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Comet Kit #3405 Vultee A-35 Vengeance Wingspan: 20" Class: Scale Warbird Building Skill / Flying Skill: Easy / Easy
Vultee A-35 Vengeance
The Vultee A-31 Vengeance was an American dive bomber of World War II,
built by Vultee Aircraft. The Vengeance was not used in combat by US
units, however it served with the British Royal Air Force, the Royal
Australian Air Force, and Indian Air Force in Southeast Asia and the
Southwest Pacific.
The Vultee bomber remained in service, mainly in the target-tug role,
until 1945.
In 1940, Vultee Aircraft started the design of a single engined
dive-bomber, the Vultee Model 72 (V-72) to meet the requirements of the
French Armée de l'Air. The V-72 was built with private funds and was
intended for sale to foreign markets. The V-72 was a low-wing,
single-engine monoplane with a closed cockpit and a crew of two. An
air-cooled radial Wright Double Row Cyclone GR-2600-A5B-5 engine rated
at 1,600 hp (1,200 kW) powered the V-72. It was armed with both fixed
forward firing and flexible mounted .30 in (7.62 mm) machine guns in the
rear cockpit. The aircraft also carried up to 1,500 lb (680 kg) of bombs
in an interior bomb bay and on external wing racks.[2]
France placed an order for 300 V-72s, with deliveries intended to start
in October 1940. The fall of France in June 1940 stopped these plans,
but at the same time the British Purchasing Commission, impressed by the
performance of the German Junkers Ju 87, were shopping for a dive bomber
for the Royal Air Force, and as it was the only aircraft available,
placed an order for 200 V-72s (named Vengeance by Vultee) on 3 July
1940, with orders for a further 100 being placed in December.[3] As
Vultee's factory at Downey was already busy building BT-13 trainers, the
aircraft were to be built at the Stinson factory at Nashville,[a] and
under license by Northrop at Hawthorne, California.
The first prototype V-72 flew from Vultee's factory at Downey,
California on 30 March 1941.[2] Additional aircraft were ordered for
Britain in June 1941 under the Lend-Lease scheme, with these being given
the US Army Air Corps designation A-31.
After the U.S. entered the war following the Attack on Pearl Harbor, a
number of V-72 and A-31 aircraft were re-possessed for use by the Army
Air Corps. As the Army Air Corps became interested in dive bombing,
it decided to order production of an improved version of the Vengeance,
designated the A-35, for both its own use and for supply to its allies
under Lend-Lease. It was fitted with a more powerful Wright Cyclone
R-2600-19 engine and improved armament. As US Army test pilots disliked
the poor pilot view resulting from the zero-incidence wing, this was
"corrected" in the A-35, giving a better attitude in cruise but losing
its accuracy as a dive bomber.
When production of the Vengeance was completed in 1944, a total of 1,528
aircraft had been produced. The majority were produced at the Vultee
plant in Nashville, Tennessee.
Operational experience with other dive bomber aircraft of the period,
such as the Blackburn Skua, Junkers Ju 87, Aichi D3A, Douglas Dauntless,
Breda Ba.65 and Curtiss SB2C Helldiver, indicated that the Vengeance
would be vulnerable to enemy fighters. To be effective, all these
aircraft required an environment of local air superiority and fighter
escort. Fighter escort, lack of fighter opposition in the theatres in
which it served, combined with its vertical dive capability meant that
the Vengeance suffered light combat losses.
Early experience with the aircraft showed there were problems with
engine cooling. In service, the British managed to solve these problems,
but Free French aircraft that did not have these problems remedied were
declared uneconomical and unreliable to operate and were grounded.
The aircraft was described as being stable in flight and in a dive, with
heavy elevator and rudder control, but with light aileron control.
Forward visibility was considered poor due to the large radial engine.
There were a number of fatal accidents with the Vengeance due to
improper dive procedures and a center of gravity problem when the
aircraft was flown with the rear cockpit canopy open, but without a rear
gunner.
In combat, the type was considered rugged, reliable, stable, and
generally well-behaved. Commonwealth forces operated the type from May
1942 to July 1944. Burma tended to be a low priority for Allied air
planners, and forces in that theater got what was left over. Aircraft
such as the Vickers Wellington and Hawker Hurricane spent their last
days in Burma. The Vengeance saw considerable action attacking Japanese
supply, communications and troop concentrations in Burma. Its service in
that theater has been described as sterling. At best
the Vengeance was a qualified success in Burma, doing much to hold the
line against Japanese advances.
