Difference between revisions of "SBD-3"
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== History == | == History == | ||
<!-- ''Describe the history of the creation and combat usage of the aircraft in more detail than in the introduction. If the historical reference turns out to be too long, take it to a separate article, taking a link to the article about the vehicle and adding a block "/History" (example: <nowiki>https://wiki.warthunder.com/(Vehicle-name)/History</nowiki>) and add a link to it here using the <code>main</code> template. Be sure to reference text and sources by using <code><nowiki><ref></ref></nowiki></code>, as well as adding them at the end of the article with <code><nowiki><references /></nowiki></code>. This section may also include the vehicle's dev blog entry (if applicable) and the in-game encyclopedia description (under <code><nowiki>=== In-game description ===</nowiki></code>, also if applicable).'' --> | <!-- ''Describe the history of the creation and combat usage of the aircraft in more detail than in the introduction. If the historical reference turns out to be too long, take it to a separate article, taking a link to the article about the vehicle and adding a block "/History" (example: <nowiki>https://wiki.warthunder.com/(Vehicle-name)/History</nowiki>) and add a link to it here using the <code>main</code> template. Be sure to reference text and sources by using <code><nowiki><ref></ref></nowiki></code>, as well as adding them at the end of the article with <code><nowiki><references /></nowiki></code>. This section may also include the vehicle's dev blog entry (if applicable) and the in-game encyclopedia description (under <code><nowiki>=== In-game description ===</nowiki></code>, also if applicable).'' --> | ||
+ | == Introduction == | ||
+ | The SBD ("Scout Bomber Douglas") was introduced in 1940 and was produced by Douglas to 1944. However its roots goes further than that. Predecessor of SBD, Northrop BT-1 was designed in 1935, in 1937 Northrop Corporation was taken over by Douglas and Northrop BT-2, developed from BT-1 served as a basis of what was to be SBD. In 1938, US Navy and US Marine Corps placed order for a new dive bomber designated SBD-1 and SBD-2. SBD-1 was delivered to Marines in 1940 and SBD-2 to Navy in early 1941 replacing obsolete SBU Corsair and SBC Helldiver carrier based dive bombers. The SBD unusual for carrier aircraft, did not possesed folding wings, designers opted for integral strenght of the plane instead. Next version, SBD-3 had increased armour protection, self-sealing fuel tanks, and the rear gunner´s 7.62 mm Browning M1919 machine gun was double mounted instead of a single mount on previous aircraft. Most produced version of SBD was SBD-5, over 2400 of these were built, equipped with more powerful 1200 hp Wright R-1820-60 Cyclone engine and increased ammo supply. US Army Air Force used denavalized variant of SBD, called A-24 Banshee. These were flown during early stages of war, and quickly withdrawn from service. | ||
− | + | == Operational history == | |
− | + | The SBDs first action was during attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, most of the Marine Corps SBDs of Marine Corps Scout Bombing Squadron 232 (VMSB-232) were destroyed on ground while parked at Ewa Mooring Mast Field. The first victim of SBDs, 3 days after attack on Pearl Harbor was Japanese submarine I-70 which was sunk by SBDs from Yorktown-class carrier, USS Enterprise making it first Japanese warship sunk by U.S. aircraft during WWII. After that, SBDs were present at every US Pacific theater campaign, supporting troops with precision strikes and patrolling around allied ships. | |
− | The | + | === Battle of the Coral Sea === |
− | + | At beggining of May 1942 SBDs participated in Battle of the Coral Sea where they sank Japanese light aircraft carrier Shōhō and damaged fleet carrier Shōkaku. During the battle, SBDs were flying anti-torpedo combat patrols focused on intercepting Japanese torpedo bombers trying to sunk USS Lexington and USS Yorktown, scoring several victories. One of the pilots, Stanley "Swede" Vejtasa scored two kills of A6M fighters after being attacked by them, and cut wing of third with his own wingtip during head-on pass. | |
