Martin BM | |
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A BM-2 of VT-2B in the early 1930s | |
Role | Dive bomber or torpedo bomber |
Manufacturer | Martin |
First flight | 17 May 1929 |
Introduction | 1931 |
Primary user | United States Navy |
Number built | 35 |
The Martin BM was a 1930s American torpedo bomber built by the Glenn L. Martin Company for the United States Navy.
To meet the requirement for a special-purpose dive bomber for the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps, the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics designed a biplane with fixed-tailwheel landing gear designated Bureau Design 77. It had room for two crew in tandem. Two prototypes were ordered in June 1928, one from Martin (designated the XT5M-1) and one from the Naval Aircraft Factory (designated the XT2N-1).
Martin moved to a new factory in Baltimore, Maryland, where the XT5M-1 was built, and it was first flown on 17 May 1929. It was powered by a 525 horsepower (391 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-1690-22 Hornet radial engine. During testing, the aircraft suffered structural damage during a pullout from a dive and had to be returned to the factory. After a redesign and rebuilding of the wings, the XTM5-1 was handed over to the Navy in May 1930 for service trials. Following further tests during 1930, the Navy ordered 12 aircraft with a more powerful R-1690-44 engine in April 1931, designating them the BM-1. A further order for four BM-1 aircraft was followed by an order in October 1931 for 16 of the BM-2, a variant with minor improvements.
The first production BM-1, A8879, was delivered to the U.S. Navy at Naval Air Station Anacostia in Washington, D.C., for acceptance testing in September 1931. The Navy refused to accept the type after A8879 had a fatal crash during a test dive in September 1931. Meanwhile, the prototype was flown aboard the aircraft carrier USS Langley (CV-1) from November 1931 to prove its suitability as a carrier aircraft. Martin modified the second production aircraft, used the same serial as the crashed aircraft, and delivered it to the Navy in January 1932. The Navy accepted the second A8879 on 27 February 1932 and the delivery of 15 more followed, with the last accepted in July 1931.
In June 1932 the BM-1s were delivered to Torpedo Squadron 1 (VT-1S) aboard the aircraft carrier USS Lexington (CV-2) to replace the squadron's Martin T4Ms. In March 1933 the squadron was redesignated VT-1B when it became part of the Battle Force. By October 1932 it had ten BM-1s and ten BM-2s in service.
In July 1934, the U.S. Navy formed Bombing Squadron 3 (VB-3B) for service aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ranger (CV-4) operating the BM-1 and BM-2, which the squadron flew until February 1935. Other carrier squadrons — including VB-5 and VT-5 aboard USS Yorktown (CV-5) and VT-6 aboard USS Enterprise (CV-6) — also operated Martin BMs for short periods before they moved on to other aircraft. By the middle of 1938 only a small number of Martin BMs remained in service, most with the test and evaluation squadrons VX-3D4 and VX-4D4 based at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. By the end of 1939, all BM-1s and BM-2s were out of service.
Martin built an additional aircraft designated the XBM-1 for trials and testing with the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics.
Of the 35 aircraft built only seven were lost in accidents:
Data from The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Aircraft.[1]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament