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Tallboy bomb

Tallboy bomb:Tallboy bomb
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Tallboy bomb

The Tallboy was an Earth Quake bomb developed by Barnes Wallis and brought into operation by the British in 1944. It weighed five tons and, carried by the Avro Lancaster bomber, was effective against concrete structures against which earlier, smaller bombs had proved ineffective. It came about as a compromise from Wallis' original plan for a 10 ton bomb dropped from 40,000 ft (the Earth Quake Bomb concept) which was not at the time possible.


Contents

History

The size of aerial bombs available up to this time, and the difficulties in accurately hitting targets meant that bombing raids against any massive or protected structures had been pointless.

The British engineer Barnes Wallis had earlier considered the strategic use of bombs as a means to destroy the enemy's capacity to wage war by hitting its infrastructure and manufacturing bases and to this end developed improved bomb designs based on large single bombs early in the war. He had presented his ideas for a 10 ton bomb working on the earthquake principle in his famous paper A Note on a Method of Attacking the Axis Powers in 1941.

His calculations showed that a very large bomb exploded deep underground beside a target would form a camouflet (cavern) rather than a crater. All the explosive energy would be contained within the ground and the shock transmitted into the foundations of the target, which would then collapse into the camouflet. More importantly, the shockwaves transmitted though a non-compressible medium are less attenuated by distance than a compressible medium such as air. The bouncing bombs that destroyed dams used this principle by using water as the non-compressible medium. If such a large bomb were exploded closer to the surface a huge single crater would be created, which would tax the capability of earthmoving equipment to fill in, and could effectively disrupt targets such as railway marshalling yards for long periods.

However, the carrying capacity of British bombers was limited and the capability to carry such a huge weapon to the height required was beyond consideration at that time. This led Barnes Wallis to draw up a bomber sufficient to the job, the "Victory Bomber" of 50 tons which would fly at 320 mph at 45,000 feet carrying the bomb over 4,000 miles, but the Air Ministry were against a single bomb bomber and the idea was not pursued beyond 1942.

The Ruhr dams, though, were one of the strategic targets he had considered and Barnes Wallis was commissioned to develop a means of destroying them. Wallis's second paper, in 1942, had the title; Spherical Bomb — Surface Torpedo.

He had to make do with a maximum bomb size of 6 tons, and overcoming the problems of delivering the weapon to the target accurately led to the revolutionary "bouncing bomb", which utilised his massive contained blast idea but with water replacing the earth. The project distracted Wallis from his designs for a very large earth penetrating bomb until the successful use of the bouncing bombs by the Dam Busters in Operation Chastise which validated his ideas. The RAF still needed a bomb that delivered a single large blast and which could penetrate hardened targets like battle ships, bunkers and railway tunnels (a bunker buster), or to create a camouflet which would undermine foundations of structures like bridges causing them to collapse,[1] and as the ability to lift 10 tons was still distant, Wallis was asked to consider what could be done with a smaller bomb and he worked on scaled down designs — one of which would become the 5 ton Tallboy.

The actual design and production of Tallboy was done without a contract on the initiative of a single official within the Ministry. As such the RAF were using bombs they had not bought and which were actually still the property of the manufacturers; Vickers. This situation was regularised once their capabilities were recognised.

Tallboys were used with great success against massive targets during the end phases of the war; targets which had been thought to be invulnerable to attack using conventional bombing techniques. Amongst many spectacular accomplishments, the attack on the V2 facility at Wizernes, France stands out. Here, a cupola roof designed to be absolutely bomb-proof was disrupted by Tallboy and Grand Slam hits undermining the foundations — a perfect vindication of Barnes Wallis' theories. In another attack on the Saumur tunnel, one Tallboy passed straight through the hill and exploded right inside the tunnel 60 feet below the surface.[2]

Design

Most large Allied World War II aircraft bombs had very thin skins to maximise the weight of explosive which a bomber could carry — this was an improvement on the early part of the war when the actual HE content of British bomb designs was low. To be able to penetrate the earth (or hardened targets) without breaking apart the casing of the Tallboy had to be strong. Each was cast in one piece of high tensile steel that would enable it to survive the impact before detonation. At the same time to achieve the penetration required, Wallis designed the Tallboy to be very aerodynamic so that when dropped from a great height it would reach a velocity higher than traditional bomb designs. In the final design the tail of the bomb was about half the overall length of the finished weapon — the bomb casing was some 10 feet (3.05 m) of the overall 21 foot (6.35 m) length. Initially the bomb had a tendency to tumble, so the tail was modified — the fins were given a slight twist so that the bomb spun as it fell. The gyroscopic effect thus generated stopped the pitching and yawing, improved the aerodynamics and improved accuracy. The improved design worked so well that it was found in development that it passed through the sound barrier as it fell. When dropped from 20,000 ft (6,100 m) it made an 80 ft (24 m) deep crater 100 ft (30 m) across and could go through 16 ft (4.88 m) of concrete.[3]

W. J. Lawrence wrote about the Tallboy bomb in his book, No 5 Bomber Group[4]

It was an extraordinary weapon, an apparent contradiction in terms, since it had at one and the same time the explosive force of a large high-capacity blast bomb and the penetrating power of an armour-piercing bomb. On the ground it was capable of displacing a million cubic feet (29,000 m³) of earth and made a crater which it would have taken 5,000 tons of earth to fill. It was ballistically perfect and in consequence had a very high terminal velocity, variously estimated at 3,600 and 3,700 feet per second (1,100–1,130 m/s or about 2,500 mph), which was, of course, a good deal faster than sound so that, as with the V-2 rocket, the noise of its fall would be heard after that of the explosion.

