Quick Facts
Aircraft: Consolidated PB4Y-2 Privateer
Role: Long-range maritime patrol bomber (Navy variant of B-24 Liberator)
Engines: 4× Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp radials
Crew: 11
Surviving Airworthy: 1 (Casa Grande, Arizona)
Event: EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2026 (July 21–27)
Registration: N2871G
Not a B-24 — Something Better
The Privateer is often described as a B-24 variant, and that is technically true — it shares the Liberator’s basic wing structure and four Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp radial engines. But the resemblance ends there. The Navy wanted a purpose-built maritime patrol bomber, and Consolidated delivered one. The Privateer has a completely redesigned fuselage with a tall, single vertical tail (the B-24 has a distinctive twin tail), a lengthened fuselage for extra fuel and crew comfort on missions that could last 12 hours or more, and waist turrets for defending against attacks from the sides.
From Combat to Fire Suppression
After the war, many Privateers found second careers. The US Coast Guard operated them for maritime surveillance. But the most unusual chapter came when dozens of surplus Privateers were converted into aerial firefighting tankers. Their enormous fuselage could carry thousands of gallons of fire retardant, and their four-engine reliability made them ideal for low-altitude drops over burning forests. The sole surviving airworthy Privateer lived most of its life in this role. It was part of the fleet operated by Hawkins and Powers in Greybull, Wyoming — a legendary aerial firefighting company that operated a fleet of WWII-era bombers until a series of accidents and a change in US Forest Service contracting rules forced the fleet to auction in 2007. That is when Joe Shoen, Robert Kropp, and a group of friends stepped in. They bought the Privateer at auction and brought it to David Goss of GossHawk Unlimited in Casa Grande, Arizona. Three years and $300,000 later, the aircraft was airworthy again.Why Oshkosh Matters
EAA AirVenture Oshkosh is the largest gathering of aviation enthusiasts in the world. More than 600,000 people attend each year, and the event is as much a pilgrimage as a show. For warbird enthusiasts, seeing the Privateer on the flightline — alongside the Commemorative Air Force’s B-24 Diamond Lil, which recently returned to the air after a two-and-a-half-year restoration — will be a once-in-a-generation moment. Four radial engines, a 110-foot wingspan, and a history that stretches from Pacific submarine hunts to Western wildfire battles. The Privateer is not the most famous warbird. But it might be the most remarkable one still flying.Sources: Flying Magazine, EAA, Aero-News Network, GossHawk Unlimited
Related Questions
What is the PB4Y-2 Privateer?
The Consolidated PB4Y-2 Privateer was a long-range maritime patrol bomber, the US Navy's dedicated version of the B-24 Liberator. Powered by four Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp radial engines and crewed by 11, it patrolled the Pacific in the final years of World War II hunting ships and submarines.
How is the Privateer different from the B-24 Liberator?
Although it shares the B-24 Liberator's wing and engines, the Privateer has a completely redesigned fuselage. It features a tall single vertical tail instead of the B-24's twin tail, a lengthened fuselage carrying extra fuel for 12-hour patrols, and waist turrets for side defence. It was purpose-built for maritime patrol.
How many PB4Y-2 Privateers are still flying?
Only one airworthy PB4Y-2 Privateer survives. Based in Casa Grande, Arizona, and registered N2871G, it is maintained by a small crew of volunteers who have kept it flying for nearly two decades. Out of hundreds built, this single example makes it one of the rarest flying warbirds in the world.
What engines did the Privateer use?
The PB4Y-2 Privateer was powered by four Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp radial engines — the same engine family used on the B-24 Liberator. Because maritime patrol was flown at low altitude, it used single-stage engines rather than the turbocharged versions fitted to the high-flying B-24.
What was the Privateer used for?
The Privateer was a maritime patrol bomber, designed to fly long over-water missions searching for enemy ships and submarines across the Pacific. Its lengthened fuselage carried extra fuel for patrols of 12 hours or more. The Navy's heavy bombers worked alongside the Army's B-17 Flying Fortress fleet during World War II.
What is EAA AirVenture Oshkosh?
EAA AirVenture Oshkosh is the world's largest aviation gathering, held each July in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, by the Experimental Aircraft Association. It draws hundreds of thousands of visitors and thousands of aircraft, including rare warbirds. In 2026 it runs July 21-27, where the sole flying Privateer is expected to appear.
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