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Author Topic: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)  (Read 86449 times)

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baronbutcher

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #24 on: January 11, 2011, 09:01:22 AM »

Mitsubishi Ki-67 Hiryu 'Peggy'

LOVE TO SEE THIS - The Japanese need a good modern bomber. The Ki-67 had good defensive armament and the ability to survive heavy battle damage. It was also required to be highly maneuverable allowing it to carry out dive-bombing attacks and escape at low level. It was fitted with self-sealing fuel tanks and armor, features common in US fighters and bombers but frequently lacking in Japanese aircraft. With these features and its two 1,417 kW (1,900 hp) 18-cylinder air-cooled radial engines, the Ki-67 was perhaps one of the most sturdy and damage-resistant Japanese aircraft of World War II.

Fortunately for the Allies in the latter stages of the Pacific war, comparatively few of the formidable Mitsubishi Ki- 67 Hiryu (flying dragon) medium bombers and torpedo-bombers, codenamed 'Peggy' by air intelligence, were encountered in action. Production was limited and got off to a late start in the war, and by the time of its service debut in 1944 the Ki-67's potency was negated both by Allied fighter superiority and by the poor quality of the JAAF and JNAF crews which operated it. To take the place of the Mitsubishi Ki-21 'Sally' and the Nakajima Ki-49 'Helen', the Air Office (Koku Hombu) issued specifications for a new bomber to the Mitsubishi concern in November 1940. The work was led by Chief Engineer Ozawa on an aircraft based on the beautiful Japanese lines and powered by the new generation of powerful Ha-100 double-row 18- cylinder radial engines. Three prototypes of the Ki-67-I were completed between December 1942 and March 1943, the first making its initial flight on 27 December 1942. The Ki-67-I proved to be fast (though not as fast as originally specified), and extremely manoeuvrable with loops and barrel-rolls being carried out with ease in an unloaded configuration. Although adopted for service as the Army Type 4 Heavy Bomber, such was the promise of the Ki-67-I that s impressed, and made early representations to Mitsubishi. On 5 January 1943 Mitsubishi received an order to convert 100 Ki-67s as torpedo-bombers, with internal racks capable of handling the standard 450mm Navy Type 91 Model II aerial torpedo: these saw service with the 762nd Kokutai (air group) from the autumn of 1944 onwards. The Ki-67- I was issued in small numbers to the veteran 7th, 14th, 16th, 61st, 62nd, 74th, 98th and 110th Hikosentais (air regiments) and saw limited action over China, Biak and Sansapor in north western New Guinea, and Sumatra in the summer of 1944. The type was recognized as such for the first time by the Allies in October 1944, during the US 3rd Fleet's attacks on Formosa and the Ryukyus where the Hiryu served in the 8th Hikoshidan (air division) based on Formosa under navy control. Thereafter Ki-67-Is were encountered over the Philippines, off Iwo Jima, in the strikes on the US 20th Air Force's bases on Saipan and Tinian, and in the Okinawa campaign where it was used as a suicide aircraft. For suicide missions the JAAF used modified Peggys known as the Ki-61-I KAI with armament removed and a solid nose packed with explosive. Only two of the more powerful Ki-67-II variant were made, production of army and navy Ki-67-Is mounting to 696. It was the best Japanese medium bomber of World War II.
Specification   
 MODEL   Ki-67
 ENGINE   2 x Army Type 4, 1425kW
 WEIGHTS
    Take-off weight   13765 kg   30347 lb
    Empty weight   8649 kg   19068 lb
 DIMENSIONS
    Wingspan   22.5 m   74 ft 10 in
    Length   18.7 m   61 ft 4 in
    Height   7.7 m   25 ft 3 in
    Wing area   65.85 m2   708.80 sq ft
 PERFORMANCE
    Max. speed   537 km/h   334 mph
    Cruise speed   400 km/h   249 mph
    Ceiling   9470 m   31050 ft
    Range w/max.fuel   3800 km   2361 miles
    Range w/max.payload   2800 km   1740 miles
 ARMAMENT   1 x 20mm cannon, 4 x 12.7mm machine-guns, 500-800kg of bombs
 
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baronbutcher

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #25 on: February 26, 2011, 10:36:34 PM »


Nakajima C6N
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaThe Nakajima C6N Saiun "Coloured Cloud"was a carrier-based reconnaissance aircraft used by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service in World War II. Advanced for its time, it was the fastest carrier-based aircraft put into service by Japan during the war. The Allied reporting name was Myrt.
Development and design
The C6N originated from a 1942 Imperial Japanese Navy specification for a carrier-based reconnaissance plane with a top speed of 350 knots (650 km/h) at 6,000 m and range of 2,500 Nautical miles (4,960 km). Nakajima's initial proposal, designated N-50, was for a craft with two 1,000 hp engines housed in tandem in the fuselage, driving two propellers mounted on the wings. With the development of the 2,000 hp class Nakajima Homare engine though, this configuration was abandoned and Nakajima decided on a more conventional single-engine layout. However, the Homare's output turned out to be less than initially expected, so the design had to be optimized in other areas. The resulting aircraft was designed around a long and extremely narrow cylindrical fuselage, just large enough in diameter to accommodate the engine. The crew of three sat in tandem under a single canopy, while equipment was similarly arranged in a line along the fuselage. The C6N's low mounted laminar flow wing housed fuel tanks and was fitted with both Fowler and slit flaps and leading edge slats to lower the aircraft's landing speed to ease use aboard aircraft carriers. Like Nakajima's earlier B6N "Tenzan" torpedo bomber, the rudder was angled slightly forward to enable tighter packing on aircraft carriers.
The first flight was on 15 May 1943, with the prototype demonstrating a speed of 639 km/h (345 kt, 397 mph). Performance of the Homare engine was disappointing, especially power at altitude, and a series of 18 further prototypes and pre-production aircraft were built, before the Sauin was finally ordered into production in February 1944.

