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The B-23 Dragon was a twin-engined aeroplane developed by Douglas Aircraft Company as a successor to (and a refinement of) the B-18 Bolo. The design of the B-23 was very similar to that of the Douglas DC-3. It was the first operational bomber equipped with a tail gun. It first flew on July 27, 1939
While significantly faster and better armed than the B-18, the B-23 found itself inferior to newer bombers like the B-25 Mitchell and B-26 Marauder. For this reason, the 38 B-23s built were never used in combat. They worked in training, reconnaissance, transport (the UC-67), and test-bed rôles. One of the UC-67 is being reconverted to B-23 configuration by the USAF Museum.
Specifications (B-23 Dragon)
General Characteristics
- Crew: six
- Length: 58 ft 6 in (17.8 m)
- Wingspan: 92 ft (28 m)
- Height: 18 ft 6 in (5.6 m)
- Wing area: 993 ft² (92.3 m²)
- Empty: 19,089 lb (8,677 kg)
- Loaded: 26,500 lb (12,045 kg)
- Maximum takeoff: 32,400 lb (14,727 kg)
- Powerplant: 2 x Wright R-2600-3, 1,600 hp (1,194 kW) each
Performance
- Maximum speed: 282 mph (451 km/h) at 122,000 feet
- Maximum Range: 2,750 miles (4,400 km)
- Normal Range: 1400 miles with 4000 lb of bombs
- Service ceiling: 31,600 ft (9,632 m)
- Rate of climb: 1,493 ft/min (455 m/min)
- Wing loading: 26.7 lb/ft² (130 kg/m²)
- Power/Mass: 0.17 hp/lb (0.20 kW/kg)
Armament
- 0.30-calibre machine guns (3)
- 0.50-calibre machine gun (tail) (1)
- 4,000 lb (1,818 kg) of bombs
Source: "B-23 "Dragon" (http://home.att.net/~jbaugher2/b23.html)." 2000. Accessed on Jan. 3, 2005.--Aerodotus 19:43, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
References
Related content
Related development:
Douglas DC-3 -
B-18 Bolo -
Douglas UC-67
Comparable aircraft:
Designation sequence:
Y1B-20 -
XB-21 -
XB-22 -
B-23 -
B-24 -
B-25 -
B-26
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