Belloli B.54 Avvoltoio

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Belloli B.54 Avvoltoio
Douglas EB-66E Destroyer in flight 061103-F-1234P-006.jpg
Role Light bomber
National origin  Temuair
Manufacturer Belloli
First flight October 11, 1950
Introduction 1954
Status In limited service
Primary user Lumenic Air Force

The Belloli B.54 Avvoltoio is a twin engine, light bomber and torpedo bomber designed and produced by Belloli (now Tancredi) of Luminerra, and was used extensively by the Lumenic Air Force during the Ohmand Continental War and beyond, continuing in limited service today. In addition to serving as a strike craft, the B.54 air frame was also used for multiple other purposes, including intelligence, reconnaissance, and electrons warfare operations.

Background and design

Design

The B.54 is a twin engine, swept wing tactical bomber with a crew of three, including the pilot, bombardier-navigator and a third crewmen-navigator, who also operated the twin 20 mm cannon located in the bombers tail section, as well as the aircraft's defensive electronic systems. The unique cockpit arrangement set the pilot and bombardier-navigator side by side in a raised compartment, with the third crewmen sat behind and below the pilot in a rear-facing seat. The aft crew station provided equipment for long-age navigation as well. Later versions, including the B-49RBE electronic reconnaissance aircraft, would add an additional 4 crew stations in the converted bomb bay.

The initial production engine for the B.54 was the Andrade I-78 turbojet engine. This engine proved to be both inefficient in design and power, as it was originally designed as the powerplant for an air-breathing cruise missile and not for aircraft. It lacked several features inherent to other aircraft turbojets at the time, the most dangerous of which was a lack of drain feature in the compressor stage, which is used to drain excess fuel after the engine is shut down. The lack required that a ground crew member manually released a drain valve prior to the engines being shut down after landing, placing that crewmen in significant danger while working near the operating turbojet. In addition, the draining jet fuel became a fire hazard after it was drained onto the parking ramp.

While in service, the Andrade I-78 proved to have an excessively high meantime between failure rate due to poor construction quality. In 1959, the Imperial Air Force selected the AE-920 turbojet, produced by Vaccari, to replace the Andrade I-78. New production B.54's received these engines, and existing air frames had their engines replaced when the existing Andrade I-78s reached their maximum life expediency.

Operational history

Variants

B.54
Production model light bomber for the Lumenic Air Force.
RB.54
All-weather photo reconnaissance version with 12 separate camera stations.
EB.54
Electronic reconnaissance and ECM version with extra crew seats, expanding the crew from 3 to 7, with the extra crew stations in the bomb bay. These aircraft wee intended to conduct electronic reconnaissance missions and ECM support operations. Aircraft were equipped with distinctive wingtip pods which housed the aircraft jamming equipment.
WB.54
Weather reconnaissance platform converted from existing RB.54 aircraft. A total of 6 conversions were completed. Often referred to as cacciatori di tempeste, or storm chasers, they are operated by the 154th Reconnaissance Squadron of the same name.  
ZB.54
Target drone version

Operators

Former

Specifications (B.54)

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

  • 2 x ARO CAPA.2038 20 mm cannons in radar-controlled/remotely operated tail turret
  • 15,000 lb (6,803.9 kg) of free-fall bombs

Avionics
ECONLU B-213 bombing radar and BU-277 search radar

See also

Related development