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Conceptually similar
XB-19 Behemoth on Tarmac with Troops
XB-19 Behemoth with Onlookers
XB-19 Behemoth with Crowd
XB-19 Behemoth on Tarmac
XB-19 Behemoth Tail with Motorcycles
XB-19 Behemoth with Troops
XB-19 Behemoth in Factory
XB-19 Behemoth Nose
XB-19 Behemoth with Douglas Fire Truck
P-40 Warhawk with XB-19 Behemoth
Loading mail on the XB-19 Behemoth
XB-19 Behemoth in Factory
XB-19 Behemoth Assembly
XB-19 Behemoth Preparing for Takeoff
XB-19 Behemoth Landing at March Field
XB-19 Behemoth Preparing to Land
XB-45 Tornado Undergoes Preflight Inspection
XB-19 Behemoth Flies Over Crowd at Long Beach Plant Dedication Ceremony
XB-47 Stratojet Engine Maintenance
Douglas XB-43 Jetmaster on Flight Ramp
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XB-19 Behemoth on Tarmac with Propellors Turning
Douglas B-19 Behemoth (1937-1941): The B-19 was an experimental long-range bomber that was the largest aircraft built in the United States during World War II. In the mid 1930s, the U.S. Army Air Corps asked for a flying battleship able to reach and strike an enemy force thousands of miles from America's coast. The result was the Boeing XB-15 and the Douglas XB-19. When each made its first flight, Boeing's B-15 in 1937, they were the largest aircraft in the United States. Construction of the B-19 took place at the cavernous production hangar at the Douglas plant in Santa Monica, Calif. It had a wingspan of 212 feet, slightly larger than today's Boeing 747-400, and its main landing gear had 24-ply tires that were eight feet in diameter. The B-19's range of 7,700 miles meant it could remain aloft for 55 hours. It had passageways inside the wings so crewmembers could service the engines in flight. The B-19 made its first flight on June 27, 1941, and spent the next six months doing flight tests in Southern California. The December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor called for special precautions along the California coast, The B-19 was given a coat of camouflage paint and flew its later test flights with its guns armed. In January 1942, the big plane was flown to Wright Field near Dayton, Ohio, where it became a flying laboratory. In 1944 it was fitted with more powerful engines and continued flying test flights. At one point the Army saw potential in the B-19 as a cargo plane and had it modified as a troop transport. However, the B-19 spent most of the war being shuttled from one Midwestern base to another. Although only one was built, the B-19 remained a symbol of American airpower throughout World War II. In 1949 it was declared surplus by the Army and destroyed, though the forward fuselage remained intact and ended up as a real estate office in Tucson, Ariz., for a short time.
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Unique identifier
BI2484
Boeing ID
lkb174
Type
Image
Size
5996px × 4494px 25MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
adults
airplanes
blur
bombers
dark
engine starts
exteriors
ground crews
ground shots
historic production status
maintenance
male
mechanics
military
monoplanes
night
one of a kind aircraft
photos
propeller planes
prototypes
research/experimental
right front views
several/groups
tarmac
three-quarter length views
unpainted
vintage / retro
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