Martin XB-27
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Dane podstawowe | ||
Państwo | ![]() | |
Producent | Glenn L. Martin Company | |
Typ | samolot bombowy | |
Załoga | 7 | |
Historia | ||
Liczba egzemplarzy | 0 | |
Dane techniczne | ||
Napęd | 2 × Pratt & Whitney R-2800 | |
Moc | 2 × 1500 kW | |
Wymiary | ||
Rozpiętość | 25,6 m | |
Długość | 18,5 m | |
Wysokość | 6,10 m | |
Masa | ||
Startowa | 15.000 kg | |
Osiągi | ||
Prędkość maks. | 450 km/h | |
Prędkość wznoszenia | 16,3 m/s | |
Pułap | 10.200 m | |
Zasięg | 4600 km | |
Dane operacyjne | ||
Uzbrojenie | ||
3 × 7,62 mm, 1 × 12,7 mm, ponad 1800 kg bomb |
Martin XB-27 – projekt bombowca średniego przystosowanego do lotów na dużych wysokościach (high attitude medium bomber), który powstał w zakładach Glenn L. Martin Company na zamówienie United States Army Air Corps. Samolot bazował na wcześniejszym B-26 Marauder. Konstrukcja nie wyszła poza fazę projektową i nie zbudowano żadnego prototypu.
Bibliografia
- Martin XB-27 (ang.). nationalmuseum.af.mil. [dostęp 2012-07-04].
Media użyte na tej stronie
US Flag with 48 stars. In use for 47 years from July 4, 1912, to July 3, 1959.
Roundel used by the United States armed forces from 19 August 1919 to 6 May 1942 until red dot removed to avoid confusion with Japanese insignia. Superseded very similar roundel whose colors and proportions differed slightly - the original version having the colors from the US flag, and a center dot 1/3 of the outer radius. This version has a center dot constrained by the inner vertices of the star, a size that does not translate into an even fraction.
Roundel used by US armed forces from 6 May 1942 to 28 June 1943 when white bars and a red outline were added as the result of studies which showed that shape was more important than color from a distance.
Autor: NiD.29, Licencja: CC-BY-SA-3.0
Roundel used by all US armed forces from 31 July 1943 to 14 January 1947, replacing roundel having red outline, or no outline, but with white bars, and was replaced some nine months before the USAF was formed, by roundel having a single lengthwise red bar inset in white bars (bisecting them), giving the insignia the trio of red-white-red stripes evocative of the non-canton areas of the Flag of the United States.