AT-6D Texan

Norte-americano AT-6D Texano

PaísEua
PapelAeronave de treinador avançado monomotor
Primeiro voo1 de abril de 1935
Construído15495

Texano da Aviação Norte-Americana T-6 É um avião de treinamento avançado monomotor usado para treinar pilotos das Forças Aéreas do Exército dos Estados Unidos (USAAF), Marinha dos Estados Unidos, Força Aérea Real e outras forças aéreas da Comunidade Britânica durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial e na década de 1970. Projetado pela Aviação Norte-Americana, o T-6 é conhecido por uma variedade de designações, dependendo do modelo e da força aérea em operação. O Corpo Aéreo do Exército dos Estados Unidos (USAAC) e a USAAF o designaram como AT-6, a Marinha dos Estados Unidos, o SNJ, e as forças aéreas da Comunidade Britânica, a Harvard, o nome mais conhecido por fora dos EUA. Depois de 1962, as forças americanas o designaram como O T-6. Continua sendo um popular avião de pássaros de guerra usado para demonstrações de show aéreo e exibições estáticas. Ele também foi usado muitas vezes para simular várias aeronaves japonesas, incluindo o Mitsubishi A6M Zero em filmes que retratam a Segunda Guerra Mundial no Pacífico.

Fonte: Norte-americano AT-6D Texano na Wiki

North American AT-6D Texan
FotógrafoVladimir Yakubov
LocalizaçãoSalinas Air Show
Fotos39
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Especificações
PapelAeronave de treinador
FabricanteAviação norte-americana
Primeiro voo1 de abril de 1935
Aposentado1995
Número construído15,495
Noorduyn AT-16 Harvard Mk.2B Anda por aí
FotógrafoMilão Sabo
LocalizaçãoDesconhecido
Fotos16
Noorduyn AT-16 Harvard Walk Around
FotógrafoCees Hendriks
LocalizaçãoDesconhecido
Fotos23

Compre-me um caféCompre-me um café

North American AT6/SNJ Texan Walk Around
FotógrafoBill Maloney
LocalizaçãoMuseu Americano do Poder Aéreo
Fotos24

Veja também:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: A História Visual Definitiva da Blitzkrieg à Bomba Atômica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial: Mapa por Mapa (DK, História, Mapa por Mapa) - Amazônia

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The Ultimate Advanced Trainer

If the PT-17 was the elementary school of flight and the BT-13 was high school, the AT-6D Texan was the university. By the time a student reached the “D” model, they were flying a complex, powerful, and demanding aircraft that was only a small step away from a P-51 Mustang or a P-47 Thunderbolt. The AT-6D was the most produced variant of the series, featuring a modernized 24-volt electrical system. It was designed to teach everything: aerial gunnery, formation flying, instrument flight, and even carrier landings for the Navy (as the SNJ-5). It was famously nicknamed the Pilot Maker because it was just difficult enough to fly that if you could master a Texan, you could master any fighter in the Allied arsenal.

Attribute Technical Specification (AT-6D)
Papel Advanced Trainer / Forward Air Control / Light Attack
tripulação 2 (Student and Instructor)
Usina 1 × Pratt & Whitney R-1340-AN-1 Wasp radial
Horsepower 600 hp (447 kW)
Maximum Speed 208 mph (335 km/h) at 5,000 ft
Service Ceiling 24,200 ft (7,376 m)
Armament (Training) Up to 3 × .30 cal machine guns (Cowl, Wing, and Flexible Rear)
Electrical System 24V DC (Key upgrade for the ‘D’ model)

Design Engineering: The Sound of the Wasp

  • The “Texan Growl”: The AT-6 is famous for its deafening “growl” on takeoff. This is caused by the propeller tips exceeding the speed of sound, creating a series of small sonic booms. This sound was a constant presence at training airfields across the US and UK.
  • Retractable Geometry: The main landing gear retracted inward toward the fuselage. This cleaned up the aerodynamics significantly compared to the BT-13, allowing the student to practice the “Gear Up/Gear Down” discipline essential for modern combat aircraft.
  • The Greenhouse Canopy: The long, multi-paned canopy provided excellent 360-degree visibility. In the AT-6D, the rear seat could be unlatched and swiveled 180 degrees to allow the student to practice “flexible” gunnery with a rear-facing machine gun.
  • All-Metal Excellence: Unlike earlier trainers with fabric sections, the AT-6D was a fully stressed-skin aluminum aircraft. It was incredibly rugged, capable of high-G maneuvers that would have snapped the wings off lesser planes.

Combat History: The “Mosquito” and Beyond

  • The Korean “Mosquitoes”: During the Korean War, the AT-6D (and later T-6G) was used as a Forward Air Control (FAC) aircraft. Known as “Mosquitoes,” they flew low over enemy lines to mark targets with smoke rockets for jet fighters, often staying over the target for hours.
  • The Syrian Victory: In a bizarre instance of trainer-vs-fighter combat, a Syrian AT-6 Texan’s rear gunner successfully shot down an Israeli Avia S-199 (a Bf 109 derivative) during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
  • World Traveler: Under the name Harvard Mk III, the AT-6D served the RAF and Commonwealth air forces globally. It remained in frontline service in some countries, like South Africa and Portugal, as a counter-insurgency (COIN) aircraft well into the 1970s and 80s.
  • Cinematic Chameleon: Like the BT-13, the Texan has “played” the Mitsubishi Zero in dozens of films. Its similar tail and canopy shape make it a perfect stand-in for the legendary Japanese fighter after a few cosmetic modifications.

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