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Consolidated PB4Y-2 Privateer

The Consolidated PB4Y-2 Privateer is an American World War II and Korean War era patrol bomber of the United States Navy derived from the Consolidated B-24 Liberator. The Navy had been using B-24s with only minor modifications as the PB4Y-1 Liberator, and along with maritime patrol Liberators used by RAF Coastal Command this type of patrol plane was proven successful. A fully navalised design was desired, and Consolidated developed a dedicated long-range patrol bomber in 1943, designated PB4Y-2 Privateer.[1] In 1951, the type was redesignated P4Y-2 Privateer. A further designation change occurred in September 1962, when the remaining Navy Privateers (all having previously been converted to drone configuration as P4Y-2K) were redesignated QP-4B.

PB4Y-2/P4Y-2 Privateer
U.S. Navy PB4Y-2 from VP-23 in flight.
Role Maritime patrol bomber
National origin United States
Manufacturer Consolidated Aircraft
Introduction 1943
Retired 1954, U.S. Navy
1958, U.S. Coast Guard
Primary users United States Navy
United States Coast Guard
Produced 1943–1945
Number built 739
Developed from Consolidated B-24 Liberator

Design and development edit

 
A PB4Y-2B carrying ASM-N-2 Bat glide bombs.

The Privateer was externally similar to the Liberator, but the fuselage was longer to accommodate a flight engineer's station, and it had a tall single vertical stabilizer rather than the B-24's twin tail configuration. The Navy wanted a flight engineer crewmember to reduce pilot fatigue on long duration over water patrols. The single vertical tail was adopted from the USAAF's canceled B-24N design (and was slightly taller on the Privateer) because it would increase stability at low to medium altitudes for maritime patrol. The Ford Motor Company, which produced B-24s for the United States Army Air Forces, had earlier built an experimental variant (B-24K) using a single tail.[2] Aircraft handling was improved. The single tail design was used on the B-32 Dominator and PB4Y-2 and was slated for the US Army Air Forces' proposed B-24N production model to be built by Ford, but that order (for several thousand bombers) was canceled on 31 May 1945.

Defensive armament on the PB4Y-2 was increased to twelve .50-in (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns in six power-operated turrets (two dorsal, two waist, nose and tail); the B-24's ventral, retractable Sperry ball turret was omitted. Turbosuperchargers were not fitted to the Privateer's engines since maritime patrol missions were not usually flown at high altitude, improving performance and also saving weight.

The navigator's astrodome was moved from its (B-24/PB4Y-1) position on the aircraft's upper nose to behind the first dorsal gun turret. Electronic countermeasure (ECM), communication and radar antennas also protruded or were enclosed in fairings at various locations on the fuselage of the Privateer, including a manually retractable AN/APS-2 radome behind the nose wheel well.

The Navy eventually took delivery of 739 Privateers, the majority after the end of the war. Several PB4Y-2 squadrons saw operational service in the Pacific theater through August 1945 in the reconnaissance, search and rescue, electronic countermeasures, communication relay, and anti-shipping roles (the latter with the "Bat" radar-guided bomb).

Operational history edit

The Privateer entered U.S. Navy service during late 1944, Patrol Bomber Squadrons 118 and 119 (VPB-118 and VPB-119) being the first Fleet squadrons to equip with the aircraft. The first overseas deployment began on 6 January 1945, when VPB-118 left for operations in the Marianas. On 2 March 1945 VPB-119 began "offensive search" missions out of Clark Field, Luzon in the Philippines, flying sectored searches of the seas and coastlines extending from the Gulf of Tonkin in the south, along the Chinese coast, and beyond Okinawa in the north.

Privateers were used as typhoon/hurricane hunters from 1945 to the mid-1950s. One aircraft, designated BuNo 59415 of VPB-119, went down when it experienced mechanical trouble while investigating a Category 1 typhoon near Batan Island in the Philippines. It attempted to land on the island, but was unable to do so and crashed. It was one of only six hurricane hunter flights that were ever lost, and the only one found.[3] Another P4Y-2S, designated BuNo 59716 of Squadron VW-3 (formerly VJ-1), was lost during reconnaissance of Super Typhoon Doris on 16 December 1953. Flying out of NAS Agana, Guam, the Privateer with a crew of nine was tracking Typhoon Doris with sustained winds of 90-95 knots near the small island of Agrihan north of Guam. No sign of the crew nor wreckage of the plane was ever found.

