The Mk 28 was produced from 1958 through 1966. It used the W28 lightweight, Class D warhead. After 1968 it was redesignated B28. Twenty different versions of the B28 were made, distinguished by their yield and safety features. The B28 used the "building block" principle, allowing various combinations of components for different aircraft and roles. The B28 had a diameter of about 22 in, with a length varying between 96 in and 170 in and weight of 1,700 lb to 2,320 lb, depending on the model type and whether a parachute retard pack was fitted. The principal configurations were:
B28EX —, streamlined external-carriage by F-100, F-105, and F-4; for free-fall delivery
B28RE — streamlined external-carriage version with a parachute retarder
B28IN — unstreamlined internal-carriage version for free-fall delivery, primarily for the Republic F-105 Thunderchief and B-52. No chute.
B28RI — unstreamlined internal-carriage version with one 4-ft. pilot parachute, one 16.5-ft. ribbon extraction chute, one 64-ft. solid chute, and one 30-in. stabilization chute.
B28FI — unstreamlined internal-carriage version with one 4-ft. pilot chute, one 16-ft. and one 24-ft. chute for laydown delivery; used only by SAC B-47s and B-52s. The FI, for "Full Fuzing Internal" was developed to adapt to new low-level delivery techniques of the Air Force in the 1960s, and is the only model of this bomb equipped for air, ground, and delayed action burst.
The fuze mechanism on a B28 could be set for an air burst or ground burst detonation. A total of 4,500 B28s were produced. The last weapons in use were retired in 1991.
Related designs
The B28 bomb design has been described as the origin of a series of related nuclear warheads designated W28 or Mk28. The W28 designation was used for two USAF missiles the MGM-13MACE surface to surface and the AGM-28 Hound Dog air to surface systems. Each had a variable yield set by the Mod number at time of manufacturing ranging from a low 70 kt yield to a high 1,450 kt yield. This same 'physics package' was used for all five aircraft dropped bombs as well as the missiles. The nuclear fissionfirst stage or primary, code-named the Python primary, was reused in several subsequent weapons. The B28 was the mainstay of SAC during the Cold War and have yet to be completely dismantled by the Defense Department. Nuclear researcher Chuck Hansen's research indicates that the Python primary was used in the US B28 nuclear bomb and the W28, W40, and W49 nuclear warheads.