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Three KB-29 Tankers Flying in Formation
An entirely new career began for the B-29 Superfortress bomber when the Strategic Air Command decided to use aerial refueling to extend the range of bombers and fighters rather than ordering new, longer range bombers. In 1948, Boeing reactivated its Wichita Plant, nearly idle since the war ended, to convert B-29s into KB-29M tankers. The KB-29Ms had about 240 feet of hose and jettisonable tanks, holding about 2,300 gallons of fuel, installed in their bomb bays. However, hose-type aerial refueling required a slow airspeed and was difficult in poor weather. To solve these problems, Boeing developed the flying boom, an aerodynamically controlled swiveling and telescoping arm that a crew member, using cockpit-like flight controls, guided into a receptacle on top of the receiving aircraft's fuselage. In 1950, KB-29P tankers - B-29s equipped with the Boeing flying boom - began operation. The boom became the aerial transfer system of choice and was subsequently used in the KC-97 tankers, and, later, in the K-135C jet tankers. The development of aerial refueling techniques provided the Air Force with a fleet of fighters and bombers that could fly anywhere in the world without landing for fuel.
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Unique identifier
BI22474
Boeing ID
p12845
Size
5998px × 4796px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
air to air
airplanes
bombers
clouds
day
exteriors
flying
flying in formation
fuel systems
full body views
historic production status
left rear views
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
propulsion systems
repetition
shadows
sunshine
tankers
unpainted
viewed from above
vintage / retro
Restrictions
Manage crops
NAME
RATIO
Square
1 : 1
Portrait
2 : 3
Landscape
3 : 2