 
U.S. Coast Guard P4Y-2G BuNo 66306

PB4Y-2s were also used during the Korean War to fly "Firefly" night illumination missions dropping parachute flares to detect North Korean and Chinese seaborne infiltrators. In addition, Privateers were used by the U.S. Navy for signals intelligence (SIGINT) flights off of the coast of the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. On 8 April 1950, Soviet La-11 fighters shot down a U.S. Navy PB4Y-2 Privateer (BuNo 59645) over the Baltic Sea, off the coast of Liepāja, Latvia. Named the Turbulent Turtle, the aircraft was assigned to Patrol Squadron 26 (VP-26), Det A.[4]

The French Aéronavale was supplied with Privateers via the Mutual Defense Assistance Act, which they used as bombers during the Indochina War and later operated out of Bizerte, Tunisia and Algiers.

All U.S. Navy PB4Y-2s were retired by 1954, though unarmed PB4Y-2G Privateers served until 1958 with the Coast Guard before being auctioned off for salvage.

The Navy dropped the patrol-bomber designation in 1951 and its remaining PB4Y-2s were redesignated P4Y-2 Privateer. (The earlier XP4Y-1 Corregidor was a completely different design, based on the Consolidated Model 31 twin-engine flying boat.) PB4Y-2s were still being used as drones in the 1950s/early 1960s, designated PB4Y-2K, and P4Y-2K after 1951. They were then redesignated QP-4B under the 1962 United States Tri-Service aircraft designation system, becoming part of the new patrol number series between the Lockheed P-3 Orion and the Martin P-5 Marlin.[5]

A number of PB4Ys were supplied to the Republic of China Air Force for use in missions over the People's Republic of China. One was shot down by ground fire on 12 September 1954, near Xiamen, People's Republic of China. The crew of nine was killed. Another was shot down on 15 February 1961 by Burmese Hawker Sea Fury fighter aircraft, near the Thai-Burmese border, killing five members of the crew. Two other crew members were taken prisoner. This aircraft was carrying supplies for Chinese Kuomintang forces fighting in northern Burma.[6]

Privateers in aerial firefighting edit

 
P4Y-2 Tanker 123 BuNo 66260 (N7620C), of Hawkins & Powers in service supporting the CDF, at Chester Air Attack Base in the late 1990s—crashed 18 July 2002.
 
PB4Y-2 BuNo 66261 (marked as BuNo 66304) in the collection of the National Naval Aviation Museum at NAS Pensacola, Florida.

A limited number of refitted PB4Ys and P4Ys continued in civilian service as airtankers, dropping fire retardant on forest fires throughout the western United States. On 18 July 2002, one such refitted P4Y, BuNo 66260 (seen in picture to right) operated by Hawkins and Powers Aviation of Greybull, Wyoming broke up in flight while fighting a wildfire near Rocky Mountain National Park. Both crew members were killed in the accident, and the Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounded all large air tankers in the region.[7] Despite the fact that the crash was the result of poor maintenance, and a much newer C-130 based aircraft also broke apart due to similar stresses, all remaining Privateers were retired. (See 2002 United States airtanker crashes.)

Variants edit

YPB4Y-2
prototypes, three built.
PB4Y-2
main production version, 736 built.
PB4Y-2B
PB4Y-2s equipped to launch ASM-N-2 Bat air-to-surface missiles. Redesignated P4Y-2B in 1951.
PB4Y-2M
PB4Y-2s converted for weather reconnaissance. Redesignated P4Y-2M in 1951.
PB4Y-2S
PB4Y-2s equipped with anti-submarine radar. Redesignated P4Y-2S in 1951.
PB4Y-2G
PB4Y-2s converted for air-sea rescue and weather reconnaissance duties with the U.S. Coast Guard. Redesignated P4Y-2G in 1951.
PB4Y-2K
PB4Y-2s converted to target drones. Redesignated P4Y-2K in 1951 and QP-4B in 1962.

Operators edit

  Canada
  Republic of China
  France
  Honduras
  United States

Surviving aircraft edit

 
P4Y-2G Super Privateer BuNo 66302.
Airworthy
P4Y-2G
On display
PB4Y-2

Specifications (PB4Y-2) edit

 
3-view line drawing of the Consolidated PB4Y-2 Privateer

Data from Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II[19]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 11: two pilots, navigator, bombardier, five gunners, two radio operators
  • Length: 74 ft 7 in (22.73 m)
  • Wingspan: 110 ft 0 in (33.53 m)
  • Height: 30 ft 1 in (9.17 m)
  • Wing area: 1,048 sq ft (97.4 m2)
  • Empty weight: 27,485 lb (12,467 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 65,000 lb (29,500 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Pratt & Whitney R-1830-94 radial engines, 1,350 hp (1,007 kW) each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 300 mph (482 km/h, 261 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 175 mph (282 km/h, 152 kn)
  • Range: 2,820 mi (4,540 km, 2,450 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 21,000 ft (6,400 m)
  • Wing loading: 62 lb/sq ft (300 kg/m2)

Armament

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Baugher, Joe. "Convair PB4Y-2 Privateer." American Military Aircraft, 23 August 1999. Retrieved: 13 November 2010.
  2. ^ Baugher, Joe. "Consolidated B-24N Liberator." American Military Aircraft. Retrieved: 13 November 2010.
  3. ^ Tannehill, Ivan Ray. The Hurricane Hunters. New York: Dodd Mead, 1955. ISBN 0-396-03789-5.
  4. ^ "Intrusions, Overflights, Shootdowns and Defections During the Cold War and Thereafter." ncnetwork.net. Retrieved: 25 July 2011.
  5. ^ Gordon Swanborough, Peter M. Bowers: United States Navy aircraft since 1911. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland (USA) 1990, p. 106. ISBN 0-87021-792-5
  6. ^ Pocock, Chris. The Black Bats: CIA Spy Flights Over China From Taiwan, 1951–1969. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Military History, 2010. ISBN 978-0-7643-3513-6.
  7. ^ Firehouse.com. Retrieved: 13 November 2010.
  8. ^ "FAA Registry: N2871G" FAA.gov Retrieved: 29 July 2021.
  9. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/66302" GossHawk Unlimited Retrieved: 2 November 2018.
  10. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/59701" Warbird Directory: Consolidated Page 7 Retrieved: 21 September 2022.
  11. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/59819" Pima Air and Space Museum Retrieved: 2 November 2018.
  12. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/59876" Yankee Air Force Retrieved: 13 November 2020.
  13. ^ "FAA Registry: N7962C" FAA.gov Retrieved: 29 July 2021.
  14. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/59882" Warbird Directory: Consolidated Page 7 Retrieved: 21 September 2022.
  15. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/59932" National World War II Museum Retrieved: 16 July 2014.
  16. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/66261" National Naval Aviation Museum Retrieved: 13 November 2020.
  17. ^ "FAA Registry: N2872G" FAA.gov Retrieved: 29 July 2021.
  18. ^ "PB4Y-2 Privateer/66300" Yanks Air Museum Retrieved: 21 September 2023.
  19. ^ Bridgeman 1946, pp. 217–218.
Bibliography
  • Bridgeman, Leonard. "The Consolidated Vultee Privateer." Jane's Fighting Aircraft of World War II. London: Studio, 1946.'ISBN 1-85170-493-0.

