H2X Little Eva aircraft Operation Aphrodite Willow Run AirportRelated development Consolidated B 32 Dominator Consolidated C 87 Liberator Express Consolidated Liberator I Consolidated R2Y Consolidated XB 41 Liberator PB4Y PrivateerAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Avro Lancaster Boeing B 17 Flying Fortress Focke Wulf Fw 200 Condor Handley Page Halifax Heinkel He 177 Junkers Ju 290 Petlyakov Pe 8 Piaggio P 108 Short StirlingReferencesNotes Quote One of the primary reasons we decided to go with the A model vs the LB 30 was that this airplane was originally a B 24A 53 Citations Bhargava Kapil Group Captain ret d India s Reclaimed B 24 Bombers Archived 12 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine bharat rakshak com Retrieved 16 June 2010 Munson Kenneth Bombers 1939 45 Patrol and Transport Aircraft Macmillan Publishing Company Inc New York Blandford Press Ltd 1969 LCCN 77 92035 page 156 Birdsall 1968 Famous Aircraft The B 24 Liberator The Boeing B 17 Flying Fortress vs the Consolidated B 24 Liberator warfarehistorynetwork com 30 June 2017 Taylor 1969 p 462 Vincenti Walter G 1986 The Davis Wing and the Problem of Airfoil Design Uncertainty and Growth in Engineering Knowledge Technology and Culture 27 4 717 758 doi 10 2307 3105326 JSTOR 3105326 S2CID 112031158 a b Baugher Joe The Consolidated XB 24 USAAC USAAF USAF Bombers The Consolidated B 24 Liberator 8 August 1999 Retrieved 15 June 2010 Craven and Cate 1949 page needed a b c d e f Simons Graham M 2012 Consolidated B 24 Liberator Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword pp 40 42 ISBN 9781848846449 Consolidated XB 24K Liberator a b c Consolidated page at Aerofiles com retrieved 23 October 2013 Simons G 2012 Liberator The Consolidated B 24 Pen amp Sword Books Limited ISBN 978 1 78303 591 5 a b c d e f g Allan Chuck A Brief History of the 44th Bomb Group chuckallan com Retrieved 15 June 2010 Archived 8 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Hillenbrand 2010 page needed Green 1975 p 84 Hillenbrand 2010 p 64 Donald 1997 p 266 Birdsall 1968 p 40 a b Taylor 1968 p 463 Hendrix Lindell Lin Requiem for a Heavyweight Wings February 1978 A Sentry Magazine page 20 Byrne John A The Whiz Kids The Founding Fathers of American Business and the Legacy They Left Us Currency Doubleday Page 50 March 1998 p 63 Smith Harry V et al Escape from Siam Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine rquirk com Retrieved 27 May 2015 Green 1975 p 85 Winchester 2004 p 57 Giorgerini Giorgio 2002 Uomini sul fondo storia del sommergibilismo italiano dalle origini a oggi Milano Mondadori pp 518 20 ISBN 8804505370 The Secret War by Brian Johnson Pen And Sword Military Classics 1978 ISBN 1 84415 102 6 Garner Forest The Consolidated B 24 Liberator uboat net Retrieved 16 August 2012 Lord 1967 p 279 Levine 1992 pp 14 15 Weal 2006 p 16 Reynolds George The AZON Project Archived 6 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine 458bg com Retrieved 25 December 2014 Marion Old China Hands Tales amp Stories The Azon Bomb Archived 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine oldchinahands Retrieved 20 March 2012 Freeman 1984 p 176 Parnell 1993 pp inside cover p 91 https web archive org web 20090304014706 http home att net jbaugher2 b24 27 html Consolidated C 109 Baugher Joe Consolidated C 109 USAAC USAAF USAF Bombers The Consolidated B 24 Liberator 16 August 1999 Retrieved 15 June 2010 Autry Gene with Herskowitz Mickey 1978 Back in the Saddle Again Doubleday amp Company Inc ISBN 038503234X Page 85 RAAF Museum website A72 Avro Lincoln Retrieved 1 May 2016 Indian Ocean New Guinea Kangaroo Service 1950 1946 Flight Global website 16 November 1950 Retrieved 29 August 2009 Isemonger L Gilman and Clive 1978 p 314 a b c Istoria unui B 24 Liberator romanesc iar80flyagain org in Romanian 16 March 2023 Gordon 2008 p 479 St John Philip A 1990 The Liberator Legend The Plane and the People Turner Publishing Company p 10 ISBN 978 0 938021 99 5 Johnsen Frederick 1996 Consolidated B 24 Liberator Warbird Tech Vol 1 Specialty Press ISBN 978 1580070546 Francillon 1988 p 26 Francillon 1988 p 580 a b Peck Merton J amp Scherer Frederic M The Weapons Acquisition Process An Economic Analysis 1962 Harvard Business School p 619 a b Nolan Jenny Michigan History Willow Run and the Arsenal of Democracy Archived 4 December 2012 at