The
B-1 Lancer is a
strategic bomber used by the
United States Air Force. First
envisioned in the 1960s as a
supersonic
bomber with sufficient range and payload to replace the
B-52 Stratofortress, it developed
primarily into a low-level penetrator with long range and
supersonic speed capability. Its development was stopped and
restarted multiple times over its history, as the theory of
strategic balance changed from
flexible response to
mutually assured destruction
and back again. It eventually entered service more than 20 years
after first being studied.
The B-1B production version has been in service with the United
States Air Force (USAF) since 1986. The Lancer serves as the
supersonic component of the USAF's long-range bomber force, along
with the subsonic B-52 and
B-2 Spirit.
The bomber is commonly called the "Bone" (originally from "B-One").
With the retirement of the
EF-111 Raven
in 1998 and the
F-14 Tomcat in 2006, the
B-1B is the U.S. military's only active
variable-sweep wing aircraft.
Development
Background
In December 1957, U.S. Air Force selected
North American Aviation's proposal
to replace the
B-52
Stratofortress. This would lead to the
B-70 Valkyrie. The Valkyrie was a six-engine
bomber that could fly very high at Mach 3 to avoid
interceptor aircraft, the only
effective anti-bomber weapon in the 1950s. At the time, Soviet
interceptors were unable to intercept the high-flying
Lockheed U-2; the Valkyrie was to fly at
similar altitudes and much higher speeds. But by the late 1950s,
anti-aircraft
surface-to-air
missiles (SAMs) could threaten high-altitude aircraft, as
demonstrated by the
1960 downing
of
Gary Powers' U-2.
Recognizing this, the USAF Strategic Air Command had begun moving
to low-level penetration before the U-2 downing. This greatly
reduces radar detection distances while at that time SAMs were
ineffective against low-flying aircraft, while interceptors did not
have as large of a speed advantage at low-level. Also the flight
path to a target could be selected so the landscape shields the
bomber from the radar's line-of-sight operation. Low-altitude
flight also made the bombers difficult to detect from aircraft at
higher altitudes, as radar systems of that generation could not
"look down" due to the clutter that resulted from ground
reflections.
Operations at low levels would limit the B-70 to subsonic speed,
while dramatically decreasing its range due to higher drag. The
result would be an aircraft with similar speed but much less range
than the B-52 it would have replaced. The Mach 2
B-58 was similarly limited to subsonic speeds
at low-level. Unsuited for this new role and due to a growing
intercontinental
ballistic missile (ICBM) force, the B-70 bomber program was
canceled in 1961. The B-70 program was changed to a supersonic
research program with two XB-70 prototype aircraft.
Although never intended for the low-level role, the B-52's
flexibility allowed it to outlast its intended successor as the
nature of the air war environment changed. The B-52's large
airframe and ample internal room allowed the addition of improved
electronic countermeasures
suites. The "big belly" modifications increased the B-52's bomb
load to 60,000 pounds (27,215 kg) during the
Vietnam War. Higher speed than the subsonic B-52
would aid even a low-level approach in the strategic role,
something the
F-111 took
advantage of. In the high-load tactical role, the B-52 was limited
to a small number of airfields due to its long takeoff distance. By
the early 1960s the
state of the
art in engine and airframe design had improved considerably; an
aircraft designed to match the B-52 in performance could meet both
of these additional requirements as well.
Design studies
The first post-B-70 study was known as the
Subsonic Low
Altitude Bomber (SLAB), which was completed in 1961. This was
followed by the similar
Extended Range Strike Aircraft
(ERSA), which added a
variable-sweep
wing planform, something then very much
in vogue in the aviation industry. ERSA envisioned a relatively
small aircraft with a 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) load and a
range of 8,750 nautical miles (16,200 km), with
2,500 nmi (4,600 km) being flown at low altitudes. In
August 1963 the similar
Low-Altitude Manned Penetrator
(LAMP) design was completed, which called for an aircraft with a
20,000 lb (9,000 kg) load and somewhat shorter range of
7,150 nautical miles (13,200 km).
These all culminated in the October 1963
Advanced Manned
Precision Strike System (AMPSS), which led to industry studies
at
Boeing,
General Dynamics, and
North American. In mid-1964, the
USAF had revised its requirements and retitled the project as
Advanced Manned Strategic Aircraft (AMSA), which differed
from AMPSS primarily in that it also demanded a high-speed
high-altitude capability, albeit slower than the Valkyrie at about
Mach 2. Given the lengthy series of design studies, Rockwell
engineers joked that the new name actually stood for "America's
Most Studied Aircraft".
The cancellation of the B-70 project had led some to question the
need for a new strategic bomber at all. The Air Force was adamant
about retaining bombers as part of the
nuclear triad concept that included bombers,
ICBMs, and
Submarine-launched
ballistic missiles (SLBMs) in a combined package that
complicated any potential defense. During this time ICBMs were seen
as a less costly option based on their lower unit cost. However
development costs were much higher. The arguments for keeping the
bombers, however, were hotly debated. Bombers had the advantages of
attacking more types of targets with better accuracy and they can
perform battle assessment and attack a target again if needed. In
the early 1960s newer generations of missiles with
solid rocket motors were being introduced that
could be launched quickly, faster than bombers, and were sited in
underground silos for protection. Accuracy of the new weapons was
improved so that direct attacks against similar weapons in the USSR
were a real possibility, and attacks on other military bases were
now possible. Making matters more troublesome for the Air Force was
the introduction and rapid improvement of the U.S. Navy's SLBM
force, which had considerably better survivability than either
bombers or hardened missile silos. The Air Force used a number of
different arguments to make its case for the strategic bomber,
including the conventional bombing use and "recall-ability".
