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Tail-Up and Level. The wingspread is 141 ft. 2 in., the fuselage length 98 ft., and the single tail fin (which has a strong family resemblance to the B-17's familiar tail fin) is 27 ft. high. The Superfortress departs' from previous Fortress custom in having tricycle landing gear -three sets of twin wheels-so that its fuselage, like that of the tricycle-geared Liberator, is tail-up and level on the ground...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIR: An Excellent Airplane | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

Even in, the days of his husky grandchildren, the B-295, Grandpappy can still hold his head high. He can fly up to 200 m.p.h. since he got some big, new engines which could supply the horsepower for lighting a small city if necessary. His wingspread is 150 ft., 46 ft. longer than his cousins', the newer B-173, only 62 ft. shorter than that of his nephew, the lumbering, dullard Douglas B19. Grandpappy has clippings to show that, in 1939, he carried a pay load of 31,205 Ib. (total weight: 74,000 Ib.) to a height...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIR: Grandpappy | 3/6/1944 | See Source »

Presently the B-26 was being called "The Flying Prostitute" (because some airmen thought that the 65-foot wingspread, for so much airplane, constituted "no visible means of support"). By derivation, it became "The Baltimore Whore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Army & Navy: Respectable Floozie | 1/31/1944 | See Source »

Pilots in New Guinea said that the new plane was about the same size as the old Zeros (about 38-39 ft. wingspread, 28 ft. long); was powered by an in-line V-type engine (the various Zeros have radial, air-cooled engines); had armor; carried one 7.7-mm. machine gun in each wing and two 12.7-mm. machine guns in the nose. In armament, the Japs had evidently borrowed some ideas from the Americans' destructive .50-caliber machine guns, to which the 12.7 roughly corresponds. New Guinea flyers said that the newcomer could outdive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Purifiers | 10/11/1943 | See Source »

...highly secret) for two years, the gun sight is a compact assembly incorporating an optical system, a small range finder and a complex instantaneous computing machine. Only arbitrary adjustment on it is a dial which the gunner sets for the wingspread (in feet) of the attacking plane. After that he frames the plane between illumined reticules (cross hairs or similar lines imposed on the field of vision), in a mirror on the sight, and keeps it framed there. He tracks it with the handle controls of his power-operated turret. When the enemy plane fills the space between the lighted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Army & Navy: Gunner's Gimmick | 7/5/1943 | See Source »

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