50% OFF! Hot items selling fast—Grab them before they're gone!
Noted aviation author William Wolf presents this enigmatic bomber, a Flying Laboratory that was the precursor to Americas first intercontinental bomber, the Continental B-36 Peacemaker.
In 1935, the intent of the Army Air Corps was to build a potential intercontinental bomber, a Guardian of the Hemisphere; they granted Donald Douglas a contract to build the worlds largest bomber.
Over the past 75 years, there have only been a few magazine articles on the gigantic Douglas XB-19 bomber, usually showing it in photos dwarfing the aircraft around it. Since the XB-19 project was top secret and there was only one example, there is little information remaining for researchers.
Wolf has used original Douglas and Army Air Force documents and very rare (as few were needed for one bomber) Erection & Maintenance Manuals in this history, which also includes never-seen-before photos and color profiles.
This volume is a must for the aviation historian, enthusiast, and modeler.[AuthorName]By William Wolf[/AuthorName][AuthorBio]WilliamWolf is a retired dentist whose consuming 45-year passion is WWII aircombat and aircraft, having over 25,000 books and magazines, 1,000s ofdownloaded CDs, and three miles of microfilm on WWII in his library.[/AuthorBio][NumIllustration]251 color and b/w photos[/NumIllustration][CoAuthor][/CoAuthor][SubTitle]An Illustrated History of America’s Would-Be Intercontinental Bomber[/SubTitle][ColorPattern]251 color and b/w photos[/ColorPattern]