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B-1B Lancer in Flight
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B-1B Lancer in Flight

The B-1 Lancer is a swing-wing bomber intended for high-speed, low-altitude penetration missions. By the end of 1977, three Rockwell International B-1As had made 118 flights with more than 21 hours at supersonic speeds. The next version was the B-1B. The B-1B differed from the B-1A in several ways. The requirement for Mach 2.2 flight was reduced to Mach 1.25, simplifying the inlet and over-wing fairing structure. The maximum gross take-off weight was increased from 395,000 to 477,000 poundsand the radar cross section was reduced an order of magnitude. The B-1B Lancer first flew Oct. 18, 1984, could operate at 60,000 feet and had a range of more than 7,000 miles. The B-1B holds 61 world records for speed, payload and distance.
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Unique identifier BI216646 
Boeing ID dvd-781-360 
Type Image 
Size 6144px × 4088px   71MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1970s
afterburners
air to air
airplanes
bombers
clouds
copy space
day
exteriors
fire
flying
full body views
gray
gray skies
jets
military
military livery
monochromatic
monoplanes
muted colors
nobody
out of production
photos
power
rear views
speed
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