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B-47 Stratojet
Conceptually similar
B-47B Stratojet Line Up in Wichita
B-47B Stratojet Landing Gear Inspection
B-47B Stratojet in the Factory
B-47B Stratojet Takeoff
B-47B Stratojet on the Ground
B-47B Stratojet in Flight
Pilots in Separate B-47B Stratojet Cockpits
B-47B Stratojet at Dawn in Wichita
B-47B Stratojet with Wing Tanks
B-47 Stratojet Noses
Sleek, Swept-Wing B-47B Stratojet in Flight
B-47 Stratojet Flight Line with Flight Crew
B-47E Stratojet Perched for Flight
Fueling the B-47 Stratojet
Boeing B-47E Navigator Station
Tanker Takeoff with B-47B Stratojet and B-29 Superfortress on the Ground
1000th B-47E Stratojet Rollout
B-47E Stratojet
B-47E Stratojet on a Snowy Field, Wichita, Kansas
B-47E Stratojet Right Profile
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B-47B Stratojet Nose
At the time of its first flight, Dec. 17, 1947, the B-47 Stratojet represented a radical departure from traditional design, and it set the design standards for all large jet aircraft until the present time. The six-engine Boeing B-47 was America’s first multiengine swept-wing jet bomber. Its thin 116-foot wing was extraordinarily flexible and swept back at a 35-degree angle. Eighteen small rocket units in the fuselage provided jet-assisted takeoff (JATO), and parachutes cut its landing speeds. Later models were powered by 5,200-pound-thrust axial-flow jet engines, and top speeds were 600 mph. A total of 2,032 B-47s in all versions were built.
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Unique identifier
BI24144
Boeing ID
k1634
Type
Image
Size
4596px × 5996px 78MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
airplanes
blue
blue skies
Boeing
bombers
clear skies
close-ups
day
exteriors
fuselages
gray
ground shots
half-length views
historic production status
jets
left front views
military
military livery
monoplanes
muted colors
nobody
nose sections
photos
silver color
structural systems
sunshine
tarmac
trucks
unpainted
viewed from below
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