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B-17 Flying Fortress Engine Assembly
B-17 Flying Fortress Ball Turret in Block
B-17B Flying Fortress Engines in Factory
B-17B Flying Fortress Engine Transportation
Underside of B-17G Flying Fortress
Truck Refueling of a B-17 Flying Fortress
Boeing-Developed Shutter Compass on B-17 Flying Fortress
B-Series Bombers in Flight, B-52, B-47, B-29 and B-17 Flying Fortress
B-17G Flying Fortress in Flight
B-17F Flying Fortress Radio Compartment
B-17B Flying Fortress Engine Assembly
B-17B Flying Fortress Engine Installation
B-17 Flying Fortress
B-17G Flying Fortress Right Nacelles with Anti-Glare Finish
B-17 Flying Fortress "New" Waist Gun
B-17G Flying Fortress Takeoff
B-17G Flying Fortress Silver Ship in Flight
B-Series Bombers in Flight, B-52, B-47, B-29 and B-17 Flying Fortress
B-17 Flying Fortress Manufacturing
B-17G Flying Fortress Ball Turret
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Two Right Engines of a B-17 Flying Fortress in Flight
During 1935, in response to an Army request for a large, multiengine bomber, Boeing financed the design of the Flying Fortress prototype, the B-17 (Model 299). The B-17 went from the drawing board to flight test in less than 12 months. The low-wing, four-engine monoplane bomber combined the aerodynamic features of the XB-15 giant bomber, still in the design stage, and the Model 247 transport. The B-17 was built in astonishing numbers to support Allied demand. At one point, the Seattle plant rolled out 19 B-17s in 24 hours. Between 1935 and 1945, 12,731 B-17 Flying Fortress bombers were built by Boeing, Douglas, and Lockheed's Vega division plants across the country.
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Unique identifier
BI211766
Boeing ID
p4688
Type
Image
Size
3600px × 2788px 9MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
aerial views
airplanes
beaches and coastlines
blur
bodies of water
bombers
close-ups
clouds
day
detail views
engines
exteriors
flying
historic production status
military
monoplanes
nacelles
nobody
photos
propeller planes
propellers
propulsion systems
scanned from film negative
structural systems
viewed from above
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