External links edit

consolidated, pb4y, privateer, earlier, aircraft, designated, consolidated, xp4y, corregidor, american, world, korean, patrol, bomber, united, states, navy, derived, from, consolidated, liberator, navy, been, using, with, only, minor, modifications, pb4y, libe. For the earlier aircraft designated P4Y see Consolidated XP4Y Corregidor The Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer is an American World War II and Korean War era patrol bomber of the United States Navy derived from the Consolidated B 24 Liberator The Navy had been using B 24s with only minor modifications as the PB4Y 1 Liberator and along with maritime patrol Liberators used by RAF Coastal Command this type of patrol plane was proven successful A fully navalised design was desired and Consolidated developed a dedicated long range patrol bomber in 1943 designated PB4Y 2 Privateer 1 In 1951 the type was redesignated P4Y 2 Privateer A further designation change occurred in September 1962 when the remaining Navy Privateers all having previously been converted to drone configuration as P4Y 2K were redesignated QP 4B PB4Y 2 P4Y 2 Privateer U S Navy PB4Y 2 from VP 23 in flight Role Maritime patrol bomber National origin United States Manufacturer Consolidated Aircraft Introduction 1943 Retired 1954 U S Navy1958 U S Coast Guard Primary users United States NavyUnited States Coast Guard Produced 1943 1945 Number built 739 Developed from Consolidated B 24 Liberator Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 2 1 Privateers in aerial firefighting 3 Variants 4 Operators 5 Surviving aircraft 6 Specifications PB4Y 2 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDesign and development edit nbsp A PB4Y 2B carrying ASM N 2 Bat glide bombs The Privateer was externally similar to the Liberator but the fuselage was longer to accommodate a flight engineer s station and it had a tall single vertical stabilizer rather than the B 24 s twin tail configuration The Navy wanted a flight engineer crewmember to reduce pilot fatigue on long duration over water patrols The single vertical tail was adopted from the USAAF s canceled B 24N design and was slightly taller on the Privateer because it would increase stability at low to medium altitudes for maritime patrol The Ford Motor Company which produced B 24s for the United States Army Air Forces had earlier built an experimental variant B 24K using a single tail 2 Aircraft handling was improved The single tail design was used on the B 32 Dominator and PB4Y 2 and was slated for the US Army Air Forces proposed B 24N production model to be built by Ford but that order for several thousand bombers was canceled on 31 May 1945 Defensive armament on the PB4Y 2 was increased to twelve 50 in 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine guns in six power operated turrets two dorsal two waist nose and tail the B 24 s ventral retractable Sperry ball turret was omitted Turbosuperchargers were not fitted to the Privateer s engines since maritime patrol missions were not usually flown at high altitude improving performance and also saving weight The navigator s astrodome was moved from its B 24 PB4Y 1 position on the aircraft s upper nose to behind the first dorsal gun turret Electronic countermeasure ECM communication and radar antennas also protruded or were enclosed in fairings at various locations on the fuselage of the Privateer including a manually retractable AN APS 2 radome behind the nose wheel well The Navy eventually took delivery of 739 Privateers the majority after the end of the war Several PB4Y 2 squadrons saw operational service in the Pacific theater through August 1945 in the reconnaissance search and rescue electronic countermeasures communication relay and anti shipping roles the latter with the Bat radar guided bomb Operational history editThe Privateer entered U S Navy service during late 1944 Patrol Bomber Squadrons 118 and 119 VPB 118 and VPB 119 being the first Fleet squadrons to equip with the aircraft The first overseas deployment began on 6 January 1945 when VPB 118 left for operations in the Marianas On 2 March 1945 VPB 119 began offensive search missions out of Clark Field Luzon in the Philippines flying sectored searches of the seas and coastlines extending from the Gulf of Tonkin in the south along the Chinese coast and beyond Okinawa in the north Privateers were used as typhoon hurricane hunters