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Boeing B-29 Superfortress
The B-29 Superfortress was used by the 20th Air Force in the Pacific to bomb the Japanese Home Islands. It was a very advanced bomber for its day, with pressurized crew compartments and remote-controlled gun turrets. While envisioned as a high altitude daylight bomber, its greatest successes were low-level nighttime raids dropping incendiary bombs on the combustible Japanese cities. The B-29 is most known for dropping the A-bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which ended the war. The Superfortress was also used in Korea.
        

Type:    Long-range Strategic Heavy bomber
Crew:   10: Pilot, Copilot, Engineer, Bombardier, Radioman,  5 Gunners
Armament:   Eight .50 cal machine guns (two in each of four power turrets)
                         three.50 cal machine guns (or two .50 cals and one 20 mm cannon) in the tail turret
                          up to 20,000 lb.. of bombs

Specifications:
        Length:         99' 0" (30.18 m)
        Height:         29' 7" (9.02 m)
        Wingspan:       141' 3" (43.05 m)
        Weight:         124,000 LB
Propulsion:
        Engines: 4
        Power plant:     Wright R-3350-23 Cyclone 18
        Horsepower:     2200 hp each
Performance:
        Range:          3250 miles (5230 km)
        Speed:      358 mph (576 km/h)
        Ceiling:        31850 ft (9710 m)

Click here for more B-29 pictures.