The weight of the Tallboy (approximately 12,000 lb.) and the high altitude required of the bombing aircraft meant that the Lancaster bombers used had to be specially adapted. Armour plating and even defensive armament were removed to reduce weight and the bomb-bay doors had to be adapted. Even then the Lancaster was not capable of reaching the bomb's intended dropping height of 40,000 ft (12,200 m) but only around 25,000 (7,700 m). At the same time No. 617 "Dambusters" Squadron trained in the use of a special bombsight the Stabilizing Automatic Bomb Sight (SABS). For accuracy multiple corrections had to be made for temperature, windspeed etc. However it was only effective if the target could be identified and several missions were cancelled or unsuccessful because of difficulty in accurately identifying and marking the targets.

Each bomb was a precision-built instrument of war made from expensive materials and carefully finished. They were not considered expendable and if not used on a raid were to be brought back to base rather than safely dropped in the sea.[5] The value of the weapon offset the additional risk to the aircrew.

The Tallboy was used to attack strategic targets that could not be destroyed by other means. When it was found that the Lancaster could be modified to carry a bomb larger than the Tallboy, Wallis produced the even larger Grand Slam bomb.

Tallboy operations

Vital statistics

Length 6.35 m (21 ft)
Diameter 950 mm (38 in)
Weight 5,443 kg (12,000 lb)
Warhead 2,358 kg (5,200 lb) "Torpex D1" (Torpedo explosive)
Number used 854[2]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ See References English Bombs of WWII
  2. ^ a b RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: saumur
  3. ^ See References Bombs Weapons Rockets Aircraft Ordnance
  4. ^ See References Spartacus: Tallboy
  5. ^ RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: 3 October 1944 8 Lancasters of No 617 Squadron which were standing by were not needed and carried their valuable Tallboy bombs back to England.
  6. ^ a b c d RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: June 1944
  7. ^ World War II German hardened A4/V2 rocket launch sites
  8. ^ a b RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: July 1944
  9. ^ RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: August 1944
  10. ^ RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: September 1944
  11. ^ a b RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: October 1944
  12. ^ Flower,Stephen; A Hell of a Bomb; Tempus Publishing, 2002.
  13. ^ RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: tirpitz
  14. ^ RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: December 1944
  15. ^ Urft Dam
    • 617 Squadeon - The Operational Record Book 1943 - 1945 (PDF) with additional information by Tobin Jones; Binx Publishing, Pevensey House, Sheep Street, Bicester. OX26 6JF. Acknowledgement is given to HMSO as holders of the copyright on the Operational Record Book. Page 507
    • Iain Murray [Big & Bouncy: The Special Weapons of Barnes Wallis], 2005. Quotes sources
      • Alan W. Cooper; From the Dams to the Tirpitz, 1982 (Goodall).
      • Alan W. Cooper; The Men Who Breached the Dams, 1982 (Kimber).
  16. ^ Memorabilia signing and veterans day at Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre East Kirkby South Yorkshire Aircraft Museum 29 August 2005] See Flight Lieutenant Thomas Clifford Iveson
  17. ^ RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: January 1945
  18. ^ a b c RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: February 1945
  19. ^ a b RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: March 1945
  20. ^ a b c d RAF web site: RAF Bomber Command: April 1945

Further reading


Strategic bombing during World War II by the Royal Air Force
Overview Documents
RAF Bomber Command | Bomber Command | Strategic bombing | Aerial bombing of cities
Prominent People
Sir Archibald Sinclair | Sir Charles Portal | Norman Bottomley
Arthur "Bomber" Harris | Sir Arthur W. Tedder | Professor Lindemann
Bombing Campaigns and Operations
Augsburg | "Dam Busters" | Berlin | Cologne | Braunschweig
Dresden | Hamburg | Kassel | Pforzheim | Würzburg
Aircraft, Technology and Tactics
Blenheim | Halifax | Hampden | Lancaster | Mosquito | Stirling | Wellesley | Wellington | Whitley
Window | H2S | GEE | Oboe | G-H | Monica
Blockbuster bomb | Tallboy bomb | Grand Slam bomb
Bomber stream | Pathfinders
Other
Aerial Defence of the United Kingdom | USAAF | Luftwaffe

Categories


Anti-fortification weapons | British World War II air-dropped bombs

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