from 1945 to the mid 1950s One aircraft designated BuNo 59415 of VPB 119 went down when it experienced mechanical trouble while investigating a Category 1 typhoon near Batan Island in the Philippines It attempted to land on the island but was unable to do so and crashed It was one of only six hurricane hunter flights that were ever lost and the only one found 3 Another P4Y 2S designated BuNo 59716 of Squadron VW 3 formerly VJ 1 was lost during reconnaissance of Super Typhoon Doris on 16 December 1953 Flying out of NAS Agana Guam the Privateer with a crew of nine was tracking Typhoon Doris with sustained winds of 90 95 knots near the small island of Agrihan north of Guam No sign of the crew nor wreckage of the plane was ever found nbsp U S Coast Guard P4Y 2G BuNo 66306 PB4Y 2s were also used during the Korean War to fly Firefly night illumination missions dropping parachute flares to detect North Korean and Chinese seaborne infiltrators In addition Privateers were used by the U S Navy for signals intelligence SIGINT flights off of the coast of the Soviet Union and the People s Republic of China On 8 April 1950 Soviet La 11 fighters shot down a U S Navy PB4Y 2 Privateer BuNo 59645 over the Baltic Sea off the coast of Liepaja Latvia Named the Turbulent Turtle the aircraft was assigned to Patrol Squadron 26 VP 26 Det A 4 The French Aeronavale was supplied with Privateers via the Mutual Defense Assistance Act which they used as bombers during the Indochina War and later operated out of Bizerte Tunisia and Algiers All U S Navy PB4Y 2s were retired by 1954 though unarmed PB4Y 2G Privateers served until 1958 with the Coast Guard before being auctioned off for salvage The Navy dropped the patrol bomber designation in 1951 and its remaining PB4Y 2s were redesignated P4Y 2 Privateer The earlier XP4Y 1 Corregidor was a completely different design based on the Consolidated Model 31 twin engine flying boat PB4Y 2s were still being used as drones in the 1950s early 1960s designated PB4Y 2K and P4Y 2K after 1951 They were then redesignated QP 4B under the 1962 United States Tri Service aircraft designation system becoming part of the new patrol number series between the Lockheed P 3 Orion and the Martin P 5 Marlin 5 A number of PB4Ys were supplied to the Republic of China Air Force for use in missions over the People s Republic of China One was shot down by ground fire on 12 September 1954 near Xiamen People s Republic of China The crew of nine was killed Another was shot down on 15 February 1961 by Burmese Hawker Sea Fury fighter aircraft near the Thai Burmese border killing five members of the crew Two other crew members were taken prisoner This aircraft was carrying supplies for Chinese Kuomintang forces fighting in northern Burma 6 Privateers in aerial firefighting edit nbsp P4Y 2 Tanker 123 BuNo 66260 N7620C of Hawkins amp Powers in service supporting the CDF at Chester Air Attack Base in the late 1990s crashed 18 July 2002 nbsp PB4Y 2 BuNo 66261 marked as BuNo 66304 in the collection of the National Naval Aviation Museum at NAS Pensacola Florida A limited number of refitted PB4Ys and P4Ys continued in civilian service as airtankers dropping fire retardant on forest fires throughout the western United States On 18 July 2002 one such refitted P4Y BuNo 66260 seen in picture to right operated by Hawkins and Powers Aviation of Greybull Wyoming broke up in flight while fighting a wildfire near Rocky Mountain National Park Both crew members were killed in the accident and the Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounded all large air tankers in the region 7 Despite the fact that the crash was the result of poor maintenance and a much newer C 130 based aircraft also broke apart due to similar stresses all remaining Privateers were retired See 2002 United States airtanker crashes Variants editYPB4Y 2 prototypes three built PB4Y 2 main production version 736 built PB4Y 2B PB4Y 2s equipped to launch ASM N 2 Bat air to surface missiles Redesignated P4Y 2B in 1951 PB4Y 2M PB4Y 2s converted for weather reconnaissance Redesignated P4Y 2M in 1951 PB4Y 2S PB4Y 2s equipped with anti submarine radar Redesignated P4Y 2S in 1951 PB4Y 2G PB4Y 2s converted for air sea rescue and weather reconnaissance duties with the U S Coast Guard Redesignated P4Y 2G in 1951 PB4Y 2K PB4Y 2s converted to target drones Redesignated P4Y 2K in 1951 and QP 4B in 1962 Operators editSee also