Air Power Series>1:72 die-cast display model>A-20>HA4206
Douglas A-20G Havoc 43-9407 "Green Hornet", 675 BS, 417 BG, New Guinea, 1944
General Background
With war approaching America knew it would be called upon to aid their Allies so a new aircraft would need to be developed. Douglas Aircraft designer Ed Heinemann's DB-7/A-20 was chosen to be the new attack-bomber. The prototype flew in December 1938 with the first production aircraft flew on August 17, 1939. Production ran until September 1944 with 7,478 aircraft built. During WWII these were supplied to French, British, Australian, Dutch and Soviet forces as well as their own U.S. forces.
The Aircraft
On March 23, 1943 the 417th Bombardment Group (Light) was constituted and activated on
March 28, 1943. This group trained on the Douglas A-20 Havoc in December 1943 and January
1944 before shipping out to the South Pacific and assigned to the 5th AF. In March 1944 the
group began supporting ground forces on New Guinea as well as striking at enemy troops,
supply depots, airfields and shipping. From September 1944 until they relocated in the
Philippines in December 1944 they carried out these operations from Saidor New Guinea against
other islands in the chain. Douglas A-20G Havoc 43-9407 was named "Green Hornet" and was
assigned to the 675th BS / 417th BG in New Guinea during 1944 - 45. The aircraft was piloted by
Lt. J.E. Pryor and crash landed in 1945 and was a write off.
Specifications :
Role: | Light Bomber |
Variants: | A,B,C,G,H,J,K |
First Flight: | October 26 , 1938 |
Entered Service: | 1939 |
Manufacturing Period: | 1939 - 1944 |
Number Built All Variants: | 7,098 |
Douglas A-20G and J specifications: | |
Crew: | 3 |
Powerplants: | G and J - 2 X Wright R-2600-23 Double Cyclone 14 cylinder twin-row air-cooled w/two-speed superchargers rated @ 1,600 hp for take-off, 1,400 hp @ 10,000 ft |
Speed: | |
G and J - Maximum: | 339 mph @ 12,400 ft, 317 mph @ 10,000 ft |
Cruise: | G – 230 – 272 mph / J - 257 mph |
Initial Climb Rate: | G and J / 1,300 fpm |
Time to 10,000 feet: | G – 7.1 minutes / J – 8.8 minutes |
Service Ceiling: | G – 25,800 ft / J – 23,100 ft |
Range: | |
With 2,000 lbs of bombs @ 238 mph: | G – 1,025 miles / J – 1,000 miles |
Maximum Ferry Range: | G – 2,035 miles / J – 2,100 miles |
Weights: | |
Empty: | G – 17,200 lbs / J – 17,117 lbs |
Normal Combat Take-off: | G – 24,000 lbs / J – 23,748 lbs |
Maximum Combat: | G and J / 27,200 lbs |
Maximum: | G – 30,000 lbs / J – 27,000 lbs |
Dimensions G and J: | |
Length: | 48 ft |
Wingspan: | 61 ft 4 in |
Height: | 17 ft 7 in |
Armament G: | 6 X forward-firing 0.50 Colt-Browning machine guns in the nose, 350 rpg
2 X .050 inch machine guns in the dorsal power turret, 400 rpg 1 X 0.50 inch machine gun in ventral tunnel position, 400 rpg Models prior to A-20G-20-DO – 2 0.50 inch machine guns on a flexible dorsal mount Maximum internal bomb-load – 2,000 lbs in split bomb bay On later models – an additional 2,000 lbs on four under-wing hard-points |
Armament J: | 2 X forward-firing 0.50-inch machine guns in lower fuselage
2 X .050 inch machine guns in the dorsal power turret, 400 rpg 1 X 0.50 inch machine gun in ventral tunnel position, 400 rpg Maximum internal bomb-load – 2,000 lbs in split bomb bay On later models – an additional 2,000 lbs on four under-wing hard-points |