B-29 Superfortress

The B-29 Superfortress is a four-engine, propeller-driven, heavy bomber that was flown primarily by the United States during World War II and the Korean War.

Background
The Lady of the Water, Lady in the Lake, or more simply the Lady, is the restored B-29 the Boomers create should the Courier assist with retrieving the crashed B-29 from Lake Mead.

The crash occurred on July 21, 1948, and 333 years later, the aircraft becomes an object of interest to the Boomers, who intend to raise it from the lake's bottom and restore to flyable condition, using parts from a museum B-29 that was kept at Nellis Air Force Base. Should the Courier assist in retrieving the B-29 for the Boomers, they will appear briefly during the Second Battle of Hoover Dam as air support.

Characteristics
The Boeing B-29 was a flying craft that was primarily designed to carry and drop extensive amounts of bombs and later converted to drop the first and only atomic bombs during an armed conflict. In addition to the offensive bombs, it contained twelve .50 caliber M2 defensive guns: Two turrets on top with four machine guns, two turrets on the bottom with two four machine guns each, plus two more machine guns in the tail gun position. Earlier configurations included an additional 20mm cannon in the tail gun.

Appearances
The B-29 Superfortress appears only in Fallout: New Vegas.

Behind the scenes

 * The crashed B-29 in-game references a real world Boeing B-29 crashing into Lake Mead on July 21, 1948 - the same date in-game and in real life. The aircraft and site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in April 2011.
 * The aircraft's defensive armament is excessive to any real-world B-29. Instead of one quad .50 cal turret and three double .50 cal turrets, all four turrets on the in-game models are equipped with four M2 BMGs, upping the armament from 10 to 18 guns total.
 * On August 6, 1945, a B-29 known as the Enola Gay was the first aircraft to ever drop a nuclear weapon. The B-29 continued service well into the Cold War, but was phased out by 1960 for newer bombers.
 * The "Circle A" tail code corresponds to the 106th Bombardment Wing, based at March Air Force Base from 1951-1952.