One of the biggest critics of the bomber portion of the triad was
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara who preferred ICBMs over
bombers for the Air Force side of the deterrent force. In testimony
before Congress, McNamara said, "
The strategic missile forces
for 1967-71 will provide more force than is required for 'Assured
Destruction' ... a new advanced strategic aircraft does not at this
time appear justified." His opposition led to the AMSA program
being limited to studies in 1964. The program was revived only a
few years later however, and in 1968 an advanced development
contract was issued to
IBM and
North American Rockwell. McNamara
remained opposed to the program in favor of upgrading the existing
B-52 fleet, and adding just under 300
FB-111 for shorter range roles then
being filled by the B-58. He again vetoed the AMSA program and did
not fund aircraft development.
B-1A program

A B-1A in flight showing its
underside, 1981.
President
Richard Nixon re-established
the program after taking office, in keeping with his
administration's flexible response strategy that required a
broad range of options short of general nuclear war. Nixon's
Secretary of Defense,
Melvin Laird
reviewed the programs and decided to lower the numbers of FB-111s,
since it lacked the desired range, and recommended that the AMSA
design studies be accelerated. In April 1969 the program officially
became the
B-1A. This was the first entry in the
new
bomber designation series, first created in 1962.
After the prolonged development period, the production contract was
finally awarded in 1970. The original program called for two test
airframes, five flyable aircraft, and 40 engines. This was cut in
1971 to one ground- and three flight test aircraft (74-0158 through
0160). First flight was set for April 1974. The company changed its
name to
Rockwell
International and named its aircraft division North American
Aircraft Operations in 1973. A fourth prototype (76-1074) was
ordered in the FY 1976 budget. This fourth aircraft was to be built
to production standards. At one time, some 240 B-1As were planned
to be built, with initial operational capability set for
1979.
Rockwell's design featured a number of features common to 1960s
U.S. designs. These included the use of variable-sweep wings in
order to provide both high lift during takeoff and landing, and low
drag during a high-speed dash phase. With the wings set to their
widest position the aircraft had considerably better lift and power
than the B-52, allowing it to operate from a much wider variety of
bases.
Penetration of the USSR
's defenses
would take place in a dash, crossing them as quickly as possible
before entering into the less defended "heartland" where speeds
could be reduced again. The large size and fuel capacity of
the design would allow this dash portion of the flight to be
relatively long.
In order to achieve the required Mach 2 performance at high
altitudes, the air intake inlets were variable. In addition, the
exhaust nozzles were fully variable. Initially, it had been
expected that a Mach 1.2 performance could be achieved at low
altitude, which required that titanium be used in critical areas in
the fuselage and wing structure. However, this low altitude
performance requirement was lowered to only Mach 0.85, reducing the
amount of titanium, and the overall cost.

B-1A nose section with ejection
capsule denoted.
Three of the 4 B-1As featured escape capsule.
Crew escape was provided for using an
escape pod that ejected a portion of the
entire cockpit with all four crew members inside, as opposed to the
more conventional
ejection seats; it
was felt that egress during a high-speed, high-altitude dash would
be too dangerous without pressurization. A pair of small
canards mounted near the nose are part
of an active vibration damping system that smooths out the
otherwise bumpy low-altitude ride, reducing crew fatigue and
improving airframe life.
An extensive suite of electronics was planned, including a
Litton LN-15
inertial navigation system, a
Doppler
radar altimeter, a
Hughes forward-looking
infrared, a
General Electric
APQ-114 forward-looking radar and a Texas Instruments APQ-146
terrain-following radar. The terrain-following radar, in
particular, would allow the B-1 to fly at much lower altitudes
during the "dash" phase of the mission than the B-52, which relied
on older systems that demanded higher minimum altitudes during bad
weather.
Overall it had a range similar to that of the B-52, although more
of the flight could be low-level. A combination of flying lower due
to better navigation systems and a greatly reduced
radar cross section made it much safer
from attack by missiles, and the latter also improved its odds
against fighters as well. In situations where fighters were the
expected competition (i.e. outside the USSR), its high-speed dash
was a potentially useful technique the B-52 could not match.
New problems
The B-1A mockup review occurred in late October 1971. There were
297 requests for alterations. The first of four prototype B-1A
models (s/n 74-0158) flew on 23 December 1974. As the program
continued the per-unit cost continued to rise. In 1970, the
estimated per-unit price was $40 million, and by 1972, the cost had
risen slightly to $45.6 million. By 1975, this figure had climbed
to $70 million.
In 1976
Viktor Belenko defected to
Japan with his
MiG-25 "Foxbat". During
debriefing he described a new "super-Foxbat" (almost certainly
referring to the
MiG-31) that had
look-down/shoot-down radar systems in order to attack cruise missiles. This
would also make any low-level penetration aircraft "visible" and
easy to attack. Countering this problem would require another
upgrade to the electronic countermeasures suite, already one of the
most complex and expensive ever fitted. The debate over the need
for the bomber opened anew, and this time the reduced low-speed
dash was a particular target. Given the performance and the
armament suite that was similar to the B-52, the program was
increasingly questioned as a very expensive solution that appeared
to have limited benefits over the existing fleet.
The program remained highly controversial. In particular, Senator
William Proxmire continually
derided it in public, arguing it was an outlandishly expensive
dinosaur. During the 1976 federal election campaign,
Jimmy Carter made it one of the Democratic
Party's platforms, saying "The B-1 bomber is an example of a
proposed system which should not be funded and would be wasteful of
taxpayers' dollars."
Cancellation

The Rockwell B-1A, 1984.
When Carter took office in 1977 he ordered a review of the entire
program. By this point the projected cost of the program had risen
to over $100 million per aircraft, although this was lifetime cost
over 20 years. He was informed of the relatively new work on
stealth aircraft that had started
in 1975, and decided that this was a far better avenue of approach
than the B-1.
Pentagon
officials
also stated that the ALCM (Air Launched Cruise
Missile) launched from the existing B-52 fleet would give the USAF
equal capability of penetrating Soviet airspace. With a
range of 1,500 miles (2,400 km), the ALCM could be
launched well outside the range of any Soviet defenses, and
penetrate at low altitude just like a bomber, but in much greater
numbers. A small number of B-52 operating outside interception
range could launch hundreds of ALCMs, saturating the defense. A
program to improve the B-52 and develop and deploy the ALCM would
cost perhaps 20% of the price to deploy the planned 244
B-1As.