By the time Britain had received large numbers of Vengeances, its
opinion on the usefulness of specialised dive bombers had changed, as
the Battle of Britain and operations over North Africa had shown the
dive bomber to be vulnerable to fighter attack, so rejected the
Vengeance for use over Western Europe or the Mediterranean. It was
decided to use the Vengeance in the Burma Theatre to carry out
dive-bombing operations in close support of British and Indian troops in
the jungles of Burma.[8]
The first RAF squadrons (No. 82 and 110) received Vengeances in October
1942. The first dive bombing missions against Japanese forces were flown
on 19 March 1943. A further two RAF squadrons in Burma received
Vengeances, (84 and 45), together with two squadrons of the Indian Air
Force (IAF)
Vengeances were heavily deployed in support of the second Arakan
campaign of 1943/44, and defending against the Japanese attacks on
Imphal and Kohima of April–July 1944.[9] Following the successful defeat
of the Japanese attack, the RAF and IAF started to phase out the
Vengeance in favour of more versatile fighter bombers and twin engined
light bombers, with the last Vengeance operations over Burma being
caried out on 16 July 1944.[10]
Although phased out of front line service with the RAF, it continued to
receive large numbers of Vengeances, with bulk deliveries of Lend Lease
aircraft (as opposed to those purchased directly by Britain) having only
just started. Many of these surplus aircraft, including most Vengeance
Mk IVs, were delivered to the UK and modified as Target tugs, being used
in this role both by the RAF and the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm
(FAA). In these roles, all armament was removed from the aircraft.
Australia placed an order for 400 Vengeances as an emergency measure
following the outbreak of war in the Pacific, which was met by a
mixture of Lend Lease and diversions from the original British
orders.[5] While the first Vengeance was delivered to the Royal
Australian Air Force (RAAF) in May 1942, the aircraft did not arrive in
substantial numbers until April 1943.[13] The RAAF's first Vengeance
squadron, No. 12 Squadron flew its first operational mission against
Selaru Island in the Dutch East Indies. Squadrons equipped with the
Vengeance included Nos. 12, 21, 23, 24 and 25 Squadrons. Of these, all
but 25 Squadron served briefly in the New Guinea campaign.
Australian Vengeances flew their last operational sorties on 8 March
1944, as they were considered less efficient than fighter bombers,
having a short range and requiring a long runway, and were withdrawn to
allow more effective fighter bombers to move into the forward area.[15]
33 V-72s and A-35s were supplied to Brazil from 1943, carrying out a few
anti-submarine patrols. They were withdrawn by April 1948.[18] The Free
French Air Force received 67 A-35A and -Bs in 1943, being used to equip
three bomb groups in North Africa. The French, however, keen to get
their aircraft operational as soon as possible did not incorporate
improvements found necessary by Britain and Australia, so their aircraft
proved to be unreliable and required extremely high oil consumption. As
such, they were restricted to training operations, being finally
withdrawn in September 1944.[19]
While the U.S. received 243 V-72s and A31s diverted from the RAF orders
together with large numbers of A-35s specifically built for it, these
saw no combat, being used as initial equipment for light bomber
squadrons that re-equipped with twin-engined aircraft before deploying
overseas, and as trainers or target tugs.[20]
From April 1944, a number of Vengeance Mk IV series Is were made
available to the 8th Air Force and assigned to tow-target flights and
Combat Crew Replacement Centers (CCRC) stations. All armament was
removed and a light cable winch fitted in the rear fuselage for sleeve
towing. Some of these aircraft continued to be flown with British
national markings and serial numbers. By late June 1944, there were
seven A-35Bs at Cluntoe, seven at Greencastle, 10 at Sutton Bridge and
six at East Wretham. When the CCRCs were dissolved in the autumn, the
A-35Bs were transferred to combat groups, most fighter and several
bomber groups having one charge at some time during 1945. A-35Bs did not
show a high state of serviceability and were generally considered
troublesome to maintain. Also designated RA-35B (R for Restricted).
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Easy Built Models FF-79 Hawker Hurricane
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