Skip to content
Vincony — fast, managed web hosting for your next site
The Pilots Desk
Bombersstrategic bomber

B-36 Peacemaker

B-36 Peacemaker

The Convair B-36 "Peacemaker" was a piston-engined strategic bomber built by Convair and operated by the United States Air Force's Strategic Air Command from 1948 to 1959. With 384 units built, the B-36 remains the largest mass-produced piston-engined aircraft, and has the longest wingspan of any combat aircraft. The B-36 was capable of intercontinental flight without refueling. The B-36 was powered by six Pratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Major radial piston engines. The B-36D through J variants were fitted further with four General Electric J47 turbojet engines, totalling ten, the most engines of any mass-produced aircraft. The B-36 was the primary nuclear weapons delivery vehicle of the United States. The B-36 was the only bomber assigned the largest of the cumbersome first generation of US thermonuclear gravity bombs, the Mark 14 (5 to 7 megatons), and the Mark 17 and Mark 24 (15 to 20 megatons). It was also assigned the fission-based Mark 6 and Mark 18 and the conventional T-12 Cloudmaker earthquake bomb. The B-36 was never flown in combat. The bomber was conceived for transatlantic raids against German-occupied Europe in the contingency that United States Army Air Forces lost its access to British airbases, but the war ended before its first flight in 1946. B-36s were used to signal nuclear deterrence in the early Cold War, flying to Britain and French Morocco. The RB-36 variants were used for aerial reconnaissance, and were the highest and furthest flying US aircraft until the Lockheed U-2. RB-36s imaged the Soviet Arctic operating from RAF Sculthorpe in England, and, during the Korean War, the Soviet Far East and Manchuria in China flying from Yokota Air Base, Japan. The NB-36H tested the world's first operation of an onboard nuclear reactor under the Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion program, ahead of the unrealized X-6. B-36s trialled RF-84F Thunderstreak and XF-85 Goblin parasite fighters, XGAM-71 Buck Duck decoy missiles, and JB-2 cruise missiles. The airframe was

Summary from Wikipedia, photo via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA.

Manufacturer
Convair
Category
Bombers
Country of origin
United States
First flight
1946-08-08

Specifications

Cruise speed
200 kt
Max speed
378 kt
Range
3,463 nm
Service ceiling
43,600 ft
Rate of climb
1,995 ft/min
Max takeoff weight
410,000 lb
Empty weight
166,165 lb
Fuel capacity
100 US gal
Powerplant
6 × Pratt & Whitney R-4360-53 Wasp Major
Engines
10
Seats
15
Length
162.1 ft
Wingspan
230 ft
Height
46.8 ft
Number built
384

Specifications are approximate and may vary by variant. Compiled from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA).

Reference and training only. Specifications vary by variant — consult the manufacturer and the official documents.