On 30 June 1977 Carter announced that the B-1A would be canceled in
favor of ICBMs, SLBMs, and a fleet of modernized B-52s armed with
ALCMs. Carter called it "one of the most difficult decisions that
I've made since I've been in office." No mention of the stealth
work was made public, the program being
top
secret, but today it is known that he authorized the
Advanced Technology Bomber (ATB) project in early 1978,
which eventually led to the
B-2
Spirit.
Unsurprisingly, the reaction to the cancellation was split along
partisan lines.
Robert Dornan claimed,
"They're breaking out the vodka and caviar in Moscow." In contrast,
it appears the Soviets were not at all excited by this development,
considering a large number of ALCMs represented a much greater
threat than a smaller number of B-1s.
Tass
commented that "the implementation of these militaristic plans has
seriously complicated efforts for the limitation of the strategic
arms race." Western military leaders were generally happy with the
decision.
Alexander Haig,
then commanding NATO
, described
the ALCM as an "attractive alternative" to the B-1. French
General Georges Buis stated "The B-1 is a formidable weapon, but
not terribly useful. For the price of one bomber, you can have 200
cruise missiles."
Flight tests of the four B-1A prototypes for the B-1A program
continued through April 1981. The program included 70 flights
totalling 378 hours. A top speed of Mach 2.22 was reached by the
second B-1A. Engine testing also continued during this time with
the YF101 engines totalling almost 7,600 hours.
Shifting priorities
It was
during this period that the Soviets started to exert themselves in
several new theaters of action, in particular through Cuba
during the
Angolan Civil War starting in 1975
and the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan
in 1979. The U.S. strategy to this point was
containment and a conventional and nuclear war in Europe, which
almost all military planning had been focused on. These newer
actions revealed that the military was simply incapable of
supporting any sort of effort outside these narrow confines.
The Army responded by accelerating its
Rapid Deployment Force concept, but
suffered from major problems with airlift and sealift capability.
While
gaming a USSR-led invasion of Iran
from
Afghanistan, then considered (incorrectly) to be a major Soviet
goal, it was discovered that only small numbers of units could be
in the field in anything close to a week. In order to slow
an advance while this happened they relied on air power, but
critically the Iran-Afghanistan border was outside the
U.S. Navy's range,
leaving this role to the Air Force. They, in turn, had limited
capability to offer ground support in many areas that were outside
the range of friendly airbases. Although the B-52 had the range to
support on-demand global missions, the B-52's long runway
requirements dramatically limited the forward basing possibilities.
In real-world scenarios the capabilities of this force against any
given potential target was limited, something the B-1 would be
better prepared to handle due to its better takeoff performance and
range.
During the 1980 presidential campaign,
Ronald Reagan campaigned heavily on the
platform that Carter was weak on defense, using the cancellation of
the B-1 program as a prime example, a theme he continued using into
the 1980s. During this time Carter's defense secretary,
Harold Brown, announced
the stealth bomber project, apparently implying that this was the
reason for the B-1 cancellation. Brown later denied this claim,
stating Carter was simply opposed to any military buildup. Although
Reagan's primary attack on Carter's decision was now rendered moot,
he immediately changed his complaint saying that Carter was giving
away secrets and politicizing the Pentagon, charges that led to a
round of sparring between Brown and Reagan in the press.
Interestingly, it was Brown that had led the original AMSA program,
but later came to prefer the cruise missile after taking the job of
Defense Secretary in 1977.
B-1B program
On taking office, Reagan was faced with the same decision as Carter
before; whether to continue with the B-1 for the short term, or to
wait for the development of the ATB, a much more advanced aircraft.
He decided to do both. Air Force studies suggested that the
existing B-52 fleet with ALCM would remain a credible threat until
1985, as it was predicted that 75% of the B-52 force would survive
to attack its targets. After this period the introduction of the
SA-10 missile, MiG-31 interceptor and the
first Soviet
AWACS systems would make
them increasingly vulnerable.
During the FY81 budget funds were given to a new study for a bomber
for the 1990s time-frame. These studies led to the
Long-Range
Combat Aircraft (LRCA) project which compared the B-1, F-111
and ATB as possible solutions. An emphasis was placed on the design
being multi-role, as opposed to a purely strategic weapon. At the
time it was believed the B-1 could be in operation before the B-2,
covering the time period between the B-52s increasing vulnerability
and the introduction of the ATB. Reagan decided the best solution
was to purchase both the B-1 and ATB, and this eventually led to
Reagan's 2 October 1981 announcement that a new version of the B-1
was being ordered to fill the LRCA role.
Numerous changes were made to the design to better fit it to
real-world missions, resulting in the new
B-1B.
These changes included a reduction in maximum speed, which allowed
the variable-aspect
intake ramp to be
replaced by simpler fixed geometry intake ramps in the newer
design. This reduced the B version's radar signature because the
compressor faces of the engines, major radar reflectors, would be
partially hidden. Low-altitude speed was somewhat improved, from
about Mach 0.85 to 0.92. This left the B-1B with the capability for
speeds of about Mach 1.25 "at altitude", a reduction from the
B-1A's Mach 2 performance.

B-1B banking during a demonstration in
2004.
The B-1B's maximum takeoff weight was increased to 477,000 lb
(216,000 kg) from the B-1A's 395,000 lb
(179,000 kg). The weight increase was to allow for takeoffs
with full fuel tanks and for weapons to be carried externally.
Rockwell engineers were able to reinforce critical areas and
lighten non-critical areas of the airframe so the increase in empty
weight was minimal. In order to deal with the introduction of the
MiG-31 and other aircraft with
look-down capability, the B-1B's
electronic warfare suite was
significantly upgraded. These changes, along with the rampant
inflation of the U.S. economy during the
time, dramatically increased the
nominal
price to about $200 million total projected
lifetime
cost per completed airframe.
