W41 (nuclear weapon)

For technical reasons, this article heading is W41 for a device actually designated B41

B41 nuclear bombs were the highest-yielding nuclear weapons ever deployed by the United States. A gravity bomb carried by the B-52 bomber, it came in two versions: It is unclear if the Soviets ever deployed a weapon in this range; their 58-megaton "Tsar Bomba", which is generally believed to be the Primary and Secondary only for a 100-megaton device, was experimental although sufficiently weaponized to be dropped from a modified bomber. Only the Soviets and Americans ever tested devices with greater than 10 MT yield.
 * B41Y1: "dirty" high-fallout with a yield of 25 MT
 * B41Y2: "clean" less than 10 MT yield.

Design
The B41Y1 was the only three-stage device (see fusion device) ever built by the U.S. As opposed to the usual fission Primary and fusion Secondary of a Teller-Ulam design, this bomb's uranium tamper constituted a Tertiary. The Y2 version lacked the Tertiary.

In the Y2 version, the device had the highest weight-to-yield ratio of any U.S. nuclear weapon. Carey Sublette quoted Theodore Taylor as saying the maximum practical ratio was 6.0KT yield per pound of nuclear weapon; the deployed weapon, with parachutes and other weight that was not part of the ratio calculation, was 10,670 lb. Test devices from which the B-41 was weaponized, however, were in the 9,100 pound range, consistent with Taylor's estimate.

Deployment
Approximately 500 were built, between September 1960 and June 1962, and were in service from November 1963 to July 1976. It was replaced by the 9MT B53, which also was implemented as the W53 warhead for the UGM-27 Titan II intercontinental ballistic missile.