Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Aircraft and Vehicles => Topic started by: brady on December 24, 2004, 09:19:48 AM
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???
(http://www.myphotodrive.com//uploads/686_YY.JPG)
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vindicator?
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Originally posted by Pongo
vindicator?
Its close...
what's with the tailwheel?
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Nope. My guess would be a Japanese development of the North American BT-9 series. Can't find a referance though.
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Sure does look north americanish GScholz, especially the wing. great one Brady I'm pouring through photos now lol.
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not a bt-9 look at the differance.
(http://1000aircraftphotos.com/Contributions/Larkins/3342.jpg)
(http://www.myphotodrive.com//uploads/686_YY.JPG)
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Vultee YA-19
(http://1000aircraftphotos.com/APS/2613.jpg)
http://home.att.net/~jbaugher4/a19.html
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Vultee V-11
(http://1000aircraftphotos.com/Contributions/Shumaker/3791.jpg)The Vultee V-11 was a military version of Gerard Vultee's single-engine passenger transport V-1A, with which it shared the wing, the tail surfaces and the undercarriage. Designed as an attack bomber, it was a low-wing, all-metal design with an elongated, four-section canopy covering its two tandem-seated crew members. It could carry up to 1,100 lbs. of bombs internally and externally, and was armed with one forward-firing, fixed .30-inch machine gun mounted on each wing and one flexible .30-inch gun operated by the rear crewman. The prototype and the initial batch of production models were powered by a 750 hp Wright SR-1820-F53 Cyclone radial engine driving a two-bladed Hamilton Standard propeller. A second version, the V-11A, got instead a three-bladed airscrew.
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WTG Gearsy!!!
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Vultee V-11, it is:)