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AD/A-1 Skyraider
Conceptually similar
Douglas AD Skyraider Three View
Douglas AD-3N Skyraider In Flight
Douglas AD Skyraider Component Breakdown
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
Douglas DB-8A-5 on El Segundo Flight Ramp
D-558-2 Skyrocket on Tarmac
Working on A-3 Skywarrior Rear Guns
Douglas SBD-3 on the Ground, in Revised US Army Air Corps Livery
Douglas SBD-3 on the Ground, in Revised US Army Air Corps Livery
SBD Dauntless on Flight Apron
Nose Landing Gear on D-558-1 Skystreak Ship Number One
D-558-1 Skystreak Ship #2 Jettisonable Nose Section
Douglas SBD Dauntless Manufacturing Line
Douglas Aircraft Rosies
D-558-1 Skystreak on the Ground
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Douglas AD-2 Skyraider on Compass Rose
The Douglas Skyraider, with its straight, low-mounted, tapered wings, was the only aircraft of its time capable of delivering 8,000 pounds of bombs with dive-bombing precision against such difficult targets as mountain bridges and hydroelectric dams. The first AD-1 Skyraider was delivered in 1946 and named according to the Douglas tradition of starting the names of Navy aircraft with "sky." When the Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force numbering systems merged in 1951, the "AD" series Skyraiders were redesignated as "A" series aircraft. Before production ceased in 1957 twenty-eight variations of Skyraiders were built. These included carrier- or land-based airplanes, day or night attack bombers, and versions for photographic reconnaissance, electronic countermeasures, airborne early warning, utility and search missions. Different configurations carried a pilot in an enclosed cockpit, a pilot and another person (either a radar operator or a co-pilot), and a pilot and two other crew. The AD/A-5 could carry a crew of four, plus four passengers or 12 troops, four stretchers, or 2,000 pounds of cargo. Because of its ability to carry large bomb loads, absorb heavy ground fire and fly for long periods at low altitude, the Skyraider was particularly suited for close-support missions.
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Unique identifier
BI42070
Boeing ID
es 69880
Type
Image
Size
2802px × 2148px 5MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
airplanes
attack
day
Douglas Aircraft
exteriors
flight lines
folding wings
full body views
fuselages
grid patterns
ground shots
haze
historic production status
left front views
military
military livery
monoplanes
propeller planes
propellers
Restrictions