Opposition to the plan was widespread within Congress. Critics
pointed out that many of the original problems with the concept
remained. In particular it seemed the B-52 fitted with electronics
similar to the B-1B would be equally able to avoid interception, as
the speed advantage of the B-1 was now minimal. It also appeared
that the "interim" time frame served by the B-1B would be less than
a decade, being rendered obsolete shortly after introduction by the
much more capable ATB design. The primary argument in favor of the
B-1 was its large conventional payload, and that its takeoff
performance allowed it to operate with a credible bombload from a
much wider variety of airfields. The debate remained rancorous.
But the
Air Force very astutely spread production subcontracts across many
congressional districts, making the aircraft more popular on
Capitol
Hill
.

B-1B Lancer
The first
production model of the revised B-1B first flew in October 1984,
and the first B-1B, "The Star of Abilene", was delivered to
Dyess Air Force
Base
, Abilene,
Texas
, in June 1985, with initial operational capability
on 1 October, 1986. The 100th and final B-1B was delivered 2
May 1988.
Design
The B-1 has a
blended wing body
configuration, with
variable-sweep
wing, triangular fin control surfaces and four
turbofan engines, to improve range and speed with
enhanced
survivability. Forward-swept
wing settings are used for
takeoff,
landings and high-altitude maximum
cruise. Aft-swept wing settings are used in
high subsonic and supersonic flight. The wings of the B-1B
originally were cleared for use at settings of 15, 25, 55 and 67.5
degrees. The 45-degree setting was later cleared in 1998–99
timeframe.

B-1B nose view with small canards
shown.
The length of the aircraft presented a serious flexing problem due
to air turbulence at low altitude. To alleviate this, Rockwell
included small canards near the nose on the B-1. An accelerometer
would actuate the canards automatically to counteract turbulence
and smooth out the ride.

A B-1B makes a high-speed pass at the
Pensacola Beach air show, 2003.
Unlike the B-1A, the B-1B made no attempt at Mach 2+ speeds. Its
maximum speed at altitude is Mach 1.25 (about 950 mph or
1,530 km/h), but its low-level speed increased to Mach 0.92
(700 mph, 1,130 km/h). Technically, the current version
of the aircraft can exceed its speed restriction, but not without
risking potential damage to its structure and air intakes. The
B-1A's engine was modified slightly to produce the
F101-102, with an emphasis on
durability, and increased efficiency. The core of this engine has
since been re-used in several other engine designs, including the
F110 which has seen use in the
F-14 Tomcat,
F-15K/SG variants
and most recent versions of the
F-16 Fighting Falcon. It is also the
basis for the non-afterburning
F118 used in the B-2 Spirit
bomber and the
U-2S. However its
greatest success was forming the core of the extremely popular
CFM56 civil engine, which
can be found on some versions of practically every small-to-medium
sized airliner. The nose gear cover door has controls for the
auxiliary power units (APUs), main gear doors and nearby entry
ladder. One of controls there allows for quick starts of the APUs
upon order to scramble.
The B-1's offensive
avionics include the
Westinghouse (now
Northrop Grumman) AN/APQ-164
forward-looking offensive
passive electronically
scanned array radar set with electronic
beam steering (and a fixed antenna pointed downward for reduced
radar observability),
synthetic
aperture radar, ground moving target indicator (MTI), and
terrain-following radar modes, Doppler navigation, radar
altimeter, and an
inertial navigation suite. From 1995 on,
the B-1B Block D upgrade added a
Global Positioning System
receiver.

B-1B cockpit at night
The B-1's defensive electronics include the
Eaton AN/ALQ-161 radar warning and
defensive
jamming
equipment, linked to a total of eight AN/ALE-49
flare dispensers located on top
behind the canopy, which are handled by the AN/ASQ-184 avionics
management system. The AN/ALE-49 dispenser has a capacity of 12
MJU-23A/B flares each. The MJU-23A/B flare is one of the world's
largest infrared countermeasure flares having a gross weight of
~1170 g. The cylindrical
Magnesium/Teflon/Viton pellet has a
net weight of ~1470 g. The Plans for a defensive systems
upgrade program (DSUP) were canceled for budgetary reasons. The B-1
has also been equipped to carry the
ALE-50 Towed Decoy System. The
Lancer has an additional
Doppler
tail-warning radar to detect aircraft or missiles approaching from
the rear.
Also aiding the B-1's survivability is its relatively low
radar cross-section (RCS). Although not
technically a
stealth aircraft in a
comprehensive sense, thanks to the aircraft's structure, serpentine
intake paths and use of radar-absorbent material its RCS is about
1/50th that of the
B-52
(probably about 26 ft² or 2.4 m²), although the Lancer is
not substantially smaller in mass than the Stratofortress.

B-1B releasing bombs and ejecting a
MJU 23 decoy flare.
The B-1 has been upgraded since production through the
"Conventional Mission Upgrade Program". This multi-stage program
added a new
MIL-STD-1760 smart-weapons
interface that enables the use of the
Joint Direct Attack Munition
and other precision-guided conventional weapons, such as the
Wind Corrected
Munitions Dispenser (WCMD), the
AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapon
(JSOW), and the
AGM-158 JASSM (Joint
Air to Surface Standoff Munition). Future precision munitions
include the
GBU-39 Small
Diameter Bomb. These and other improvements are intended to
ensure that the B-1 will be viable through approximately 2020. In
addition, the Air Force has recently announced a program to keep
the aircraft flying until at least 2040.
Operational history
The USAF
Strategic Air Command
(SAC) had B-1 Lancers in service from 1986 through 1992, when SAC
was re-organized out of existence. During that time the "Bone" was
on limited alert, and the backbone of SAC's alert bombers remained
B-52H models. In late 1990 engine fires in two Lancers caused the
grounding of the fleet. The cause was traced back to problems in
the first-stage fan. Aircraft were placed on "limited alert",
meaning they were grounded unless a nuclear war broke out. They
were returned to duty one-at-a-time starting in January 1991 as
they were inspected and repaired. It was not until mid-April that
the fleet was once again declared airworthy.
