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New Image of B-21 Bomber Tail

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New Image of B-21 Bomber Tail Shows Different Exhausts and Rear Deck from B-2​

Oct. 27, 2023 | By John A. Tirpak
A new photograph of the B-21 bomber circulating on the internet in the last few days—and the first to reveal what the back of the secret aircraft looks like—shows a different geometry for the aircraft’s exhaust area and rear deck from its predecessor, the B-2.
The moderate-resolution photo, posted to Reddit by a user named “u/Mug_Of_Fire” and apparently taken through a fence, shows a B-21 conducting an outside engine test. Its appearance prompted media queries to the Air Force, which acknowledged that taxi tests with the secret stealth bomber are now underway.



An Air Force official, speaking on background as to the image’s authenticity, confirmed “that is a B-21.”

Air & Space Forces Magazine reached out to “u/Mug_Of_Fire,” to establish how and when the photo was taken and did not receive an immediate response. The B-21 is undergoing taxi tests at Northrop Grumman’s facilities at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, Calif.

The light gray aircraft in the image is clearly not a B-2, having different landing gear and lacking the “sawtooth” rear area shaping of that bomber.

The principal revelation from the rear-view image is that the B-21’s exhausts are rounded and hooded/scallop-shaped; similar to but flatter than the air intakes on the B-2, and very unlike that aircraft’s boxy slot exhausts.

Although the angle of the image makes it hard to say for sure, there appears to be a lengthy flat deck behind the exhausts, ending in a slightly upturned tail point. Shadows at the rear of the center “fuselage” of the flying wing bomber seem to confirm this. The exhausts clearly don’t come all the way to the trailing edge of the aircraft, as they have been portrayed in many artist’s speculations.

Nothing about the configuration reveals whether the B-21 has two engines or four, a characteristic the Air Force has so far refused to discuss. The engines are made by RTX’s Pratt & Whitney, but the exact type has never been discussed.

Heat plumes emanating from the back of the aircraft also seem to disperse upwards, rather than straight back, further indicating the presence of an extended deck behind the exhausts. That would be consistent with efforts to attenuate the bomber’s heat signature.

In the image, control surfaces along the trailing edge are deflected or relaxed, in all areas except the tail point, which does not appear to be articulated. That suggests the B-21 may not have the “beavertail” feature on the B-2.

The “beaver tail” on the B-2—specifically the Gust-Load Alleviation System, or GLAS—was intended to give the B-2 more lift and help it get off the ground more quickly in case of a nuclear attack sending blast across the runway. A former B-2 pilot said this control surface was not considered useful and became an almost vestigial feature, not included as part of the integrated flight control system.

B-2-Technical-Details_hero_3-1024x512.jpeg
A B-2 Spirit stealthy bomber. Photo Credits: Northrop Grumman/U.S. Air Force.
Videos of B-2 control surfaces being deflected as part of a preflight check don’t show the beavertail moving. It’s possible the beavertail was deleted from the B-21 given the operational experience with the B-2. Doing so would strengthen the area and eliminate seams, which are the toughest element of the otherwise glass-smooth aircraft to make stealthy.

Each wing on the B-21 has two flaperons, while there appears to be a single flaperon along each side of the tail. The image also confirms the “kite” planform of the B-21, in that it lacks the “sawtooth” trailing edge of the B-2.

The original design of the B-2 called for a planform much like that on the B-21, but a late-add requirement for the aircraft to fly low-level required the addition of the “sawtooth” tail; a redesign that added several years and several billions to the B-2’s development. Lacking those features, the B-21 seems optimized for high-altitude work.
The wingtips indicate a slight anhedral, or downward angle, but the quality of the image makes it difficult to say whether this is simply a factor of the higher camber of the wing versus that of the B-2. Both the B-2 and B-21 must have very stiff wings to remain stealthy, so there should be no wing droop when wing fuel tanks are full.
Weapons bays do not appear to be open in the image.
An unexplained feature visible in the photo is a different-colored patch on the aircraft’s upper port wing root. This is not a shadow, as that part of the aircraft is in direct sunlight. Aircraft experts were unable to speculate on what this different-colored patch might be.

