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I have a burning need to know stuff and I love asking awkward questions.

Thursday, July 18, 2024

3 comments:

Stephen said...

Good night, that looks imposing. Body looks interesting....paneling?

CyberKitten said...

I thought this was Russian... I was wrong... [lol]

From Wiki: The SAB AB-20 was a large four engine twin boom French bomber built in the early 1930s as a development of the Dyle et Bacalan DB-70 airliner. It featured a lifting body of thick airfoil section between the inner engines. It was later modified for the attack role; a second aircraft, the AB-21, had different engines and cleaner aerodynamics but no more were built.

The SAB AB-20 was a four-engine night bomber development of the three-engine Dyle et Bacalan DB-70 airliner. The change of manufacturer's name was the result of the financial failure of Dyle et Bacalan in 1929, followed by its immediate reappearance as SAB, who took over DB-70 development. The latter was built around a thick, wide chord airfoil centre section which provided generous internal space for passengers. The engines were mounted on this structure as were twin fuselages to carry the tail. The outer wings were of normal thickness and chord, and the cockpit and undercarriage were also attached to the centre section. The generous intra-wing volume equally offered crew, fuel and bomb-room for military purposes. Initially the AB-20 was intended to have three engines like its predecessor, but during the design phase there was a military request for a bombardier's position and a gunner's cockpit in the nose, which required the removal of the centre engine and its replacement by two extra engines wing-mounted outboard of the centre section.

Trials of an airborne sideways-firing 75 mm gun were carried out with the AB-20 prototype modified as the AB-22. Firing trials were halted after damage was caused to the lower wing skin by blast from the gun muzzle.

[LOL!!]

I think it was the same sort of thing as the Ford trimotor... For strength without too much weight gain? Probably flew too slowly to worry about aerodynamics.

Stephen said...

I found other images where all four engines are visible. Looks like the inner engines were set VERY close to the body. By the way, I just posted a review you'll get a chuckle out of.