Although officially named the "Lancer", B-1 crews almost never
refer to the aircraft by this name. Crews prefer to call the B-1
the "Bone". Origins of the "Bone" nickname are disputed, but appear
to stem from an early newspaper article about the aircraft wherein
its name was phonetically spelled out as "B-ONE" and inadvertently
omitted the hyphen. Crews, who generally felt the "Lancer" moniker
was unappealing, quickly latched onto the "Bone" nickname.
Originally designed strictly for nuclear war, the B-1's development
as an effective conventional bomber was delayed until the 1990s. By
1991, the B-1 had a fledgling conventional capability, forty of
them able to drop the 500 lb (230 kg) Mk-82 General
Purpose (GP) bomb, although mostly from low altitude. Although
cleared for this role, the problems with the engines precluded
their use in
Operation Desert
Storm. Also, B-1s were reserved for strategic nuclear strike
missions at this time.
After the absorption of Strategic Air Command (SAC) into
Air Combat Command (ACC) in 1992, the B-1
began to truly develop conventionally. A key part of this
development was the start-up of the B-1 Weapons School Division,
also in 1992. Starting in 1994, two additional B-1 bomb wings were
also created in the
Air National
Guard, with former fighter wings in the
Kansas Air National Guard and the
Georgia Air National
Guard converting to the aircraft.
By the mid-1990s, the B-1 could employ GP weapons as well as
various CBUs. By the end of the 1990s, with the advent of the
"Block D" upgrade, the B-1 boasted a full array of guided and
unguided munitions. This development has continued through the
present. The B-1B no longer carries nuclear weapons, and the B-1
fleet did not have nuclear capability by 1995 with the removal of
nuclear arming and fuzing hardware.
Operationally, the B-1 was first used in
combat in support of operations against Iraq
during
Operation Desert Fox in
December 1998, employing unguided GP weapons. B-1s have been
subsequently used in
Operation
Allied Force (Kosovo) and most notably in
Operation Enduring Freedom in
Afghanistan and the
2003 invasion
of Iraq. In both conflicts, the B-1 employed its full array of
conventional weapons, most notably the GBU-31, 2,000 lb
(900 kg)
Joint Direct
Attack Munition (JDAM). During OEF, the B-1 improved its
mission capable rate to 79%. The B-1 continues to be used in combat
to the present day. The most recent addition to its arsenal is the
GBU-38, a 500 lb (230 kg) JDAM. The use of the GBU-38
reduces undesired
collateral
damage and is very useful in urban
Close Air Support.
The B-1 now fills an important niche in the Air Force inventory.
The project finished on budget, and the B-1 has higher
survivability and speed when compared to the older B-52, which it
was intended to replace. With the arrival of limited numbers of
B-2s in the 1990s and the continuing use of B-52s, its value has
been questioned. However, the capability of a high-speed strike
with a large bomb payload for time-sensitive operations is useful,
and no new strategic bomber is on the immediate horizon.
The B-1 holds several
FAI
world records for speed, and time-to-climb in different aircraft
weight classes. The
National Aeronautic
Association recognized the B-1B for completing one of the 10
most memorable record flights for 1994.
Recent developments

A B-1B Lancer in flight.
A total of 100 B-1Bs were produced with 93 bombers remaining in
2000 after losses in accidents. In 2003, following the removal of
the B-1B from the two bomb wings in the
Air National Guard, the USAF decided to
retire 33 of the B-1Bs to concentrate its budget on maintaining
availability of the remaining aircraft, although in 2004 a new
appropriations bill called for
some of the retired aircraft to return to service. In 2004, the
USAF returned seven of the mothballed bombers to service, giving a
total force of 67 aircraft, with the rest cannibalized for spares.
Five of
the seven that were brought back to service went to Dyess AFB in
Texas, one to Ellsworth AFB
, South
Dakota
, and another to Edwards AFB
, California.
On 14 July 2007, the Associated Press reported on the growing USAF
presence in Iraq as a result of "surge" in forces. Also mentioned
is the reintroduction of B-1Bs to be a close-at-hand "platform" to
support Coalition ground forces. , the B-1 is being used in Iraq in
close support of ground troops by delivering guided bombs.
On 19
March 2008, a B-1B from Dyess Air Force Base
, Texas, became the first US Air Force aircraft to
fly at supersonic speed using a synthetic
fuel during a flight over Texas and New Mexico. The B-1B
is undergoing flight testing using a 50/50 mix of synthetic and
petroleum fuel as part of an ongoing Air Force testing
program.
On 4 August 2008, a B-1B flew the first Sniper Advanced Targeting
Pod equipped combat sortie where the crew successfully targeted
enemy ground forces and dropped a GBU-38 guided bomb in
Afghanistan.
Variants
B-1A/B
The B-1A was original B-1 design with variable engine intakes and
Mach 2.2 top speed. Four prototypes were built.
The B-1B is the improved B-1 design with reduced radar signature
and a top speed of Mach 1.25. A total of 100 B-1Bs were
produced.
B-1R
The B-1R is a proposed replacement for the B-1B fleet. Boeing's
director of global strike integration, Rich Parke, was first quoted
about the "B-1R" bomber in
Air Force Magazine. Parke said
the B-1R (R for "regional") would be a Lancer with advanced radars,
air-to-air missiles, and
Pratt
& Whitney F119 engines (originally developed for the
F-22 Raptor). Its new top speed of Mach
2.2 would be purchased at the price of a 20% reduction of the
B-1B's range. This proposal would involve modifying existing
aircraft. The
FB-22 and
YF-23-based designs are alternative
proposals.
Boeing's proposal appears to modify the B-1B into a design able to
serve these two purposes. For the bomb-truck role Boeing proposes
the modification of existing external hardpoints to allow them to
carry multiple conventional warheads, dramatically improving
overall warload. For the air-to-air role, both defensive and
offensive, they propose to add active electronically-scanned array
radar and allow some of the hardpoints to carry air-to-air
missiles. Even with its somewhat reduced range as compared to the
original B-1B, its fuel capacity remains quite large. This would
allow it to escape from unfavorable air-to-air encounters by simply
running away; there are few enough aircraft capable of Mach 2+
performance in general, and those that are deployed can maintain
these speeds for only very short periods of time.
