Air Weapons

Dive Bomber (1942)

Vultee

A-31/35 Vengeance

A-31/35 Vengeance

Built in numbers that in no way reflected its actual role in the war, the Vultee A-31 Vengeance was a widely used dive bomber which nevertheless had a completely forgettable career to the extent that one USAAF general described it as "a shining example of the waste of material, manpower and time". It was designed at a time when dive bombers had become fashionable due to the success of the Ju 87 over Spain, as such it was immediately ordered by the RAF which was quick to discover its lackluster performance over Europe (just when the myth of the Stuka was slowly being debunked) although it was used to better effect in Burma. A number were also used by Australian forces in New Guinea while the USAAF eventually took control of the redesignated A-35 where they ended up being used mostly as target tugs. Other users of this notoriously unsuccessful design included Brazil and India.

First flown as the V-72 sometime in 1939, the A-31 was immediately ordered by the RAF through Lend-Lease where they were designated Vengeance Mk. I, Mk. II, and Mk. III, all of these corresponding to various versions of the basic A-31 or, in the case of the Mk. II, the A-31A. USAAF units were known as the A-35 and included the A-35A and the A-35B known in RAF service as the Mk. IV. Production was shared by Vultee and Northrop.

Preceded by:

None

Succeeded by:

None

Datafile

DesignA-35B
NameVengeance
TypeDive Bomber
Year1942
Crew1
Dimensions
Length12.12 m
Height4.674 m
Wing Span14.63 m
Wing Arean/a
Weight
Empty4,672 kg
Maximum7,439 kg
Wing Loading241.2 kg/m²
Performance
Speed449 km/h
Ceiling6,797 m
Range966-3,701 km
Powerplant
Engine1 x R-2600-13
Wright
1,268 kW
Thrust/Weight0.33
Armament
Guns6 x .50-in
M2 Browning
Payload907 kg
Production
Built831
Total1,931

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