Severoamerický A-36A Apache

Severoamerický A-36A Apache

KrajinySpojené štáty americké
ÚlohuPozemný útok/strmhlavý bombardér
Prvý letOktóber 1942
Postavený500

Komisia Severoamerický A-36 Apache (listed in some sources as “Invader”, but also called Mustang) was the ground-attack/dive bomber version of the North American P-51 Mustang, from which it could be distinguished by the presence of rectangular, slatted dive brakes above and below the wings. A total of 500 A-36 dive bombers served in North Africa, the Mediterranean, Italy and the China-Burma-India theater during World War II before being withdrawn from operational use in 1944.

Zdrojový: Severoamerický A-36A Apache na Wikipédii

North American A-36A Apache
FotografJohn Heck
LokalizáciaNeznáme
Fotografie14
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Info
ÚlohuPozemný útok/strmhlavý bombardér
VýrobcaSeveroamerické letectvo
návrhárEdgar Schmued
Prvý letOktóber 1942
Zavedenie1942
Dôchodku1945
Primárny používateľ Vzdušné sily armády Spojených štátov
Počet vstavaných500
Vyvinuté zP-51 Mustang

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North American A-36A Apache
FotografVladimír Jakubov
LokalizáciaNeznáme
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The Mustang’s Forgotten Warrior

Komisia Severoamerický A-36A Apache (often called the “Invader” by its crews) was the ground-attack version of the early P-51 Mustang. Before the Mustang became a high-altitude escort legend with a Merlin engine, it was a low-level specialist powered by the Allison V-1710. The A-36A was specifically adapted for the dive-bombing role to satisfy U.S. Army Air Corps contracts. It was rugged, fast, and surprisingly effective, proving that the Mustang airframe was a winner long before it ever saw a drop of British-designed power.

Attribute Technical Specification (A-36A)
Úlohu Dive Bomber / Ground Attack
Posádky 1 (Pilot)
Pohonná jednotka 1 × Allison V-1710-87 liquid-cooled V12
Horsepower 1,325 hp (at low altitude)
Maximálna rýchlosť 365 mph (587 km/h) at 5,000 ft
Dive Speed Limit 390 mph (with brakes deployed)
Výzbroj 6 × .50 cal Browning M2 machine guns; 2 × 500 lb bombs
First Combat June 1943 (North Africa/Sicily)

Design Engineering: Brakes and Brownings

  • Hydraulic Dive Brakes: The most distinctive feature of the A-36A was the set of rectangular, cast-aluminum “slats” on the upper and lower wings. These acted as fences to limit dive speeds to a manageable 390 mph, allowing for much greater bombing accuracy during a steep descent.
  • Nose-Mounted Guns: Unlike later Mustangs which carried all their guns in the wings, the A-36A carried two of its six .50 caliber machine guns in the lower engine cowling, synchronized to fire through the propeller arc. This provided a very concentrated “point” of fire for strafing.
  • The Allison Engine: The V-1710 was a fantastic engine at low altitudes, but it lacked a multi-stage supercharger. This made the A-36A a “mud-mover” by necessity, as its performance dropped off significantly above 12,000 feet.
  • Rugged Cooling: The iconic scoop under the belly was reinforced on the A-36 to handle the debris and high-stress maneuvers associated with “hedge-hopping” and low-level ground support.

Combat History: Screaming Over the Mediterranean

  • Sicily and Italy: The A-36A saw its heaviest use in the Mediterranean Theater. Pilots would dive at 70-degree angles to drop bombs on bridges, trains, and bunkers. It was so quiet in a dive that it often achieved total surprise over German and Italian positions.
  • A Surprising Dogfighter: Despite being weighed down by bombs and dive brakes, the A-36A was still a Mustang. A-36 pilots were credited with 84 aerial victories, and the type even produced one ace: Lt. Michael T. Russo.
  • The Name Game: While the factory called it the “Apache,” the AAF initially tried to name it the “Invader.” However, crews and the public eventually just started calling them “Mustangs,” leading to the A-36 name largely fading into the shadow of the P-51.
  • The Burma Front: The A-36A also served in the China-Burma-India (CBI) theater, where its long range (compared to the P-40) allowed it to strike Japanese supply lines deep in the jungle.

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