In general terms the B-1R most closely resembles the original
F-111 concept, as opposed to
a pure bomber role. However, it would be able to carry out these
missions at ranges even greater than the F-111.
Upgrades
The Conventional Mission Upgrade Program (CMUP) will enhance the
airplane's effectiveness as a conventional weapons carrier.
Capability will be delivered in blocks attained by hardware
modifications and software updates.
- Block A: Standard design of the B-1B with the
capability to deliver non-precision Mk-82 500 lb gravity
bombs. Before CMUP all B-1Bs were designated as "Block A"
models.
- Block B: Improved Synthetic Aperture Radar, as
well as some upgrades to the Defensive Countermeasures System. This
upgrade reached the field in 1995.
- Block C: "Enhanced Capability" provided for
delivery of up to 30 Cluster Bomb Units (CBUs) per sortie. The
upgrade consists of modification for B-1B bomb module from the
original configuration of 28 x 500 lb bombs per unit to 10 x
1,000 lb cluster bombs per bomb rack. The modifications were
made to 50 bomb racks. This capability was completed in August
1997.
- Block D: "Near Precision Capability" gives B-1
aircrews increased abilities to accurately put bombs on target with
improved weapons and targeting systems, as well as giving them
advanced secure communications capabilities. The first part of the
electronic countermeasures upgrade, addition of Joint Direct Attack
Munitions (JDAM), ALE-50 Towed
Decoy System, and anti-jam radios are also included.
- Block E: This upgrade covers improvements to
the avionics computers. This package also incorporates the
Wind-Corrected Munitions Dispenser (WCMD), the Joint Standoff
Weapon (JSOW) and the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile
(JASSM), substantially improving the bomber's capability. Upgrades
were completed in September 2006.
- Block F: The Defensive Systems Upgrade Program
(DSUP) improves the aircraft's electronic countermeasures and
jamming capabilities. This includes the Towed Decoy System (TDS).
Upgrades were canceled in December 2002 due to cost overruns and
schedule slips.
After the CMUP program, upgrades will provide for better network
centric capability. A program was begun in 2005 to provide
integrated data linking and upgraded crew station displays.
Integration of the
Sniper
targeting pod is underway. The pod is mounted on an external
hardpoint at the aircraft's chin near the forward bomb bay. Due to
accelerated testing the Sniper pod was fielded in summer
2008.
On 29 July 2009 a B-1 of the
419th Flight Test Squadron made
the first flight with the Fully Integrated Data Link (FIDL). This
replaces dedicated control links with an unified
Ethernet network of computers and displays so the
crew will no longer have to copy information between systems by
hand. The USAF is expected to place a contract to have FIDL
installed in the entire fleet at the end of 2010.
Operators

A 28th Bomb Wing B-1B on the ramp in
the early morning at Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota

A B-1B on display for family and
friends at Ellsworth AFB, 2003
-
- U.S. Air Force
- 96th
Bombardment Wing, Dyess Air Force Base
, Abilene, Texas
(1984-1992)
- 7th Bomb Wing,
Dyess AFB, Abilene, Texas
- 28th Bomb
Wing, Ellsworth Air Force Base
, Rapid City, South Dakota
- 319th
Bombardment Wing, Grand Forks Air Force Base
, Grand
Forks
, North
Dakota
(1986-1994)
- 384th
Bombardment Wing, McConnell Air Force Base
, Wichita
, Kansas
(1987-1994)
- 366th
Wing, Mountain Home Air Force Base
, Mountain Home,
Idaho
(1994-2002)
- 184th Bomb Wing,
Kansas Air National Guard,
McConnell AFB, Wichita, Kansas (1994-2002)
- 116th Bomb
Wing, Georgia Air
National Guard, Robins AFB
, Georgia
(1995-2002)
- 53d
Wing, Eglin Air Force Base
, Florida
- 57th
Wing, Nellis AFB
, Nevada
- 412th Test
Wing, Edwards
Air Force Base
, California
Survivors
- The
first B-1A (s/n 74-0158) was disassembled and used for radar
testing at the Rome Air Development Center
, New York.
- The second B-1A (s/n 74-0159) flew for the subsequent B-1B
program, but crashed on 29 August 1984 (see below).
- The
third B-1A (s/n 74-0160) is on display at Wings Over the Rockies Museum
in Denver, Colorado
.
- The
fourth and last B-1A (s/n 74-0174) was on display at the National Museum of the United States Air
Force
at Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base
near Dayton,
Ohio
for many years before moving to the Strategic
Air and Space Museum
in Ashland, Nebraska
. This aircraft has conventional ejection seats and other features distinctive
to the B-1B variant instead of the B-1A.
- B-1B
(s/n 83-0069, Lot II) is on display the Museum of
Aviation
at Robins Air Force Base
in Warner Robins, Georgia
. This aircraft was the sixth B-1 produced,
and was delivered to the 96th Bomb
Wing at Dyess Air
Force Base
, Texas on 13 March 1986. The aircraft was
originally given the name Silent Penetrator, but was later
named Rebel and painted with the nose art of a WWII B-29
Superfortress assigned to the 497 Bomb Group. This aircraft
arrived at Robins AFB in September 2002 from Dyess AFB in Texas. As
of 31 May 1992, the aircraft had accumulated 1,393 flight hours.
The aircraft is displayed outside the museum entrance near the
parking lot.
- B-1B
(s/n 84-0051, Lot III) is on display at the National Museum of the
United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio
. It is displayed in the Museum's Cold War
Gallery, and replaces the B-1A (74-0174) formerly on display.
- B-1B
(s/n 83-0070, Lot II) is on display at the Hill
Aerospace Museum
at Hill Air Force Base
in Ogden,
Utah
.
- B-1B
(s/n 83-0068, Lot II) is on display as s/n 85-0115, an actual
aircraft assigned to the 184th BW of the KANG, at the Reflections of Freedom Air
Park at McConnell Air Force Base
in Wichita,
KS
.