List of Consolidated B 24 Liberator operators PB4Y Privateer operators This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Canada nbsp Republic of China nbsp France nbsp Honduras nbsp United States United States Navy United States Coast GuardSurviving aircraft edit nbsp P4Y 2G Super Privateer BuNo 66302 Airworthy P4Y 2G 66302 based in Casa Grande Arizona 8 9 On display PB4Y 2 59701 Museum of Flight and Aerial Firefighting in Greybull Wyoming 10 59819 Pima Air and Space Museum in Tucson Arizona 11 59876 Yankee Air Museum in Belleville Michigan 12 59882 Museum of Flight and Aerial Firefighting in Greybull Wyoming 13 14 59932 nose only Over Exposed The National WWII Museum in New Orleans Louisiana Displayed as a B 24D 15 66261 National Naval Aviation Museum at Naval Air Station Pensacola Florida 16 66300 Yanks Air Museum in Chino California 17 18 Specifications PB4Y 2 edit nbsp 3 view line drawing of the Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer Data from Jane s Fighting Aircraft of World War II 19 General characteristicsCrew 11 two pilots navigator bombardier five gunners two radio operators Length 74 ft 7 in 22 73 m Wingspan 110 ft 0 in 33 53 m Height 30 ft 1 in 9 17 m Wing area 1 048 sq ft 97 4 m2 Empty weight 27 485 lb 12 467 kg Max takeoff weight 65 000 lb 29 500 kg Powerplant 4 Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 94 radial engines 1 350 hp 1 007 kW each Performance Maximum speed 300 mph 482 km h 261 kn Cruise speed 175 mph 282 km h 152 kn Range 2 820 mi 4 540 km 2 450 nmi Service ceiling 21 000 ft 6 400 m Wing loading 62 lb sq ft 300 kg m2 Armament Guns 12 50 in 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine guns in six turrets Bombs Up to 12 800 lb 5 800 kg of bombs mines or torpedoesSee also editRelated development Consolidated B 24 Liberator Consolidated B 32 Dominator Consolidated C 87 Liberator Express Consolidated R2Y Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Avro Shackleton Focke Wulf Fw 200 Condor Vickers Warwick Nakajima G8N Related lists List of aircraft of World War II List of military aircraft of the United StatesReferences editNotes Baugher Joe Convair PB4Y 2 Privateer American Military Aircraft 23 August 1999 Retrieved 13 November 2010 Baugher Joe Consolidated B 24N Liberator American Military Aircraft Retrieved 13 November 2010 Tannehill Ivan Ray The Hurricane Hunters New York Dodd Mead 1955 ISBN 0 396 03789 5 Intrusions Overflights Shootdowns and Defections During the Cold War and Thereafter ncnetwork net Retrieved 25 July 2011 Gordon Swanborough Peter M Bowers United States Navy aircraft since 1911 Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland USA 1990 p 106 ISBN 0 87021 792 5 Pocock Chris The Black Bats CIA Spy Flights Over China From Taiwan 1951 1969 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Military History 2010 ISBN 978 0 7643 3513 6 Two Die in Crash Fighting Colorado Wildfire Firehouse com Retrieved 13 November 2010 FAA Registry N2871G FAA gov Retrieved 29 July 2021 PB4Y 2 Privateer 66302 GossHawk Unlimited Retrieved 2 November 2018 PB4Y 2 Privateer 59701 Warbird Directory Consolidated Page 7 Retrieved 21 September 2022 PB4Y 2 Privateer 59819 Pima Air and Space Museum Retrieved 2 November 2018 PB4Y 2 Privateer 59876 Yankee Air Force Retrieved 13 November 2020 FAA Registry N7962C FAA gov Retrieved 29 July 2021 PB4Y 2 Privateer 59882 Warbird Directory Consolidated Page 7 Retrieved 21 September 2022 PB4Y 2 Privateer 59932 National World War II Museum Retrieved 16 July 2014 PB4Y 2 Privateer 66261 National Naval Aviation Museum Retrieved 13 November 2020 FAA Registry N2872G FAA gov Retrieved 29 July 2021 PB4Y 2 Privateer 66300 Yanks Air Museum Retrieved 21 September 2023 Bridgeman 1946 pp 217 218 Bibliography Bridgeman Leonard The Consolidated Vultee Privateer Jane s Fighting Aircraft of World War II London Studio 1946 ISBN 1 85170 493 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer Manual 1945 Flight Manual PB4Y 2 Airplane Archived 2018 04 24 at the Wayback Machine Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer Aviation Enthusiast Corner Warbird Alley Globalsecurity org Aeroweb s PB4Y Location List Aeroweb s PB4Y at Lone Star Flight Museum Lone Star Flight Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer amp oldid 1215911414, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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