As the B-21 is now nearing first flight—which the Air Force and Northrop say will occur before the end of the year—high-speed taxi tests will soon be underway on Plant 42’s runway. At that point, more detailed photos will likely become available.

 
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B-21 Begins Moving Ground Tests Before First Flight​

Steve Trimble Brian Everstine October 25, 2023
head-on view of B-21

Images released during the week of the Air and Space Force Association’s Air, Space & Cyber Conference revealed a head-on view that allowed for a reliable estimate of the wingspan.

Credit: Northrop Grumman
A Northrop Grumman B-21 bomber has been spotted conducting taxi tests in daylight in Palmdale, California, revealing a first, distant glimpse of the aft section and trailing edge of the Raider.
The start of moving ground tests provides another milestone on the path to a scheduled first flight by year’s end.
Despite the secrecy surrounding the program, the U.S. Air Force allowed Northrop employees to parade the B-21 down a semipublic runway in daylight in Palmdale, and did not hesitate to acknowledge the start of ground testing.
“I can confirm the B-21 is conducting ground taxi activities,” an Air Force spokeswoman said.
The Air Force offered no other details about testing, but the start of ground testing is a sign that first flight could be days or weeks away.
In 1989, the first B-2 aircraft started low-speed taxi tests on July 10. High-speed tests began three days later, and the first flight followed on July 17. Other programs have required weeks or months to clear all taxi testing before a first flight.
But Air Force and Northrop officials are not giving any clues about the pace of planned testing leading to a long-awaited first flight event.
“We’re being a little bit ambiguous because you know in the world of aviation aficionados and journalists wanting to know when first flight is, the adversary does too. So we’re not really giving specifics of how much longer we’ve got,” Tom Jones, president of Northrop’s Aeronautics Systems sector, told Aviation Week last month. “We are on track for a first flight this year.”
The ground testing announcement comes a day before Northrop reports third-quarter earnings.
Northrop started engine runs on the first Raider aircraft last month.
“We’ve made, as a program, investments in a fuel system simulator that we were able to use to derisk fuel transfer, and, as a result of that, we went from fuel-on to integrated test runs in like five days, which is unheard of, particularly in a flying wing type of design where fuel movement is all the more important,” Jones said.
A photograph of the B-21 during an apparent taxi test quickly appeared on Reddit on Oct. 2. Reddit user @Mug_of_Fire seemed to delete the picture within a few hours, however. By then, however, the picture had circulated on several social media sites.
The image showed new details of the trailing edge, aft section and powered-on configuration. The image reveals similar V-shaped exhaust nozzles as the B-2 in both engine nacelles.
The trailing-edge configuration showed at least three moving control surfaces on each wing. It was possible a fourth is installed on the most outboard wing section, but it was not visibly deployed in the picture.

 
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Heavy clashes on all directions, resistance is engaging enemy with mortar fire.
This probably first hard test of resistance defence on infantry level
 
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Heavy clashes on all directions, resistance is engaging enemy with mortar fire.
This probably first hard test of resistance defence on infantry level
Wrong thread, mayhaps?
 
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What are these two "things"?

View attachment 967249
It could be a further development of the techniques used on the YF-23’s exhaust. Btw, there are small perforations in those heat absorbing tiles (which I personally got a chance to see close up) shown below which allows cool air, that comes in from the intakes to bypass the engine and blend with the air that comes through the engine to cool the signature. The black tiles are heat absorbing and further limit the IR signature, similar to the space shuttles tiles.
1698847710867.jpeg
 
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refueling boom receptacle thing, some sort of access panel ?
 
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It doesn't look that different from B-2 to me.
 
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