Tupolev Tu-4

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Tupolev Tu-4

Tu-4, spitting image of the B-29
Description
Role Heavy bomber
Crew seven
First Flight July 3 1947
Entered Service 1948
Manufacturer Tupolev
Dimensions
Length 30.18 m ft in
Wingspan 43 m ft in
Height 8.5 m ft in
Wing area 162 m² ft²
Weights
Empty 35,270 kg lb
Loaded kg lb
Maximum takeoff 65,000 kg lb
Powerplant
Engines 4x Shvetsov ASh-73TK radial engines
Power 7,160 kW hp
Performance
Maximum speed 558 km/h mph
Combat range 5,400 km miles
Ferry range 6,200 km miles
Service ceiling 11,200 m ft
Rate of climb m/min ft/min
Wing loading kg/m² lb/ft²
Power/Mass kW/kg lb/hp
Avionics
Avionics
Armament
Guns 10x 23mm Nudelman NS-23 machine guns
in four turrets and tail barbette
Bombs 6x 454 kg (1,000 lb) or
1x atomic bomb
Missiles 2x standoff missiles in place of bombs

The Tupolev Tu-4 is a piston-engined Russian strategic bomber which served the Soviet Air Force from the late 1940s to mid 1960s.

Background

Towards the end of World War II, the Soviet Union was envious by the strategic bombing capability of the USAAF. The US regularly conducted bombing raids on Japan, virtually in the Soviet Union's backyard, from distant Pacific forward bases using B-29 Superfortress. Stalin ordered the development of comparable bombers.

During such raids, in 1945, four B-29s were forced to land in Russian territory. The Soviets seized the bombers, and Tupolev OKB dismantled and studied the B-29s. The bombers were copied bolt-by-bolt where possible and reverse engineered where necessary.

The resulting bomber is the Tu-4, NATO reporting name Bull, which first flew in 1947. The entry into service of the Tu-4 threw the USAF into a virtual panic, since the Tu-4 possessed sufficient range to attack Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City with a worthwhile load on a one-way "suicide" mission.

The development of the Soviet atomic bomb in 1949 gave the air defense program a new urgency, since the United States was itself now in danger of a nuclear attack with the Tu-4 as the delivery platform. This forced the United States to develop an extremely costly air-interception capability involving ground radar installations, a Ground Observer Corps, radar picket planes, surface-to-air missiles, and a fleet of jet interceptor fighters.

In Service

Approximately 1200 Tu-4s are believed to have been built in the Soviet Union, with some going to China during the later 1950s. Many experimental variants are built and the valuable experience launched the strategic Soviet bomber program. They were withdrawn in the 1960s, replaced by their more capable successors, the Tupolev Tu-95 and Tupolev Tu-16.

Variants

Tu-70

File:Tu70.gif
Multiple view of Tu-70 airliner and Tu-75 freighter versions of the Tu-4

A passenger variant of Tu-4, using a new pressurized fuselage designed for 72 passengers, first flying 27 November 1946. The aircraft was successfully tested, was recommended to serial production, but was not produced because of more pressing military orders and Aeroflot was not ready to operate such an aircraft.

Tu-75

A transport variant of Tu-4,using new fuselage designed for transport. The first Soviet machine of this class; it was equipped with rear fuselage ramp hatch. It was successfully tested, with its first flight on 21 January, 1950. It was not put into serial production because Air Force was not ready to accept such a machine.

Tu-80

Modernized Tu-4 with improvements on aerodynamics such as wing area increase, aircraft systems, weapon and equipment. The work done allowed to increase designed flight range in comparison with that of Tu-4 by 20-25%. Its first flight was on 1 December 1949. However it is still not up to expectations and hence not produced.

Tu-85 "Barge"

 
The final refinement of Tu-4, the Tu-85

The final version of Tu-4, overcoming the shortcomings of the Tu-4 especially with regards to range. Intercontinental strategic bomber. Only two machines were built, with the first flying on 9 January 1951. In the course of tests, an intercontinental flight range of 6,500 nautical miles was achieved with a bomb payload of five tonnes. However, by then it was already vulnerable to US jet fighters. The aircraft was thus not produced and the focus is now towards higher performance strategic bombers such as turbojet (Tupolev Tu-16) and the turbo-prop (Tupolev Tu-95)

Related content
Related Development

B-29 - Tu-70 - Tu-75 - Tu-80 - Tu-85

Similar Aircraft
Designation Series

Tu-1 - Tu-2 - Tu-4 - Tu-6 - Tu-12 - Tu-14

Related Lists

List of military aircraft of the Soviet Union and the CIS - List of bomber aircraft