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B-17 Flying Fortress Engine Assembly
B-17 Flying Fortress Manufacturing
B-17 Flying Fortress Part Assembly, Chehalis WA
Installation of B-17G Flying Fortress Chin Turret
Riveters Assembling a B-17 Flying Fortress
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Woman Installs New Waist Guns on B-17 Flying Fortress
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Rivet Bucking, B-17 Flying Fortress Bulkhead
Washing a B-17 Flying Fortress
Woman Inside B-17G Flying Fortress Chin Turret
B-17G Flying Fortress Chin Turret Final Assembly
B-17 Flying Fortress Manufacturing
B-17 Flying Fortress Assembly
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B-17D Flying Fortress Wing Assembly
Team Installs a B-17 Flying Fortress Bomb Bay Catwalk
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B-17 Flying Fortress Final Assembly
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 to flight test in less than 12 months. The B-17 Flying Fortress was a low-wing monoplane that combined aerodynamic features of the XB-15 giant bomber, and the Model 247 transport. 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. Each version of the B-17 was more heavily armed. Described by General H. H. Hap Arnold, as the backbone of our worldwide aerial offensive, the B-17 Flying Fortress served in every World War II combat zone. Boeing, Douglas, and Lockheed Vega produced 12,731 B-17s, and the four-engine bombers became legendary for their ability to stay in the air after taking brutal poundings.
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Unique identifier
BI211708
Boeing ID
p4099
Type
Image
Size
2788px × 3600px 9MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
abundance
adults
airplanes
bombers
busy
factories
factory workers
female
fuselages
glare
ground shots
hangars
historic production status
interiors
male
manufacturing
military
monoplanes
occupations and work
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
reflections
repetition
Rosie the Riveter
scanned from film negative
several/groups
structural systems
unpainted
viewed from above
Restrictions