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B-17F Flying Fortress Forward Section Armament
B-17F Flying Fortress Rear Compartment
B-17F Flying Fortress Bomb Bay
B-17F Flying Fortress Radio Compartment
B-17F Flying Fortress Bombadier's and Navigator's Compartment
B-17 Flying Fortress Rear Compartment
B-17F Flying Fortress Nose
B-17F Flying Fortress Fuel System
B-17F Flying Fortress in Flight
B-17F Flying Fortress Restoration
Riveters Assembling a B-17 Flying Fortress
B-17E Flying Fortress Pilot's Control Panel
B-17F Flying Fortress Restoration
B-17F Flying Fortress Restoration
B-17F Flying Fortress in Flight
B-17E Flying Fortress Pilot's Cab
B-17G Flying Fortress Cutaway
B-17F Flying Fortress Assembly Workers in Wing
B-17C Flying Fortress Control Cabin
Two Gun Turret on a B-17E Flying Fortress
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B-17F Flying Fortress Pilot's Compartment
In response for the Army's request for a large, multiengine bomber, the B-17 (Model 299) prototype, financed entirely by Boeing, went from design board to flight test in less than 12 months. The B-17 was the first Boeing military aircraft with a flight deck instead of an open cockpit and was armed with bombs and five .30-caliber machine guns mounted in clear "blisters." Boeing plants built a total of 6,981 B-17s in various models, and another 5,745 were built under a nationwide collaborative effort by Douglas and Lockheed (Vega). Only a few B-17s survive today; most were scrapped at the end of the war.
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Unique identifier
BI219504
Boeing ID
hs21c
Type
Image
Size
2863px × 2193px 18MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
airplanes
ammunition/weapons systems
bombers
close-ups
cockpits
control systems
cutaway views
detail views
green
historic production status
illustrations
instrument panels
left front views
left side views
military
monoplanes
nobody
nose sections
POINT OF VIEW
propeller planes
structural systems
text
vintage / retro
yellow
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