Douglas Y1B-7
Template:Short description Template:Infobox aircraft
The Douglas Y1B-7 was a 1930s American bomber aircraft. It was the first US monoplane given the B- 'bomber' designation. The monoplane was more practical and less expensive than the biplane, and the United States Army Air Corps chose to experiment with monoplanes for this reason. At the time the XB-7 was ordered, it was being tested by Douglas Aircraft as an observational plane.
Design and developmentEdit
In 1929–1930, the Douglas Aircraft Company designed a new twin-engined monoplane observation aircraft to compete with the Fokker XO-27, two prototypes of which had been ordered by the United States Army Air Corps in July 1929, as Douglas feared that the advanced Fokker would challenge Douglas's role as the major supplier of observation aircraft to the Air Corps. The Douglas proposals resulted in the Air Corps placing an order for two prototypes, the XO-35 and XO-36, on 26 March 1930. The two aircraft were to differ only in the engines fitted, with the XO-35 having geared Curtiss V-1570-29 Conqueror engines, while the XO-36 used direct-drive V-1570-23, which both produced Template:Cvt each.<ref name="pell p30,2">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2002, pp. 30, 32.</ref><ref name="Frnc Doug p135-6">Francillon 1979, pp. 135–136.</ref>
The Douglas design had gull wings mounted high on the aircraft's fuselage, the engines being suspended in streamlined nacelles under the wings by bracing struts. A retractable tailwheel undercarriage was fitted, the mainwheels retracting into the engine nacelles. The fuselage was a semi-monocoque structure with corrugated duralumin covering, which housed the aircraft's crew of four: a nose gunner/observer, a pilot whose cockpit was situated ahead of the leading edge of the wing, an upper gunner who sat in a cockpit aft of the wing, and a radio operator housed within the fuselage. Armament was two .30 in machine guns.<ref name="pell p30,2"/><ref name="Frnc Doug p135-6"/>
The projected performance of the new twin-engined Douglas and Fokker observation aircraft was much greater than the Keystone biplanes (the Keystone B-3, B-4, B-5 and B-6) that equipped the Air Corps light bomber squadrons, and both Fokker and Douglas were instructed to complete one of their prototypes as a bomber, with the XO-36 being redesignated the XB-7, with provision to carry up to Template:Cvt of bombs on racks under the fuselage added.<ref name="pell p32">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2002, p. 32.</ref>
The XO-36 made its first flight at the Santa Monica, California factory of Douglas in spring 1931.<ref name="Frnc Doug p137">Francillon 1979, p. 137.</ref> On 22 August 1931, the Air Corps placed an order for a small batch of service test aircraft, consisting of seven Y1B-7 bombers and five Y1O-35 observation aircraft. These differed from the prototypes by having smooth fuselage skins rather than the corrugated skins used on the prototype, while the fuselage was Template:Cvt longer to adjust the aircraft's center of gravity. A revised fuel system was fitted, with more fuel carried in order to give the two-hour endurance specified by the Air Corps. More powerful Conqueror engines were fitted, with all aircraft using geared engines as used on the XO-35.<ref name="pell p32"/>
Operational historyEdit
The XO-35 was delivered to the Air Corps at its test center at Wright Field, Ohio on 24 October 1931, with the XB-7 following in July 1932.<ref name="Frnc Doug p137"/> The twelve service test aircraft were completed between November 1932 and March 1933.<ref name="pell p33-4">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2006, pp. 33–34.</ref> The Y1B-7s equipped the 11th and 31st Bombardment Squadrons at March Field, California,<ref name="pell p32"/> while the Y1O-35s were issued to a number of Squadrons, including the 88th Observation Squadron at Brooks Field, Texas.<ref name="pell p34">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2006, p. 34.</ref> One notable early use of the Y1B-7 was during a May 1933 exercise at Fort Knox, where it was able to outrun biplane fighters like the Boeing P-12, showing that the Air Corps needed more modern fighters.<ref name="pell p32-3">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2006, pp. 32–33.</ref>
Despite the aircraft's superior performance to the elderly Keystone biplanes, the Douglas monoplane never entered mass production either in the observation or bomber roles because newer, more capable aircraft, such as the Martin B-10, were under development while a change in Air Corps policy meant that it was no longer interested in buying more twin-engined observation aircraft.<ref name="Frnc Doug p138">Francillon 1979, p. 138.</ref>
In February 1934, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt cancelled all air mail contracts owing to a scandal relating to the award of contracts, thus initiating the Airmail Emergency, where the Air Corps was tasked with carrying the mail until new contracts could be awarded. The O-35s and B-7s were considered some of the most suitable aircraft in the Air Corps inventory for the air mail role, so the six remaining Y1B-7s and the five Y1O-35s, together with the XO-35, were assigned to air mail routes in the western United States, which included hazardous operations over the Rocky Mountains, the Cascade Range and the Sierra Nevada.<ref name="pell p35">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2006, p. 35.</ref> By the time the Air Corps involvement in air mail flights ended in June 1934, the twelve O-35s and B-7s had flown 1,412 hours on mail flights, while four of the B-7s had been lost as a result of accidents.<ref name="Frnc Doug p139">Francillon 1979, p. 139.</ref> The last O-35s and B-7s were withdrawn from use in December 1938.<ref name="pell p40">Pelletier Air Enthusiast March/April 2006, p.40.</ref>
VariantsEdit
- XO-35
- Prototype twin-engined observation aircraft. Two Template:Cvt geared Curtiss V-1570-29 engines driving three-bladed propellers. One built.<ref name="pell p32"/>
- XO-36
- Prototype twin-engined observation aircraft. Two Template:Cvt direct-drive Curtiss V-1570-23 engines driving two-bladed propellers. Redesignated XB-7. One built.
- XB-7
- Prototype light bomber, with two direct-drive Template:Cvt V-1570-23 engines driving two bladed propellers. One built.<ref name="pell p32"/>
- Y1O-35
- Service test batch of observation aircraft, powered by Template:Cvt V-1570-39 or Template:Cvt V-1570-53 engines. Five built.<ref name="pell p32"/>
- Y1B-7
- Service test batch of bombers, powered by Template:Cvt V-1570-33 or Template:Cvt V-1570-53 engines. Seven built.<ref name="pell p32"/>
OperatorsEdit
Specifications (Y1B-7)Edit
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
NotesEdit
BibliographyEdit
- Francillon, René J. McDonnell Douglas Aircraft since 1920. London: Putnam, 1979. Template:ISBN.
- Pelletier, Alain J. "Bombers as Postmen: Boeing Y1O-35 and Y1B-7". Air Enthusiast, No. 122, March / April 2006, pp. 30–40. ISSN 0143-5450.
- Wagner, Ray. American Combat Planes. New York: Doubleday, 1982. Template:ISBN.
External linksEdit
Template:Douglas aircraft Template:USAF bomber aircraft Template:USAAF observation aircraft