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B-17 Flying Fortress

Redirected from BQ-7 Aphrodite

The B-17 Flying Fortress was the first large, four-engined heavy bomber and is still one of the most recognized airplanes ever built. It was most widely used for daylight strategic bombings of German industrial targets during World War II as part of the US Eighth Air Force.

B17.sallyb.shuttle.050801.250pix.jpg
B-17 "Sally B", England, 2001.
Larger version

The prototype of the B-17 first flew on July 28, 1935. Few B-17s were in service when the United States entered World War II on December 7, 1941, but production quickly accelerated. The aircraft served in every WWII combat zone. Production ended in May 1945 after 12,726 aircraft had been built.

Late in WWII, at least 25 B-17s were loaded with 12,000 pounds (5.4 tonnes) of high explosives, fitted with radio controls, dubbed "BQ-7 Aphrodite missiles," and used against U-boat pens and bomb-resistant fortifications. Because few (if any) BQ-7s hit their target, the Aprodite project was scrapped in early 1945.

The Memphis Belle was a B-17.

General Characteristics (B-17G)

External links

B-17

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump