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Douglas A-26B Invader

Douglas A-26B Invader

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A-26B

NoRender3000.png
Totals
3600 Price
1200 Survivability
13125 kgWeight
416.7 Damage
Speed
1393.1 Airspeed
484.5 km/hTop Speed at Sea Level
570 km/hTop Speed at Best Altitude
2000 mOptimum Altitude
700 km/hMaximum Dive Speed
63.1 m/sRate of Climb
100 km/hStall Speed
350 km/hOptimum Airspeed
Mobility
70.8 Controllability
20.6 sAverage Time to Turn 360 deg
40 °/sRate of Roll
682 Maneuverability
A-26B
VI
Douglas A-26B Invader
3600
Developed as an attack bomber to replace the Douglas A-20 Havoc serving the U.S. Air Force. The A-26B was the first aircraft in the series to enter mass production. A significant number of modifications were built based on the A-26B.

Tech Tree

Engine
tree_wowp_ico-engine.pngVII
0
EnginePratt Whitney R-2800-27
Specifications:
Engine Power, hp2000
Typeair-cooled
Weight, kg2200
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-engine.pngVII
2xPratt Whitney R-2800-27
tree_wowp_ico-engine.pngVII
0
Engine
Specifications:
Engine Power, hp2000
Typeair-cooled
Weight, kg2200
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-engine.pngVII
2x
Airframe
tree_wowp_ico-planer.pngVII
0
Airframe
Specifications:
Survivability1200
Weight, kg10500
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-planer.pngVII
tree_wowp_ico-planer.pngVII
0
AirframeA-26B-15
Specifications:
Survivability1200
Weight, kg10500
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-planer.pngVII
A-26B-15
Cowling-mounted weapon
tree_wowp_ico-gun.pngVII
0
Machine gun12.7 mm M2 (C)
Specifications:
Caliber12.7
Muzzle Velocity, m/s1120
Damage45
Rate of Fire, rounds/min750
Weight, kg60
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-gun.pngVII
6x12.7 mm M2 (C)
tree_wowp_ico-gun.pngVII
0
Machine gun
Specifications:
Caliber12.7
Muzzle Velocity, m/s1120
Damage45
Rate of Fire, rounds/min750
Weight, kg60
Price:
Purchase price16400
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-gun.pngVII
6x
Turret
tree_wowp_ico-turret.pngVII
0
Turret12.7 mm M2
Specifications:
Caliber13.2
Machine gun2
Damage128
Rate of Fire, rounds/min30
Weight, kg5
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-turret.pngVII
12.7 mm M2
tree_wowp_ico-turret.pngVII
0
Turret12.7 mm M2
Specifications:
Caliber13.2
Machine gun2
Damage128
Rate of Fire, rounds/min30
Weight, kg5
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-turret.pngVII
12.7 mm M2
Outboard weapon
tree_wowp_ico-empty.png
No weapons
tree_wowp_ico-bomb.pngVII
0
Bombs100 lb
Specifications:
Damage Radius, m50
Damage1200
Weight, kg45
Price:
Purchase price0
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-bomb.pngVII
16x100 lb
tree_wowp_ico-bomb.pngVII
0
Bombs
Specifications:
Damage Radius, m50
Damage1200
Weight, kg45
Price:
Purchase price0
Applicability:Douglas A-26B Invader
tree_wowp_ico-bomb.pngVII
16x
tree_wowp_ico-.png
No weapons
tree_wowp_ico-.png
No weapons
tree_wowp_ico-.png
No weapons


Modules

Engine

Engine

Tier Engine Engine Power, hp / Thrust Type Weight, kg Price,
VII Pratt Whitney R-2800-27 2000 air-cooled 2200 54000
Airframe

Airframe

Tier Airframe Survivability Weight, kg Price,
VII 1200 10500 100000
Cowling-mounted weapon

Cowling-mounted weapon

Tier Machine gun Caliber Muzzle Velocity, m/s Damage Rate of Fire, rounds/min Weight, kg Price,
VII 12.7 1120 45 750 60 16400
Turret

Turret

Tier Turret Caliber Machine gun Damage Rate of Fire, rounds/min Weight, kg Price,
VII 12.7 mm M2 13.2 2 128 30 5 90000
Outboard weapon

Outboard weapon

Tier Bombs Damage Radius, m Damage Weight, kg Price,
VII 50 1200 45 0



Historical Info

The Douglas A-26 Invader (designated B-26 between 1948 and 1965) is an American twin-engined light bomber and ground attack aircraft. Built by Douglas Aircraft Company during World War II, the Invader also saw service during several major Cold War conflicts. A limited number of highly modified United States Air Force aircraft served in Southeast Asia until 1969. It was a fast aircraft capable of carrying a large bomb load. A range of guns could be fitted to produce a formidable ground-attack aircraft.[4]

A re-designation of the type from A-26 to B-26 led to confusion with the Martin B-26 Marauder, which first flew in November 1940, some 20 months before the Douglas design's maiden flight. Although both types were powered by the widely used Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp eighteen-cylinder, double-row radial engine, they were completely different and separate designs — the Martin bomber originated in 1939, with more than twice as many Marauders (nearly 5,300) produced in comparison to the Douglas design. Design and development

Douglas XA-26 AAC Ser. No. 41-19504 first flight, Mines Field, California, piloted by Benny Howard The A-26 was Douglas Aircraft's successor to the A-20 (DB-7) Havoc, also known as Douglas Boston, one of the most successful and widely operated types flown by Allied air forces in World War II.

Designed by Ed Heinemann, Robert Donovan, and Ted R. Smith,[5] the innovative NACA 65-215 laminar flow airfoil wing of the A-26 was the work of project aerodynamicist A.M.O. Smith.[6][7]

The Douglas XA-26 prototype (AAC Ser. No. 41-19504) first flew on 10 July 1942 at Mines Field, El Segundo, with test pilot Benny Howard at the controls. Flight tests revealed excellent performance and handling, but engine cooling problems led to cowling changes and elimination of the propeller spinners on production aircraft. Repeated collapses during testing led to reinforcement of the nose landing gear.[8]


Douglas XA-26B Invader AAF Ser. No. 41-19588, 5 May 1943, with "strafer" nose adaptable to a combination of weapons, including a 75 mm (3 in) cannon. The A-26 was originally built in two different configurations. The A-26B had a gun nose, which originally could be equipped with a combination of armament including .50 caliber machine guns, 20mm or 37mm auto cannon, or even a 75mm pack howitzer (which was never used operationally). Normally the gun nose version housed six (or later eight) .50 caliber machine guns, officially termed the "all-purpose nose", later commonly known as the "six-gun nose" or "eight-gun nose". The A-26C's "glass" nose, officially termed the "Bombardier nose", contained a Norden bombsight for medium altitude precision bombing. The A-26C nose section included two fixed M-2 guns, later replaced by underwing gun packs or internal guns in the wings.[9]

After about 1,570 production aircraft, three guns were installed in each wing, coinciding with the introduction of the "eight-gun nose" for A-26Bs, giving some configurations as many as 14 .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns in fixed forward mounts. An A-26C nose section could be replaced with an A-26B nose section, or vice versa, in a few man-hours, thus physically (and officially) changing the designation and operational role. The "flat-topped" canopy was changed in late 1944 after about 820 production aircraft, to a clamshell style with greatly improved visibility.[10][11]

Alongside the pilot in an A-26B, a crew member typically served as navigator and gun loader for the pilot-operated nose guns. In an A-26C, that crew member served as navigator and bombardier, and relocated to the nose section for the bombing phase of an operation. A small number of A-26Cs were fitted with dual flight controls, some parts of which could be disabled in flight to allow limited access to the nose section. Access was through the lower section of the right-hand instrument panel, which was open to allow access to the nose for the bombardier, who would normally sit next to the pilot. This was similar to British designs like the Lancaster, Blenheim/Beaufort, Wellington, etc. A tractor-style "jump seat" was located behind the "navigator's seat." In most missions, a third crew member in the rear gunner's compartment operated the remotely controlled dorsal and ventral gun turrets, with access to and from the cockpit possible via the bomb bay only when that was empty. The gunner operated both dorsal and ventral turrets via a novel and complex (and problematic) dual-ended periscope sight, which was a vertical column running through the center of the rear compartment, with traversing and elevating/depressing periscope sights on each end. The gunner sat on a seat facing rearward, and looked into a binocular periscope sight mounted on the column, controlling the guns with a pair of handles on either side of the column. When aiming above the centerline of the aircraft, the mirror in the center of the column would flip, showing the gunner what the upper periscope was seeing. When he pressed the handles downward, as the bead passed the centerline the mirror would automatically flip, transferring the sight "seamlessly" to the lower periscope. The guns would aim wherever the periscope was aimed, automatically transferring between upper and lower turrets as required, and computing for parallax and other factors. While novel and theoretically effective, a great deal of time and trouble was spent trying to get the system to work effectively, which delayed production, and it was difficult to keep maintained in the field even once production started.

World War II Pacific The Douglas company began delivering the production model A-26B to the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) on 10 September 1943[13], with the new bomber first seeing action with the Fifth Air Force in the Southwest Pacific theater on 23 June 1944, when Japanese-held islands near Manokwari were attacked.[14] The pilots in the 3rd Bomb Group's 13th Squadron, "The Grim Reapers", who received the first four A-26s for evaluation, found the view from the cockpit to be restricted by the engines and thus inadequate for low-level attack. General George Kenney, commander of the Far East Air Forces stated that, "We do not want the A-26 under any circumstances as a replacement for anything."[15]

Until changes could be made, the 3d Bomb Group requested additional Douglas A-20 Havocs, although both types were used in composite flights.[16] The 319th Bomb Group worked up on the A-26 in March 1945, joining the initial 3rd BG, with the 319th flying until 12 August 1945. The A-26 operations wound down in mid-August 1945 with only a few dozen missions flown.[16] Several of the A-20 and B-25 AAF units in the Pacific received the A-26 for trials, in limited quantities.

Europe Douglas needed better results from the Invader's second combat test, so A-26s began arriving in Europe in late September 1944 for assignment to the Ninth Air Force. The initial deployment involved 18 aircraft and crews assigned to the 553d Squadron of the 386th Bomb Group. This unit flew its first mission on 6 September 1944. No aircraft were lost on the eight test missions, and the Ninth Air Force announced that it was happy to replace all of its A-20s and B-26s with the A-26 Invader.

The first group to fully convert to the A-26B was 416th Bombardment Group with which it entered combat on 17 November, and the 409th Bombardment Group, whose A-26s became operational in late November.[17] Due to a shortage of A-26C variants, the groups flew a combined A-20/A-26 unit until deliveries of the glass-nose version caught up. Besides bombing and strafing, tactical reconnaissance and night interdiction missions were undertaken successfully. In contrast to the Pacific-based units, the A-26 was well received by pilots and crew alike, and by 1945, the 9th AF had flown 11,567 missions, dropping 18,054 tons of bombs, recording seven confirmed kills while losing 67 aircraft.[17]

In Italy the Twelfth Air Force's 47th Bomb Group also received the A-26, starting in January 1945. They were used against German transport links, but also for direct support and interdiction against tanks and troop concentrations in the Po valley in the final campaigns in Italy.



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