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Lockheed XB-30
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{{short description|American bomber project}} {{Infobox aircraft | name = Lockheed XB-30 | image = Lockheed XB-30.jpg | caption = Scale model of the Lockheed XB-30 bomber concept. | type = Heavy bomber | manufacturer = [[Lockheed Corporation]] | designer = | first_flight = n/a | status = Design only | primary_user = [[United States Army Air Forces]] | number_built = 0 | developed_from = [[Lockheed L-049 Constellation|L-049 Constellation]] | unit cost = }} The '''Lockheed XB-30''' (company model '''L-249''')<ref>Stringfellow and Bowers 1992, p. 31.</ref> was the design submitted by [[Lockheed Corporation|Lockheed]] after the request by the [[United States Army Air Forces]] for a very heavy bomber, the same request that led to the [[Boeing B-29 Superfortress]], the [[Douglas XB-31]] and [[Consolidated B-32 Dominator]]. ==Design and development== Around 1938, General [[Henry H. Arnold|Henry H. "Hap" Arnold]], the head of the [[United States Army Air Corps]], was growing alarmed at the possibility of war in Europe and in the Pacific. Hoping to be prepared for the long-term requirements of the Air Corps, Arnold created a special committee chaired by Brigadier General [[Walter G. Kilner]]; one of its members was [[Charles Lindbergh]]. After a tour of ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' bases, Lindbergh became convinced that [[Nazi Germany]] was far ahead of other European nations. In a 1939 report, the committee made a number of recommendations, including development of new long-range heavy bombers. When war broke out in Europe, Arnold requested design studies from several companies on a Very Long-Range bomber capable of traveling {{convert|5000|miles|km}}. Approval was granted on 2 December 1939. Based on the design of the [[Lockheed L-049 Constellation|Lockheed L-049]] (subsequently adopted by the [[United States Army Air Forces]] as the [[Lockheed C-69 Constellation|C-69]]), the L-249 never progressed past the design stage, mainly because [[Boeing]] had a head start with its [[Boeing B-29 Superfortress]] {{citation needed|date=January 2024}}, using the same [[Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone]] radials as the XB-30 was intended to use. Only a scale model was built. Retaining the wings and tail surfaces of the Model 49, the Model 249-58-01 was to have had a new fuselage with up to six gun turrets (one in the nose, two above and two below the fuselage, and one in the tail) housing ten .50-caliber guns—twinned up in each turret for the nose, dorsal, and ventral emplacements; and one 20-mm cannon for the tail defensive position. Ventral bomb bays were to accommodate eight {{convert|2000|lb|kg|abbr=on}} bombs. ==Specifications (as proposed)== {{Aircraft specs |prime units?=imp | ref= | crew=12 | length ft=104 | length in=8 | length m=31.91 | span ft=123 | span in=0 | span m=37.50 | height ft=23 | height in=9 | height m=7.25 | wing area sqft=1646 | wing area sqm=153 | empty weight lb=51616 | empty weight kg=23462 | gross weight lb=85844 | gross weight kg=39020 | max takeoff weight lb=93808 | max takeoff weight kg=42640 | eng1 number=4 | eng1 type=[[radial engine]]s | eng1 name=[[Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone|Wright R-3350]]-13 | eng1 hp=2200 | eng1 kw=1600 | max speed mph=382 | max speed kmh=615 | range miles=5,333 | range km=8,045 | ceiling ft=17832 | ceiling m=5,440 | wing loading lb/sqft=52 | wing loading kg/m2=255 |power/mass=0.10 hp/lb (170 W/kg) | guns=<br /> ** 8× .50 in (12.7 mm) [[machine gun]]s in four fuselage turrets ** 2× .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns ''and'' ** 1× [[20 mm caliber|20 mm]] [[autocannon|cannon]] in remotely aimed tail turret | bombs=16,000 lb }} ==See also== {{Aircontent | related= * [[Lockheed Constellation]] | similar aircraft= * [[Boeing B-29 Superfortress]] * [[Consolidated B-32 Dominator]] * [[Douglas XB-31]] * [[Heinkel He 277]] * [[Messerschmitt Me 264]] | lists= * [[List of Lockheed aircraft]] }} ==References== ;Notes {{reflist}} ;Bibliography {{refbegin}} * Stringfellow, Curtis K., and Peter M. Bowers. ''Lockheed Constellation''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbooks, 1992. {{refend}} ==External links== * [https://web.archive.org/web/20110716073618/http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=2578 USAF Museum — XB-30 Factsheet] {{Lockheed Constellation family}} {{Lockheed Martin aircraft}} {{USAF bomber aircraft}} [[Category:Lockheed aircraft|B-030]] [[Category:Four-engined tractor aircraft]] [[Category:Low-wing aircraft]] [[Category:Cancelled military aircraft projects of the United States]] [[Category:Lockheed Constellation|XB-30]] [[Category:Four-engined piston aircraft]] [[Category:Triple-tail aircraft]] [[Category:Aircraft with retractable tricycle landing gear]]
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