Hobby Master 1/72 Air Power Series HA0112 SBD-3 Dauntless, VS-5, USS Yorktown "Battle of Coral Sea", 1942
|
Hobby Master SBD-3 Douglas Dauntless: Heavy die-cast. Minimum use of plastic. Professionally painted. Fully assembled. Display stand included. Undercarriage can be displayed up or down. Canopy comes with various options. A free spinning propeller. Rubber wheels. Comes with bombs. Tampo applied markings not decals. Accurately painted color scheme.
SBD-3 spec: Dimensions: Length: 32 ft., 8 in. Height: 13 ft., 7 in. Wingspan: 41ft., 6 in. Weight: Empty: 6,345 lb. Gross: 10,400 lb. Power Plant: One 1,000 horsepower Wright R-1820-52 engine Performance: Maximum Speed: 250 M.P.H. Maximum Range with Bomb Load: 1,345 miles Service Ceiling: 27,100 ft. Crew: Pilot and gunner/radio operator Armament: Two fixed forward-firing .50-in. guns, two flexible-mounted rear-firing .30-in. guns, 1,200 lb. of ordnance
|
Historical Background of the SBD-3 Designed as light bomber and reconnaissance aircraft, various versions of the Dauntless served during the war with the US Marine Corps, Army and Navy. The Douglas Dauntless was the workhorse of the US Navy in the Pacific. The Dauntless dive bomber was the only plane to fight in every major Pacific engagement.
The SBD-3, sarcastically nicknamed “Speedy Three”, entered service in March 1941, and incorporated self-sealing and larger fuel tanks, armor protection, improved electrical system, a bullet-proof windshield, and four machine guns. Production ended in July 1944, by which time a total of 5,936 had been built in all versions.
The SBDs first real test came on 7 May 1942, when the US aircraft carriers USS Lexington and USS Yorktown faced three Japanese carriers in the Battle of the Coral Sea. During the two day battle, which was the first naval battle in which victory was decided by aircraft alone, Dauntless dive-bombers flew alongside other US aircraft. Each side lost one carrier (the Japanese carrier Shoho being sunk by Dauntless and Devastator bombers) and the U.S. lost USS Lexington but the U.S. had stopped the Japanese ships from supporting an invasion of Port Moresby, New Guinea, and the proposed air assault on Australia.
USS Yorktown (CV-5) Named after a town in Virginia, where the climactic battle of the American Revolution was fought in the autumn of 1781. Two previous US warships had borne this name. USS Yorktown, a 19,800 ton aircraft carrier built at Newport News, Virginia, was commissioned on 30 September 1937. Operating in the Atlantic and Caribbean areas until April 1939, she then spent the next two years in the Pacific. In May 1941 Yorktown returned to the Atlantic, patrolling actively during the troubled months preceding the outbreak of war between the United States and the Axis powers.
Once again returning to the Pacific, she saw action in the Marshalls-Gilbert Islands, “Battle of the Coral Sea” where Yorktown first became badly damaged May 8 1942. Heroic efforts by dry dock personnel at Pearl Harbor repaired Yorktown in time for the Battle of Midway. During the “Battle of Midway” she was badly mauled at 1200 and 1445 on June 4 1942 by torpedoes and bombs. She was abandoned and taken in tow on the June 5th in an effort to once again return “The Fighting Lady” to Pearl for repairs. But this wasn’t to be, she was torpedoed by the Japanese submarine I-168 on the 6th and sunk by slow flooding just after sunrise on the June 7 1942.
THESE ARE PRE-PRODUCTION PICTURES, NOT THE FINISHED PRODUCT.
|
|