archive today The Detroit News 28 January 1997 Retrieved 7 August 2010 Wegg 1990 pp 82 83 Dorr and Lake 2002 p 129 Ol 927 CAF s B 24A Liberator Archived 16 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Warbird Digest Issue 15 July August 2007 pp 17 30 Andrade 1979 p 60 Baugher Joe Consolidated PB4Y 1 USAAC USAAF USAF Bombers The Consolidated B 24 Liberator 18 August 1999 Retrieved 15 June 2010 Wegg 1990 p 90 Robertson 1998 Loftin L K Jr 1985 Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft NASA SP 468 NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch retrieved 22 April 2006 Bridgman Leonard ed 1989 Jane s Fighting aircraft of World War II 1995 ed New York Military Press pp 215 216 ISBN 0517679647 Wegg John 1990 General Dynamics aircraft and their predecessors 1st ed Annapolis Md Naval Institute Press pp 82 90 ISBN 0 87021 233 8 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Walter Matthau The Telegraph 3 July 2000 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 21 September 2017 Hillenbrand 2010 page needed Mullen Cassius Byron Betty 2015 Before the Belle Page Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1 68213 622 5 Margolick David Zamperini s War The New York Times 19 November 2010 Damnyankee amazon com Retrieved 4 February 2013 B 24D 53 CO Shady Lady Serial Number 42 40369 pacificwrecks com Retrieved 26 June 2016 Bibliography Andrade John U S Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909 Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Counties Publications 1979 ISBN 0 904597 22 9 Axworthy Mark Third Axis Fourth Ally Romanian Armed Forces in the European War 1941 1945 London Arms amp Armour First edition 1995 ISBN 978 1 85409 267 0 Birdsall Steve The B 24 Liberator New York Arco Publishing Company Inc 1968 ISBN 0 668 01695 7 Birdsall Steve B 24 Liberator in Action Aircraft number 21 Carrollton Texas Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1975 ISBN 0 89747 020 6 Birdsall Steve Log of the Liberators Garden City New York Doubleday 1973 ISBN 0 385 03870 4 Blue Allan G The B 24 Liberator A Pictorial History Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan Ltd 1976 ISBN 0 7110 0630 X Bowman Martin The B 24 Liberator 1939 1945 Norwich Norfolk UK Wensum Books Ltd 1979 ISBN 0 903619 27 X Bowman Martin Combat Legend B 24 Liberator Shrewsbury UK Airlife Publishing Ltd 2003 ISBN 1 84037 403 9 Craven Wesley and James Lea Cate US Army Air Forces in World War II Vol I Plans amp Early Operations January 1939 to August 1942 Archived 18 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Washington D C Office of Air Force History 1949 Currier Donald R Lt Col Ret 50 Mission Crush Shippensburg Pennsylvania Burd Street Press 1992 ISBN 0 942597 43 5 Davis Larry B 24 Liberator in Action Aircraft number 80 Carrollton Texas Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1987 ISBN 0 89747 190 3 Donald David general editor Encyclopedia of World Aircraft Etobicoke Ontario Prospero Books 1997 ISBN 1 85605 375 X Dorr Robert F and Jon Lake Warplane Classic Consolidated B 24 Liberator Part 1 International Air Power Review Volume4 Spring 2002 Norwalk Connecticut USA Airtime Publishing pp 126 163 ISSN 1473 9917 Ethell L Jeffrey Aircraft of World War II Glasgow HarperCollins Publishers 1995 ISBN 0 00 470849 0 Francillon Rene McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Since 1920 Volume I Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1988 ISBN 0 87021 428 4 Freeman Roger B 24 at War Shepperton Surrey UK Ian Allan Ltd 1983 ISBN 0 7110 1264 4 Freeman Roger Mighty Eighth War Manual London Jane s Publishing Company Limited 1984 ISBN 0 7106 0325 8 Gann Ernest K Fate Is the Hunter New York Simon amp Schuster 1986 ISBN 0 671 63603 0 Gardner Brian 1984 Flight Refuelling The Wartime Story Air Enthusiast No 25 pp 34 43 80 ISSN 0143 5450 Gilman J D and J Clive KG 200 London Pan Books Ltd 1978 ISBN 0 85177 819 4 Gordon Yefim Soviet Air Power in World War 2 Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Ian Allan Publishing 2008 ISBN 978 1 85780 304 4 Green William Famous Bombers of the Second World War Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company 1975 ISBN 0 385 12467 8 Hillenbrand Laura Unbroken A World War II Story of Survival Resilience and Redemption New York Random House 2010 ISBN 978 1 4000 6416 8 Isemongers Lawrence The