Mustangs of Today - A36Apache.jpg (1/1)
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
		
"Scubabix" wrote: 
 
 This is probably a stupid question, what's the difference between an A-36  
 and a P-51A? 
 
Dive brakes.  The A-36 was the dive-bomber version 
of the Allison-engined Mustang. 
 
I'll quote from one of Ernie Pyle's columns, in his 
collection "Brave Men" (ch. 12, "Dive Bombers," 
describing life in the 12th Air Support Command 
in Italy): 
 
"Our dive bombers were known as A-36 Invaders. 
Actually they were nothing more than the famous P-51 
equipped with diving brakes.  For a long time they 
didn't have any name at all, and then one day in Sicily 
one of the pilots said, 'Why don't we call them 
Invaders, since we're invading?'" 
 
and 
 
"Those boys dived about eight thousand feet before 
dropping their bombs.  Without brakes their speed in 
such a dive would ordinarily build up to around seven 
hundred miles an hour, but the brakes held them down 
to around 390.  The brakes were nothing but metal 
flaps in the form of griddles about two feet long and 
eight or ten inches high.  They lay flat on the wings 
during ordinary flying." 
 
and 
 
"If you ever heard a dive bombing by our A-36 Invader 
planes you'd never forget it.  Even in normal flight that 
plane made a sort of screaming noise; when this was 
multiplied manifold by the velocity of the dive the wail 
could be heard for miles  From the ground it sounded 
as though they were coming directly down on us.  It was 
a horrifying thing. 
 
"The German Stuka could never touch the A-36 for sheer 
frightfulness of sound.  Also, the Stuka always dived at an 
angle.  But those Invaders came literally straight down.  If 
a man looked up and saw one above him, he couldn't tell 
where it was headed.  It could strike anywhere within a 
mile on any side of him.  That's the reason it spread its terror 
so wide." 
 
--Bill Thompson 
 
 
 
 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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