− | + | ===== Battle of Midway ===== | |
− | + | The most successful action of SBDs happened during Battle of Midway in early June 1942, where four squadrons of Navy SBDs attacked Japanese fleet, and sank all four aircraft carriers present, aswell as multiple cruisers and destroyers. The carriers sunk were Akagi, Kaga, Sōryū and Hiryū. Later that day, SBDs sighted a group of Japanese heavy cruisers en route from bombarding Midway. The group consisted from four Mogami-class heavy cruisers Kumano,Suzuya, Mikuma and Mogami. Heavily damaging Mogami and Mikuma, with one of these, namely Mikuma, sinking later. | |
− | + | ===== Guadalcanal Campaign ===== | |
− | + | During the Guadalcanal Campaign, the SBDs were conducting sorties from both US Navy carriers and Henderson Field, sinking Japanese shipping trying to reinforce the island with new troops. Aircraft carrier Ryūjō fell victim to 31 SBDs from USS Saratoga. In total another three aircraft carriers were damaged, one heavy cruiser and nine transport vessels sunk during the six months lasting campaign. | |
+ | ===== Battle of the Phillipine Sea ===== | ||
+ | The Battle of the Phillipine Sea was last major battle where SBDs participated, before being replaced by more powerful Curtiss SB2C Helldiver bombers. The Helldiver was faster, could carry bigger payload, and had more powerful engine, but had few characteristics that made it hard to fly. SBDs were favoured by pilots due to superior handling at low speed, crucial for carrier landing. Pilots nicknamed the plane "Slow But Deadly" | ||
+ | ===== Overview ===== | ||
+ | In total, 5936 SBDs were produced, with last assembled at 21st July 1944. During its career, SBD sunk six aircraft carriers, fourteen cruisers, six destroyers, fifteen cargo or transport ships and numerous lesser craft. During and after the war SBDs served with Free French Airforce and French Navy, retiring in 1949. Other foreign users include Royal New Zealand Airforce, Royal Navy and after the war some examples were sold to Chile, Mexico and Morocco. | ||
{{break}} | {{break}} | ||
{{Navigation-Start|{{Annotation|Archive of the in-game description|An archive of the historical description of the vehicle that was presented in-game prior to Update 1.55 'Royal Armour'}}}} | {{Navigation-Start|{{Annotation|Archive of the in-game description|An archive of the historical description of the vehicle that was presented in-game prior to Update 1.55 'Royal Armour'}}}} |
Revision as of 16:12, 3 March 2023
Contents
Description
The SBD Dauntless was workhorse of US Navy, serving through 1940 all the way to late 1944 as main carrier based dive bomber. It replaced SBC Helldiver and SBU Corsair aboard US carriers. Featuring range of about 1700 km, quite heavy armament for its size and role, made of two 12.7 mm Browning M2 machine guns in engine cowling, and bombload of up to 2,250 lbs, it was very versatile plane. SBD participated in most of Pacific theater battles and achieved success such as sinking Japanese aircraft carrier Shōhō during the battle of the Coral Sea in May 1942, or its biggest success during Battle of Midway in June 1942 where SBD bombers sank four aircraft carriers. Namely Akagi, Kaga, Sōryū and Hiryū. The SBD was slowly being replaced in 1944 by faster and more modern SB2C Helldiver. Foreign users includes Royal Navy, Free French Airforce, Mexico, Chile and Morocco.
In War Thunder since the start of the Open Beta Test, the SBD-3 Dauntless is one of the first bombers in American aviation tech tree. Featuring an air spawn allowing for quick bombing runs out of reach of enemy fighters, as your bombs are dropped before the fighters climb up to your altitude. Heavy armament compared to contemporaries found in other tech trees allows for engaging enemy fighters using altitude advantage or after installation of DGP-1 machine gun pods, also engaging enemy medium and heavy bombers such as Fw-200, He-111 or Ju-88. Despite being a bomber, SBD is also quite manoeuverable aircraft, allowing to win prolonged turn fights with less agile opponents such as He-112 or MiG-3.
