The N-1M and the N-9M aircraft were developed to prove stability and
control theories which would enable the construction of
a large flying wing. Northrop was able to achieve this goal with the
construction of the flying wing bombers, the XB-35, and the
subsequent jet versions.
The contract for the XB-35 was approved November
22, 1941, while the war was in full swing. The contract called for an operational
range of 10,000 miles with 10,000 pounds of bombs. This was such a long
mission that a relief crew of six people was
provided with sleeping areas. Twenty 0.50 caliber machine guns were
to protect the plane with seven remotely controlled turrets, four on the
wing itself, two in the crew nacelle, and one in the tail stinger.
To power the behemoth, four Pratt & Whitney
Wasp Major engines (each composed of one pair of a R-4360-17 and
R-4360-21) were to provide 3000 hp each to a four-bladed, contra-rotating
Hamilton Standard propellor via a government furnished equipment (GFE)gearbox.
This was to prove to be a crippling weakness in the bomber, as the gearboxes
were a constant source of trouble.
First flight of the design was to be June 25, 1946, a measure of the
complexity of the project. Many other
planes were able to go from contract to first flight in a year or two,
the Wing was allocated almost five. As
engineering work continued, a contract for a backup plane test was
awarded, as well as a contract for 14
test models, the YB-35. In June of 1943, a contract for 200 B-35s was
anticipated. The problem with all
this was that Northrop's construction facilities were already heavily
taxed in current production of the P-61
Black Widow night fighters. Someone else's plant would have to help
build the bombers. The Glenn L.
Martin Company was contracted to assist Northrop in engineering the
XB-35 and YB-35, as well as
manufacture the 200 B-35s.
Unfortunately, the relationship did not help the program. Lack of cooperation
and coordination, as well as
too many engineers having left for military duty, left the program
18 months behind schedule by early 1944.
In May, the AAF conducted a program review. It was decided that Martin's
production contract was to
be canceled, although they were to continue to give Northrop engineering
assistance on the X and Y
models. As a result of this, it became clear that the B-35 would not
be in service before the end of the
war. This had significant implications for the B-35. Jets were being
developed, and new fighters and
bombers designed to use the new powerplants. Faster was better, even
if range shrunk dramatically.
As a result of the jet age, it was obvious that the B-35 would be just
too slow. On the other hand, it was
an extremely aerodynamic airplane to start with, and could easily be
converted to jet power. A series of
programs were begin to study how to best implement a jet powered Wing.
On June 25 1946, after a successful taxi test program which reached
taxi speeds of 115 mph, the Wing
underwent it's first flight. In true Dilbertian management style, employees
were forbidden to attend, as there
were so many of them that crowd control would be a problem.
The Wing, piloted by Max Stanley, became airborne at 120 mph. This first
flight was just a ferry flight from
Northrop airport to Muroc Army Air Base (now Edwards AFB). During this
flight the gear was cycled,
and maximum airspeed reached was 200 mph. The flight lasted 44 minutes.
The test program revealed major problems with the GFE gearboxes and
governors. Vibration caused
gearbox failures. The governors failed to perform adequately. The second
XB-35 flew almost a year after
the first, and had similar problems. It was decided to remove the contra-
rotating propellers and replace
them with single rotation propellers, but this decreased performance
considerably.
Two of the XB-35s were converted to the YB-49 configuration by
replacing the piston engines with eight
4000 pound thrust TG-180 (J35) engines. Because of the decreased ventral
area, small fins were added
for stability at the trailing edges.
In November 1949, the Air Force ordered all XB-35s scrapped. Scrapping
of the XB-35s began in
January 1950, the only flying YB-49 was destroyed on March 1950 during
a failure of the nose landing
gear. See the Northrop and Symington article for more details.