Accidents and incidents
Between 1984 and 2001, 17 people have been killed in B-1
crashes.
- Notable accidents and incidents
- On 29 August 1984, B-1A (s/n 74-0159) stalled and crashed while
performing minimum control speed tests at low altitude. The crew
used the escape capsule to leave
the bomber, but the parachute deployed improperly and the pilot,
Rockwell civilian test pilot Doug Benefield, was killed on
impact.
- In
September 1987, B-1B (s/n 84-0052) from the 96th Bomb Wing, 338th Bomb Squadron, Dyess AFB
crashed near La Junta, Colorado
, while flying on a low-level training route.
This was the only B-1B crash to occur with six crew members aboard.
The two crew members in jump seats, and one of the four crew
members in ejection seats perished. The crash investigation
revealed that malfunctioning logic chips may have caused the fourth
ejection seat to fail. The root cause of the accident was thought
to be a bird strike on a wing's leading
edge during the low-level flight. The impact was severe enough to
sever the fuel and hydraulic lines running along the forward spar
that served that side of the aircraft, whereas the other side and
its two engines functioned long enough to enable the three crew
members to eject. The B-1B fleet was later modified to protect the
various supply lines, which lie along the edge.
- In November 1988, B-1B (s/n 85-0063) from the 96th Bomb Wing,
337th Bomb Squadron, Dyess AFB crashed near Tye, Texas after a fire
broke out above left engines. All four crew members successfully
ejected from the aircraft.
- In
November 1988, B-1B (s/n 85-0076) from the 28th Bomb Wing, 37th Bomb Squadron, Ellsworth AFB
crashed short of the runway at Ellsworth AFB during
adverse weather. All four crew members successfully ejected
from the aircraft.
- In
October, 1989, B-1B (s/n 85-0070) was forced to make an emergency
landing at Edwards
AFB
when the nose gear would not lower. After
multiple attempts to "bounce" the nose gear down, (via hard touch
& gos on the main gear), the aircraft diverted to Edwards. The
crew were able to make a nose-gear up landing so that the aircraft
suffered only minor damage.
- In
October 1990, while flying in a training route in eastern Colorado,
B-1B (s/n 86-0128) from the 384th Bomb
Wing, 28th Bomb Squadron, McConnell AFB
, experienced an explosion as the engines reached
military power. Fire on the aircraft's left was spotted. The
#1 engine was shut down and its fire
extinguisher was activated. The accident investigation
determined that the engine had suffered catastrophic failure, in
which engine blades cut through the engine mounts, causing the
engine to detach from the aircraft.
- In December 1990, B-1B (s/n 83-0071) from the 96th Bomb Wing,
337th Bomb Squadron, Dyess AFB, Texas experienced a jolt and the #3
engine was shut down with its fire extinguisher activating. This
event, coupled with the October 1990 engine incident, led to a 50+
day grounding of the B-1Bs not on nuclear alert. The problem was
eventually traced back to problems in the first-stage fan, and all
B-1Bs were equipped with modified engines.
- In
November 1992, B-1B (s/n 86-0106) from the 7th Bomb Wing, 337th Bomb Squadron, Dyess AFB,
Texas
flying on a low-level training flight crashed into
a mountain near Van Horn,
Texas
. All four members of the crew were killed.
The cause was attributed to pilot error.
- In
September 1997, B-1B (s/n 85-0078) from the 28th Bomb Wing, 37th Bomb Squadron, Ellsworth
AFB, South
Dakota
, flying in the Powder River Military
Operating Area crashed near Alzada, Montana
, approximately 80 miles north of Rapid City,
South Dakota
. All four members of the crew were killed.
The review board found the bomber struck the ground while
decreasing speed and making an abrupt turn to evade a threat.
- In
February 1998, B-1B (s/n 84-0057) from the 7th Bomb Wing, Dyess
AFB, Texas crashed near Marion, Kentucky
when a fire detected by a cockpit instrument panel
shut down the aircraft's power. All four crew members were
able to eject and were rescued safely. In response to a warning
light on the #3 engine, the crew shut down the fuel pumps to that
engine. However, a panel electrical short caused a fire that shut
down fuel to all the engines and prevented them from being
restarted.
- In
December 2001, B-1B (s/n 86-0114) from the 28th Bomb Wing, 37th
Bomb Squadron, Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota, was lost over the
Indian
Ocean
. All four crew members successfully ejected
and were rescued. The bomber (of the 28th Bomb Wing,
designated ICECUBE 44) was approximately 100 miles north of its
Diego
Garcia
departure point, flying en route to a long-range
combat mission over Afghanistan, when the crew declared an
in-flight emergency. Details remain classified. The pilot,
Capt. William Steele, attributed the crash to "multiple
malfunctions" causing the bomber to go "out of control". Further
information from maintenance specialists related the aircraft
mishap to the aircrew experiencing electrical bus failures that
contributed to an instrument blackout affecting both primary and
backup instruments. With no visual reference of level flight
available to the aircrew, the four crew members ejected safely.
Because of the depth of the water in which the aircraft crashed,
the structural data collector (SDC) or "Black Box" was not recovered from the
wreckage and the nature of the cause was not positively determined.
The
aircraft had recently returned from Ellsworth AFB from a routine
Phase Inspection, and was on its first combat mission after
returning to Diego
Garcia
. The crew spent two hours in the water
before being rescued by a launch from the USS Russell. This was the first
B-1B to be lost in combat operations since the model became
operational in 1986.

A B-1B landing in Guam catches fire on
touchdown, 15 September 2005.
- On 15
September 2005 B-1B (s/n 85-0066) was extensively damaged by fire
while landing at Andersen Air Force Base
, Guam
.
The investigation into the incident concluded that leaking
hydraulic fluid and sparks from a wheel being gouged caused a fire
to start in the aircraft's right main landing gear as it touched
down. The resulting fire damaged the B-1's right wing, nacelle,
airframe and landing gear, leading to an estimated repair cost of
more than $32 million.
