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Girl on B-50 Nacelle
Girl on B-50 Nacelle 
Girl on B-50 Nacelle
Girl on B-50 Nacelle 
Ladies Decorate the Tail Section of Boeing Plant II's Last B-17 Flying Fortress
Ladies Decorate the Tail Section of Boeing Plant II's Last B-17 Flying Fortress 
B-50 Tail
B-50 Tail 
B-50 Flight Line
B-50 Flight Line 
Mechanics at Work on B-17 Flying Fortresss
Mechanics at Work on B-17 Flying Fortresss 
XB-47 Stratojet Rollout in Front of B-50
XB-47 Stratojet Rollout in Front of B-50 
Restored 307 Stratoliner Propeller
Restored 307 Stratoliner Propeller 
B-17G Flying Fortress Ball Turret
B-17G Flying Fortress Ball Turret 
377 Stratocruiser Rollout
377 Stratocruiser Rollout 
Girl on Carloader
Girl on Carloader 
B-50 Tail on Flight Line
B-50 Tail on Flight Line 
B-17G Flying Fortress Ball Turret
B-17G Flying Fortress Ball Turret 
Model 307 Stratoliner Engines
Model 307 Stratoliner Engines 
Crowd Gathers Around Boeing Plant II's Last B-17 Flying Fortress
Crowd Gathers Around Boeing Plant II's Last B-17 Flying Fortress 
Servicing and Testing XB-47 Stratojets
Servicing and Testing XB-47 Stratojets 
Two Right Engines of a B-17 Flying Fortress in Flight
Two Right Engines of a B-17 Flying Fortress in Flight 
P-82 Twin Mustang Betty Joe with Women Sitting on Drop Tanks
P-82 Twin Mustang Betty Joe with Women Sitting on Drop Tanks 
Mechanics at Work on B-17 Flying Fortresss
Mechanics at Work on B-17 Flying Fortresss 
Wright Field Movie Unit with XB-47 Stratojet
Wright Field Movie Unit with XB-47 Stratojet 
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Girl on B-50 Propeller

The four-engine, propeller-powered B-50 bomber, which first flew in 1947, was among the last piston-powered bombers built during an era that was to be dominated by jets. However, in 1949, the B-50A, the Lucky Lady II, made the first nonstop flight around the world in 94 hours, refueled in flight four times by KB-29Ms. The B-50 originally evolved from the B-29D but because it included so many improvements, it was redesignated the B-50A, with 59 percent more power than the B-29. The next version, the B-50B, fitted with cameras and wing tanks, was designated RB-50B and used for strategic reconnaissance. The B-50D, the most common variant, was distinguished by a one-piece transparent-plastic nose molding and an optically flat bombardier’s window in the lower portion. Some B50s were later converted to hose-type KB-50 aerial tankers, their speed enhanced by the addition of two 5,200-pound-thrust jet engines, so at 400 mph, they could refuel jet aircraft. One KB-50D became a drone to test Bell XGAM missiles and 36 became long-range reconnaissance aircraft (WB-50D).
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Unique identifier BI29772 
Boeing ID p7157 
Type Image 
Size 6000px × 4800px   27MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1940s
adults
airplanes
bombers
close-ups
contrast
day
detail views
engines
exteriors
female
foolishness
full body views
ground shots
happy
historic production status
large
military
monoplanes
nacelles
occupations and work
one person
performers
photos
posing
propeller planes
propellers
propulsion systems
publicity events
right front views
scanned from film negative
small
structural systems
sunshine
unpainted
viewed from below
vintage / retro
Restrictions