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North American B-25D Mitchell

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Contents

Fighter Ace Screenshots




Fighter Ace Ratings

Durability: 6

Speed: 5

Maneuverability: 4

Firepower: 1

Climb Rate: 3

Ground Attack: 4


Fighter Ace Performance

Top

Speeds

Climb

Rates


Sea

Level

4921'

1500m

9843'

3000m

19685'

6000m

Best

Speed

Best

IAS

to

1000m

to

3000m

to

6000m

mph


250
265
269
281
284@

15092'

137

mph



2:42



8:10



18:53

kph


403
426
433
452
457@

4600m

220

kph



Historical Statistics

Service Date: January 1942

Primary Guns: 1x Browning M2 0.5" (12.7mm) machine gun with 300 rpg in nose

Defensive Guns: 1x Browning M2 0.5" (12.7mm) flex machine gun with 600 rpg in nose, 2x Browning M2 0.5" (12.7mm) machine guns with 400 rpg in dorsal turret

Ordnance: 16x 100 lb (45 kg) or 8x 250 lb (113 kg) or 6x 500 lb (227 kg) or 3x 1000 lb (454 kg) bombs in internal bomb bay or 1x 1,927 lb (874 kg) Mk.13 torpedo slung under fuselage

Engine(s): 2x Wright Cyclone R-2600-13 radials rated for 1,724 hp at sea level

Int Fuel Capacity: 4,027 lbs (1,826 kg)

Ext Fuel Capacity: none

Maximum Speeds: 284 mph (457 kph) at 15,040 ft (4,572 m)

Ceiling: 21,256 ft (6,462 m)

Loaded Weight: 29,900 lbs (13,563 kg)

Wing Area: 610 sq ft (56.7 sq m)

Wing Loading: 49.0 lbs/sq ft (239.1 kg/sq m)


Strengths

Bomb Load: The 5,000 lb. maximum bomb load is one of the heavier medium bomber loads.

Durability: The B-25D was known for its ability to absorb combat damage.


Weaknesses

Defensive Guns: With only a single turret and flexible gun position, the gunners would be hard pressed to deal with more than one attacker at a time.


History

Named after Billy Mitchell, the outspoken and brash Army officer who was court-martialled for advocating the use of air power, the B-25 began life as the NA-40, a twin-engine medium bomber design intended to meet the 1938 Army Specification Number 98-102. The initial design featured a large greenhouse cockpit area extending above the fuselage line, which combined with low powered engines to produce a disappointing top speed of just 265 mph.

New engines were introduced to produce a meager increase in speed, but after the prototype was destroyed in a crash, North American decided to redesign the plane, which now bore the designation NA-62. Significant changes were introduced, the most notable of which was the shifting of the wing mounting point from the shoulder to mid-fuselage and the reduction in height of the cockpit area into a more streamlined, stepped arrangement with the bombardierís position in the nose.

With the outbreak of war in Europe, the Army accepted the new design without any further prototyping and the B-25 was born. The Mitchell grabbed headlines in 1942 when Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle led a group of volunteers in B-25Bs on a bombing mission of the Japanese home islands from the deck of the USS Hornet. While the attack resulted in insignificant levels of damage, the blow to Japanese security was such that four first-line fighter units were held for home defense over the next several months, precisely when they were needed in the Solomon Islands campaign.

By this time the new "C" and "D" models were coming off the production lines (the two models were identical, the only difference being the location of manufacture - Inglewood or Kansas City). Improvements included the addition of an autopilot, an increase in bomb capacity, better defensive and offensive firepower, and the ability to carry a torpedo for anti-shipping operations. These models were to serve in such far-flung outposts as Egypt, Tunisia, and New Guinea.

Because the Bendix Electric Ventral Turrets, which used a periscope sighting apparatus, were so hard to use effectively many C/D models had them removed in the field to save weight and improve performance. Additionally, most B-25C/Ds were equipped with wing racks, which raised the maximum bomb capacity to 5,000 lbs. for short-range missions. Over 3900 C/D models were built.


Sources

Green, William; Famous Bombers of the Second World War, Second Series; Doubleday & Company, Garden City, New York; 1961.

McDowell, Ernest R.; B-25 Mitchell in Action; Squadron/Signal Publications, Carrollton, Texas, 1978.

Angelucci, Enzo and Matricardi, Paolo and Pinto, Pierrluigi; Complete Book of World War II Combat Aircraft; ERVIN s.r.l., Rome; 1988.


See Also

Fighter Ace Planes Inventory

North American Aviation, Inc.

Aircraft Manufacturers During World War II

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