General info
Flight performance
As a dive bomber, it has very good dive characteristics and manoeuvres decently at most speeds. Although the engine is relatively weak, it could be WEP-ed for a long time before it reaches the overheating stage. This is not an aircraft which you will want to fly at high altitudes but should remain lower where it is a capable dive bomber.
Characteristics | Max Speed (km/h at 4,500 m) |
Max altitude (metres) |
Turn time (seconds) |
Rate of climb (metres/second) |
Take-off run (metres) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AB | RB | AB | RB | AB | RB | |||
Stock | 422 | 409 | 5700 | 26.6 | 27.8 | 7.9 | 7.8 | 291 |
Upgraded | 456 | 439 | 24.3 | 25.5 | 14.3 | 9.8 |
Details
Features | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Combat flaps | Take-off flaps | Landing flaps | Air brakes | Arrestor gear |
✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Limits | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wings (km/h) | Gear (km/h) | Flaps (km/h) | Max Static G | |||
Combat | Take-off | Landing | + | - | ||
740 | 450 | 490 | 469 | 320 | ~13 | ~13 |
Optimal velocities (km/h) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Ailerons | Rudder | Elevators | Radiator |
< 350 | < 350 | < 380 | > 299 |
Compressor (RB/SB) | ||
---|---|---|
Setting 1 | ||
Optimal altitude | 100% Engine power | WEP Engine power |
1,324 m | 950 hp | 1,000 hp |
Setting 2 | ||
Optimal altitude | 100% Engine power | WEP Engine power |
4,777 m | 800 hp | 842 hp |
Engine performance
Engine | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Engine Name | Number present | ||||
Wright Cyclone R-1820-52 9-cylinder | 1 | ||||
Engine characteristics | |||||
Weight (each) | Type | Cooling | |||
907 kg | Radial | Air | |||
Engine power (Stock) | |||||
Mode | Max | Take-off | |||
Arcade | 889 hp | 939 hp | |||
Realistic/Simulator | 879 hp | 930 hp | |||
Engine power (Upgraded) | |||||
Mode | Max | Take-off | |||
Arcade | 1,023 hp | 1,074 hp | |||
Realistic/Simulator | 950 hp | 1,000 hp |
WEP Duration | |||
---|---|---|---|
Arcade | Realistic/Simulator | ||
25 seconds | Infinite |
Survivability and armour
- 38 mm bulletproof glass in the windshield
- 12.7 mm steel pilot seat
- 12.7 mm steel protecting the gunner
- Self-sealing fuel tanks (2 in each wing)
Modifications and economy
Armaments
Offensive armament
The SBD-3 is armed with:
- 2 x 12.7 mm M2 Browning machine guns, nose-mounted (180 rpg = 360 total)
Suspended armament
The SBD-3 can be outfitted with the following ordnance:
- 1 x 1,000 lb AN-M65A1 bomb + 2 x 100 lb AN-M30A1 bombs (1,200 lb total)
- 4 x 12.7 mm M2 Browning machine guns, wing-mounted (gunpods) (340 rpg = 1,360 total)
- 1 x Type A Mark I mine
Defensive armament
The SBD-3 is defended by:
- 2 x 7.62 mm Browning machine guns, dorsal turret (1,000 rpg = 2,000 total)
Usage in battles
The Dauntless is an underrated aircraft, as it is viewed as a weak and sluggish bomber by a majority of tier 1 players. Use this to your advantage by catching unsuspecting bombers and fighters. Its manoeuvrability is good enough to energy fight the enemy. You should try to keep your speed higher than 200 km/h and stay at altitudes lower than 2km.
This plane is good at what it was designed for Dive Bombing. Start at a high altitude at around 4-5,000 feet, fly directly above the target, invert the plane, cut the throttle and deploy airbrakes (H key by default), dive, at 1,000-700 feet release bombs, pull the nose up, retract air brakes, push the throttle to full, then pitch up in a climb.
The small bomb load requires you pick your targets carefully and make your bombs count, choose to attack artillery positions or bases, where you have a higher chance of hitting due to their stationary position. Ships are also prime targets (it is what it was designed for), as the 1000lb bomb is plenty to sink a small ship.
