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Six Turning, Four Burning: The B-36 Peacemaker Legacy

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The year was 1950, and in the skies over America flew a true engineering marvel – a magnesium-skinned colossus that dwarfed everything that came before it. Pilots described it as "sitting in a bay window while flying an apartment building," and for good reason.

Meet the Convair B-36 "Peacemaker," the largest mass-produced piston-engine aircraft ever built and a true testament to post-war American innovation. Developed when no idea seemed too ambitious, this behemoth featured a unique propulsion system that aviation enthusiasts still marvel at today: six massive 28-cylinder engines turning 19-foot wide propellers in a pusher configuration, complemented by four jet engines – a configuration pilots fondly referred to as "six turning, four burning."

What made the B-36 truly remarkable was its unprecedented capabilities. With a wingspan of 230 feet and wings so thick they contained crawl spaces for in-flight maintenance, this bomber could carry 86,000 pounds of conventional or nuclear weapons – equivalent to more than twenty World War II heavy bombers combined. More impressively, it could deliver this payload to targets 12,000 miles away without refueling, making it the perfect Cold War deterrent able to reach Moscow from American soil with plenty of range to spare.

The Peacemaker pushed boundaries in ways that seem almost unbelievable today. It carried entire fighter aircraft underneath it as part of the FICON program, transported complete airframes of other bombers, and most astonishingly, flew 47 test missions with an onboard nuclear reactor that required a special "GLOW Squad" ready to parachute and secure the site in case of a crash.

Though its operational career lasted just a decade before being replaced by the all-jet B-52, the legacy of this aeronautical giant endures as a symbol of an era when aviation engineers dared to dream impossibly big. Join us as we explore the fascinating story of America's largest bomber – a true bridge between eras that changed the course of Cold War history.

Subscribe now to hear more incredible stories from aviation's golden age, and discover why some aircraft become legendary while others fade into history.

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