Made in the U.S.S.R.
Of course they copied it. The two airplanes could have been twins. But was the Soviets' Tu-4 truly an exact duplicate of the Boeing B-29?
- By Von Hardesty
- Air & Space magazine, March 2001
The General H.H. Arnold Special had flown a number of missions from its base in China prior to a final, fateful mission to Manchuria.
NASM
(Page 6 of 10)
To implement this plan, he asked Mikoyan to appoint a person from each ministry to be responsible for timely delivery. Each project manager would have to explain any missed deadlines or poor workmanship to Beria. Mikoyan quickly agreed, appointing high-ranking bureaucrats—often deputy ministers—to assume responsibility. (Later, Sergei Korolev used this same model for the Soviet space program.)
While Tupolev manipulated the politics, he never abandoned control of critical aspects of the program: He kept the calendar, and he was adept at trouble-shooting. Leonid Kerber remembered Tupolev’s uncanny aptitude for anticipating trouble spots, and whenever problems arose, Tupolev would intervene directly. He also hired a talented coordinator in the person of I.M. Sklyanskiy. This choice proved to be inspired, if dangerous in the minds of Tupolev’s nervous associates. Sklyanskiy was an engineer, full of energy, attentive to detail, and blessed with a keen memory. No other person was better suited to supervise the timetable, which filled one entire wall of a special exhibition located at Tupolev’s design bureau on Radio Street in downtown Moscow. As dispatcher, Sklyanskiy filled out four cards for each part placed on order: one for Tupolev, one for the aviation ministry, another one for the cooperating ministry, and a final one for the actual manufacturing entity in the field.
Still, Sklyanskiy’s past aroused some anxiety. He had once been arrested and spent some time in a police-run workshop not unlike Tupolev’s sharaga. This was not unusual, but it did place him in great jeopardy whenever there was a failure or breakdown in the system. Worse, Sklyanskiy’s brother had once served as Leon Trotsky’s deputy on the Military Revolutionary Committee during the Bolshevik revolution. For reasons still unclear, this link with Trotsky, the regime’s premier enemy of the people, never got Sklyanskiy into trouble.
As the first parts and supplies for the Tu-4 began to arrive for inspection, Tupolev devised a special exhibit in Moscow to display progress graphically, noting deadlines met and milestones still to be achieved—along with the name of the responsible manager. Booths for each major component or sub-assembly consumed two floors of his design bureau. Telephone links to the responsible factories provided the latest updates. The exhibit provided a convenient vehicle to showcase the project to visiting officials and alert Tupolev to any potential breakdown. When Stalin learned of this remarkable exhibit, he planned a visit.
Any tour by the boss stirred high anxiety, and Stalin picked a Sunday, when the plant was closed. This was not unusual; he often made late-night phone calls to distant offices, forcing fearful bureaucrats to remain in their offices around the clock. On the afternoon of Stalin’s visit, Tupolev and his staff gathered at the plant. Teams of police in civilian clothes arrived, searched the building, locked all the doors, substituted their own guards for the plant security force, and set up their own sentry posts. For these critical briefings, there were precise instructions. All briefings should be short and comprehensible. At no time should a briefer look away from Stalin’s eyes, put his hands in his pockets or jacket, or ever position himself behind the leader.
The police instructed everyone to stand in place and not move without permission. Armed guards would escort anyone to the restroom. Outside, the streets had been cleared except for policemen dressed in civilian clothes, who strolled around to create the atmosphere of a normal Sunday afternoon. Hours passed, but after all these preparations, Tupolev announced to his exhausted staff at 2 a.m. Monday morning that Stalin had cancelled the tour. Everyone returned home in the black ZiS cars of the police.
The documentation required for the new bomber had been enormous. Retro-engineering dictated the analysis and photographing of some 105,000 parts. Tupolev’s team generated 40,000 detailed drawings, completed by a force of a thousand draftsmen. Exacting quality standards and the threat of police sanctions made the whole enterprise an exhausting experience. During the most critical phases of the program, workers were sometimes allowed only one day off each month. Any deviation raised the fear that someone, for personal benefit or revenge, might complain to the police.
One immense challenge was the difference between English measurements used by U.S. manufacturers and the metric system, which the Soviets used. Early on, Tupolev decided not to convert the U.S. units to the metric system, which would have been time consuming. The manufacture of aluminum panels exemplified the problem. The standard thickness of the aluminum skin on the B-29 was 1/16 of an inch (1.5875 millimeters). It was impossible for Soviet plants to fabricate metal sheets to that dimension. Tupolev opted to vary the thickness of the Tu-4’s skin between .8 and 1.8 millimeters, which actually had the effect of strengthening the aircraft’s structure in some areas. Despite such changes, the weight of the Tu-4 would turn out to be only one percent greater than the B-29. No less critical were other compromises made on electrical wiring as well as hydraulic pressure and fuel consumption.
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Comments (4)
Never,Ever,Underestimate your Enemy Don't ever think, you
hold all the Technology, Because some other Country just
might surprise you.
This is true for Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Remember
when your Number 1, Number 2, Number 3, and Number 4 all want a crack at you.
Friends have become Enemies, Enemies have become Friends.
And you must always remember that.
Always hold the high ground, this way you can keep an eye
on everyone.
When it comes to National Interest there are no Friends.
Remember protect yourself, because no one else will.
When you show weakness your enemies will gather.
If a Nation has to show Military Force, use it, and use it
with overwhelming force, this will get the respect, of both Friends and Enemies and other forces in the shadows will rethink.
Those who stood by you, will always have your protection.
If one day you must fight a battle alone, remember where
your friend were.
"If you would shoot a general,first destroy his horse"
-Japanese Proverb-
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil, is for
good men to do nothing."
-Thomas Burke-
War is a dirty, rotten business stop it before it starts.
Posted by William D. De Nomie / Vietnam Veteran on November 20,2009 | 12:35 AM
Amazing that there were so many TU-4's made, only 1 survives (that we know of). This is a valuable lesson regarding our posterity, that we should plan to keep enough of our aviation history artifacts (ex: Museum of the US Air Force).
What a geture it would have been to return the Ramp Tramp after the wall came down.
Posted by Joel Wilson/ US Army Aviation Veteran on February 6,2010 | 10:03 PM
Makes one wonder if Iran will do something similar with the Lockheed Martin RQ-170 Sentinel drone that they captured.
Posted by Mike Burkholder on December 20,2011 | 09:46 PM
Very interesting story! I enjoyed reading. Soviet aircraft are the most beautiful planes ever built, the Tu-16, Tu-154 and Il-62 especially.
Posted by Anders on March 18,2013 | 03:12 AM