- In May 2006, B-1B (s/n 86-0132) from the 7th Bomb Wing, 9th
Bomb Squadron, Dyess AFB, Texas, landed "gear-up" during recovery
from an 11-hour ferry flight to Diego Garcia. A resulting fire was
quickly extinguished and the crew escaped through the top hatch.
The copilot suffered a minor back injury; the three other crew
members were not injured. The Air Force investigation concluded
that the pilots disabled the aural tone generator circuit breaker
which creates audible warning signals and then "forgot to lower the
landing gear". Damage to the aircraft
and runway totaled approximately $8 million. Four days later the
aircraft was raised and its landing gear deployed. The B-1B
returned to normal service in 2007.
- In August 2007, a B-1B had an engine fire and made an emergency
landing at Kandahar airport in Afghanistan. Crews removed the
damaged engine and flew the aircraft out in October.
- On 4
April 2008, a B-1B lost hydraulic power while taxiing, then crashed
into a concrete barrier and caught fire at Al Udeid AB
,Qatar
.
The crew safely evacuated the aircraft. The plane was carrying
multiple bombs at the time, all but two of which detonated during
the fire. The aircraft was a total loss.
Specifications (B-1B)
Popular culture
The B-1 and B-52 bombers have been featured frequently in author
Dale Brown's books.
A B-1 carries the
President to NORAD
, during an alien invasion in the Larry Niven and Jerry
Pournelle science fiction novel
Footfall.
The 1983
James Bond film
Never Say Never Again features a
cruise missile launch from a B-1
(although a sequence in which cruise missiles are loaded onto the
B-1 was filmed with a
Concorde SST
substituting for the B-1's undercarriage). In the 1985 film
Real Genius, the laser weapon
that is developed by Chris Knight is mounted in a B-1's bomb bay.
In the 2009 film
Transformers: Revenge of the
Fallen, a B-1B is shown dropping numerous 2000 pound
JDAMs in the climatic battle scene. In the
Young Ones
episode "
Bomb", a B-1 is
shown dropping a bomb on the flatmates' house.
Gallery
- B-1A Close-ups
File:B1AswingWingsMus.JPG|Top/rear view of swing
wingFile:B1ArearWingsMus.JPG|Rear section with pointed
radomeFile:B1ArudderWingsMus.JPG|Rudder and
tailFile:B1AnosegearWingsMus.JPG|Nose
gearFile:B1AmaingearWingsMus.JPG|Main
gearFile:B1AbayWingsMus.JPG|Bomb bay
See also
References
Notes
- Jenkins 1999, pp. 12–13.
- Rich, Ben and Leo Janos. Skunk Works. Boston: Little,
Brown & Company, 1994. ISBN 0-316-74300-3.
- Jenkins 1999, p. 21.
- Spick 1986, pp. 6–7.
- North American Rockwell, NASA-CR-115702, B-70 Aircraft Study Final Report,
Vol. I, p. I-38. NASA, 1972.
- Jenkins 1999, pp. 11–19.
- Knaack 1988, p. 256.
- Baugher, Joe. "Rockwell B-1A." Rockwell B-1B Lancer, 10
October 2001. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- B-1A background, Globalsecurity.org.
- Wykes, J. H. "The Evolution of a Strategic Bomber."
aiaa.org. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- Pace 1998, p. 10.
- Jenkins 1999, p. 21.
- Pace 1998, pp. 10-11.
- "B-1A page." fas.org. Retrieved: 20
March 2008.
- "Rockwell International history 1970-1986."
boeing.com. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
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boeing.com. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- "Carter's Big Decision: Down Goes the B-1, Here
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- Baugher, Joe. "Northrop B-2A Spirit." Northrop B-2A Spirit,
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- Jenkins 1999, p. 46.
- Liggett, Lieutenant Colonel William R. "Long-Range Combat Aircraft and Rapid Deployment
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Review, July-August 1982. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
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digital.library.unt.edu, 3 May 1982. Retrieved: 8 October
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- Jenkins 1999, p. 60.
- Pace 1998, p. 64.
- Spick 1987, p. 498.
- Pace 1998, p. 44.
- Spick 1986, p. 44.
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- Jenkins 1999, p. 141.
- Jenkins 1999, p. Appendix E.
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Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
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- Bates, Matthew. "B-1B achieves first supersonic flight using synthetic
fuel". Air Force News, 20 March 2008.
- Pate, Capt. Kristen. "Sniper ATP-equipped B-1B has combat first." US
Air Force, 11 August 2008. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- Lewis, Paul and Simonsen, Erik. "Offering Unique Solutions for Global Strike
Force." All Systems Go (Boeing) Vol. 2, Issue 2, 2004. Retrieved: 18
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- Hebert, Adam J. "Long-Range Strike in a Hurry." Air Force
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- "B-1B Variants and upgrade blocks,
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- Hernandez, Jason. "419th FLTS demonstrates Sniper pod capability", US
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- Jenkins 1999, pp. 70–74.
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Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- "The Crash of the B-1A (29 August 1984)."]
Check-Six.com. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
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- "Squadron Service 1985 - 1992."
targetlock.org.uk. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
- "4 die in crash of B-1 bomber in Montana, Air Force
moves up stand down to Monday." CNN, 19 September
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CNN, 18 February 2002. Retrieved: 8 October 2009.
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16 January 2001. Retrieved: 18 July 2006.
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USA Today,
12 December 2001. Retrieved: 18 July 2006.
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targetlock.org.uk. Retrieved: 12 January 2007.
- Report: pilot error caused B-1B crash, Air
Combat Command Public Affairs , USAF, 18 September 2006.
Retrieved: 1 December 2006.
- Recovery of B-1B "SLIP 57."
zianet.com. Retrieved: 1 December 2006.
- "Making a Three Engine B-1 Take Off."
StrategyPage.com, 31 October 2007. Retrieved: 8
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Air Force Times accident report, 6 October 2008. Includes
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- "Bomb". The Young Ones. BBC TV, 1983. No. 4, series
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- Pace, Steve. Boeing North American B-1 Lancer. North
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External links