Men Who Went to Warsaw Nelspruit UK Freeworld Publications 2002 ISBN 0 9584388 4 6 Job Macarthur Misadventure at Mauritius Flight Safety Magazine January February 2000 Johnsen Frederick A Consolidated B 24 Liberator WarbirdTech Volume 1 North Branch Minnesota Specialty Press 2001 ISBN 1 58007 054 X Johnsen Frederick A B 24 Liberator Combat and Development History of the Liberator and Privateer St Paul Minnesota Motorbooks International 1993 ISBN 0 87938 758 0 Johnsen Frederick A Bombers in Blue PB4Y 2 Privateers and PB4Y 1 Liberators Tacoma Washington Bomber Books 1979 No ISBN Levine Alan J The Strategic Bombing of Germany 1940 1945 Westport Connecticut Praeger 1992 ISBN 0 275 94319 4 Lord Walter Incredible Victory New York Harper amp Row 1967 ISBN 1 58080 059 9 March Daniel J ed British Warplanes of World War II London Aerospace Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 874023 92 1 McDowell Ernest and Richard Ward Consolidated B 24D M Liberator in USAAF RAF RAAF MLD IAF CzechAF amp CNAF Service PB4Y 1 2 Privateer in USN USMC Aeronavale amp CNAF Service New York Arco Publishing Company Inc 1969 ISBN 0 668 02115 2 Nelmes Michael V Tocumwal to Tarakan Australians and the Consolidated B 24 Liberator Belconnen Australia Banner Books 1994 ISBN 1 875593 04 7 Moyes Philip J R Consolidated B 24 Liberator Early Models Kidlington Oxford UK Vintage Aviation Publications Ltd 1979 ISBN 0 905469 70 4 North Tony and Mike Bailey Liberator Album B 24 s of the 2nd Air Division 8th Air Force Volume 1 The 20th Combat Bomb Wing Norwich Norfolk UK Tony North 1979 No ISBN North Tony and Mike Bailey Liberator Album B 24 s of the 2nd Air Division 8th Air Force Volume 2 The 14th Combat Bomb Wing Norwich Norfolk UK Tony North 1981 No ISBN Odgers George Air War Against Japan 1943 1945 Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 3 Air Canberra Australian War Memorial 1968 O Leary Michael Consolidated B 24 Liberator Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2002 ISBN 1 84176 023 4 Parnell Ben Carpetbaggers America s Secret War in Europe Austin Texas Eakin Press 1987 revised edition 1993 ISBN 978 0 89015 592 9 Prins Francois Spring 1994 Pioneering Spirit The QANTAS Story Air Enthusiast No 53 pp 24 32 ISSN 0143 5450 Robertson Bruce British Military Aircraft Serials 1878 1987 Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Counties Publications 1998 ISBN 978 0 904597 61 5 Scearce Phil Finish Forty and Home The Untold World War II Story of B 24s in the Pacific Denton Texas University of North Texas Press 2011 ISBN 978 1 57441 316 8 Shacklady Edward Classic WWII Aviation Consolidated B 24 Bristol UK Cerberus Publishing Ltd 2002 ISBN 1 84145 106 1 Shores Christopher History of the Royal Canadian Air Force Toronto Royce Publications 1984 ISBN 0 86124 160 6 Taylor John W R Consolidated B 24 PB4 Y Liberator Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present New York G P Putnam s Sons 1969 ISBN 0 425 03633 2 Wagner Ray American Combat Planes New York Doubleday amp Company Inc 1968 ISBN 0 385 04134 9 Ward Richard and Eric A Munday USAAF Heavy Bomb Group Markings amp Camouflage 1941 1945 Consolidated Liberator Reading Berkshire UK Osprey Publishing Ltd 1972 ISBN 0 85045 128 0 Weal John Bf 109 Defence of the Reich Aces Oxford UK Osprey 2006 ISBN 1 84176 879 0 Wegg John General Dynamic Aircraft and their Predecessors London Putnam 1990 ISBN 0 85177 833 X Wilson Stewart Boston Mitchell amp Liberator in Australian Service Weston Creek Australia Aerospace Publications 1992 ISBN 1 875671 00 5 Wilson Stewart Military Aircraft of Australia Weston Creek Australia Aerospace Publications 1994 ISBN 1 875671 08 0 Winchester Jim Consolidated B 24 Liberator Aircraft of World War II The Aviation Factfile Hoo Kent UK Grange Books plc 2004 ISBN 1 84013 639 1 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Consolidated B 24 Liberator Consolidated B 24A page Consolidated B 24D page USAF National Museum Willow Run Bomber Plant WW 2 film about production of the B 24 at the Willow Run bomber plant Navy Libs Naval Liberator and Privateer Naval Variant PB4Y 1 Liberator Split Tail PB4Y 2 Privateer Single Tail Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Consolidated B 24 Liberator amp oldid 1204664730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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