|
|
 |
 |
Weapons
of War: U.S.
Bombers
America's bomber force spans the conventionally-designed, reliable B-52
to highly sophisticated, cutting-edge stealth technology. Dedicated bombers
offer high bomb carrying capacity, extremely long-range and precision attack
capability. Due to their relatively large size and slow speed they typically
drop their weapons from high altitudes. |
|
B-52H
|
B-1B
|
B-2
|
F-117
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
Primary role |
|
Long-range, high-altitude heavy bomber |
Long-range heavy bomber |
Low-range
stealth bomber |
Multi-role altitude strategic stealth bomber. |
| Entered
service |
| 1961
|
1986 |
1989 |
1982 |
| Length |
| 157
feet, 7 inches |
147
feet |
69
feet |
65
feet 11 inches |
| Wingspan |
| 185
feet |
136
feet 8 1/2 inches |
172
feet |
45
feet 4 inches |
| Speed |
| 595
mph |
826
mph |
Approx. 650 - 740 mph |
645 mph |
| Max.
altitude |
| 55,000
feet |
60,000
feet |
50,000
feet |
Not
available |
| Max.
range* |
| 8,800
nautical miles |
5,600
nautical miles |
6,300
nautical miles |
570
nautical miles |
| Armament |
Cruise
missiles; Harpoon anti-ship missiles; bombs
|
Cruise
missiles; bombs; cluster bomblets |
Cruise
missiles; guided bombs; cluster bomblets |
Air-to-air
missiles; cruise missiles; guided bombs |
| *Unrefueled
range |
| SOURCES:
Associated Press, Jane's Aircraft Recognition Guide; Periscope |
|