Operational history
Although designed for carrier use, by the time it entered service in September 1944, there were few carriers left for it to operate from, so most were used from land bases. Its speed was exemplified by a famous telegraph sent after a successful mission: "No Grummans can catch us." The top speed of the Grumman F6F Hellcat was indeed of the same level, so overtaking a Sauin was out of the question.
A total of 463 aircraft were produced. A single prototype of a turbocharged development mounting a 4-blade propeller was built, this was called the C6N2 Saiun-kai. A night-fighter version C6N1-S with oblique-firing (Schräge Musik configuration) single 30 mm (or dual 20 mm) cannon and a torpedo carrying C6N1-B were also developed. The C6N1-B developed by Nakajima was not needed after Japan's aircraft carriers were destroyed. As Allied bombers came within reach of the Japanese home islands, there became a need for a first class night fighter. This led Nakajima to develop the C6N1-S by removing the observer and replacing him with two 20mm cannons. The C6N1-S's effectiveness was hampered by the lack of air-to-air radar, although it was fast enough to enjoy almost complete immunity from interception by Allied fighters.
Despite its speed and performance, on 15 August 1945, a C6N1 was the last aircraft to be shot down in World War II. Just five minutes later, the war was over and all Japanese aircraft were grounded.
 
Variants
Nakajima C6N-1S. Note the obliquely mounted 30mm cannon in the fuselage.
•   C6N-1 : Two-seat reconnaissance aircraft for the Imperial Japanese Navy.
•   C6N-1B : Proposed torpedo-bomber version. Unbuilt.
•   C6N-1S : Small number of C6N-1s converted into night fighters.
•   C6N-2 : One prototype fitted with a 1,980-hp (1476-kW) Nakajima NK9K-L 24 Homare turbocharged engine.
•   C6N-3 : Projected night-fighter version of the C6N-2. Project only.

Specifications (C6N1)
Data from Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War
General characteristics
•   Crew: 3
•   Length: 11.00 m (36 ft 1 in)
•   Wingspan: 12.50 m (41 ft 0? in)
•   Height: 3.96 m (13 ft 0 in)
•   Wing area: 25.5 m² (274 ft²)
•   Empty weight: 2,968 kg (6,543 lb)
•   Loaded weight: 4,500 kg (9,921 lb)
•   Max takeoff weight: 5,260 kg (11,596 lb)
•   Powerplant: 1× Nakajima NK9B Homare 11 18 cylinder two-row air-cooled radial engine, 1,485 kW (1,990 hp)
Performance
•   Maximum speed: 610 km/h (329 knots, 379 mph) at 6,100 m (20,000 ft)
•   Cruise speed: 390 km/h (210 knots, 242 mph)
•   Range: 5,300 km (2,886 NM, 3,300 mi) (with auxiliary fuel[7])
•   Service ceiling: 10,470 m (35,240 ft)
•   Wing loading: 176 kg/m² (36.2 lb/ft²)
•   Power/mass: 0.33 kW/kg (0.20 hp/lb)
•   Climb to 6,000 m (19,700 ft): 8 min 9 sec
Armament
•   Guns: 1× flexibly mounted rearward-firing 7.92 mm Type 1 machine gun
Thanks for looking. :)
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Stanko-01

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #26 on: March 04, 2011, 08:22:34 AM »

That's a lot of info there mate..... ;D
I didnt even hear about some of those planes.........i woukd really like to see them in game eventually 8)
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Sharkzz

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #27 on: August 22, 2011, 11:13:06 PM »

 8)
~S~
LOVELY WORK  totally love it, keep up the good stuff m8 appreciate this emencley  ~S~
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KG3_V

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #28 on: December 16, 2011, 08:38:17 AM »

wasnt their some Whirlwind and Meteor in the work long time ago, what happen to them ??
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mojojojo

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #29 on: February 24, 2012, 05:04:28 AM »

man il2 could use a mb-152
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radko1111

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #30 on: March 18, 2012, 03:23:42 PM »

and what about Paul Defiant MK 1  :)
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mojojojo

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SAS~Gerax

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #32 on: November 03, 2014, 11:08:52 AM »

Yermolayev Yer-2 is in the development stage!
Thanks Guzknife for the link.

http://forum.aviaskins.com/showpost.php?p=130342&postcount=13 
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Typhoon Ib

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Re: baronbutcher's illustrated requests compilation (do not lock)
« Reply #33 on: November 03, 2014, 03:28:01 PM »

and the AR-2 is in the same screenshot (radiators in wing leading edge, flush gunner position, round nose with single MG...)
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