Do not rely on fighter support when focusing on ground targets. After you drop your bombs, the plane should be manoeuvrable enough to dogfight enemies. You should stay on deck and manoeuvre wisely to not expose your weak underbelly. If you are caught at high altitude, go into a steep dive until you are at the deck, there is a good chance you may out dive them. If you cannot lose the enemy, try to quickly turn to your enemy's direction. your high G tolerance is equal, if not better than most enemies so you could lose them if they cant follow your turn.
Realistic battles
With the gun pods attached, you could act as menacing fighter support. With a high altitude spawn, try to hunt bombers first before you consider killing fighters. climb up to 4,500 m to get your max speed so you can dive down to the bombers. After eliminating a bomber or two, you should find that your allies are starting to engage the enemy. You could help them by catching enemies that are turning, have low speed, or attacking an ally. It should be easy to do all of this because of your energy advantage. You are still marked as a bomber, so enemies will surely consider you as an easy kill. You can not outrun them, but you can turn very well at almost every speed except stall. If they are coming from behind, a sudden reverse would be a good manoeuvre to throw them off. After that, you could either perform a head-on or fly under the enemy to avoid them. Avoid rushing upwards to maintain speed. Combine all of that with good trigger discipline, it is possible to achieve a five kill game.
Simulator battles
Hands-off carrier take-off (Auto engine control): Start the engine, flaps: raised, elevator trim: 15%, aileron trim: 11%, rudder trim: 6%, WEP throttle, hands-off controls until you lift off the carrier.
Enemies worth noting
Yak-2 KABB: Do not think that the SBD-3 can confidently outmanoeuvre this plane just because it is twin-engined. The Yak-2 has an amazing turn rate for a heavy fighter, thus the SBD-3 must avoid turning with it, if not dogfighting with it in general. It bears a pair of ShVAK cannons that can easily damage vital parts like engine or cooling systems. It has green camo, greatly resembling an Me 410 but with an H-tail like a Bf 110's.
Facing the SBD
It is very common in the game to encounter the SBD equipped with the gunpods, instead of its more usual historical role as a dive bomber. If you are playing against the Americans, in a battle rating where you are likely to encounter it, and especially if you are on a base-bombing run, it is wise to assume that you are facing six forward-firing .50 cal M2 machine guns, until proven otherwise. The best countermeasures are altitude, speed, and manoeuvrability.
Manual Engine Control
MEC elements | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mixer | Pitch | Radiator | Supercharger | Turbocharger | ||
Oil | Water | Type | ||||
Controllable | Controllable Not auto controlled |
Controllable Auto control available |
Controllable Auto control available |
Separate | Controllable 2 gears |
Not controllable |
Pros and cons
Pros:
- Gets a bomber spawn which really makes up for its performance
- Can turn with most enemy fighters on its rank
- It has two powerful machine guns that are centrally mounted, meaning you can effectively hunt down low-tier bombers and in most situations, be a quasi-fighter aircraft
- Its bombs are powerful enough to destroy packed enemy ground vehicles
- Its manoeuvrability is good enough to attack enemy bombers and support friendly fighters
- Tail gunner has excellent coverage, almost a perfect 180 degrees on a horizontal plane
- Can "pullout" from a 60-degree dive quite effectively
- Tail gun also has plenty of ammunition
- Can be used as a fighter when needed
- Can increase the total firepower to 6 .50 cals, one of the earliest plane that has six M2 Brownings
- Good firepower, enough to make quick kills on planes and ground targets alike. Extremely useful for attacking weakly armoured tanks
- Decent dive characteristics
- Will not break its wing on high G turns up to 600 km/h
Cons:
- It is still a dive bomber, so its manoeuvrability is limited by its poor energy retention
- Low ammo capacity for the nose-mounted machine guns
- The tail gunner won't do so much, because he is too exposed and the 2 x 7.62 is not powerful enough to destroy planes of its tier
- Limited selection of bombs, only one payload is available to choose from
- Slow acceleration
- Poor climb rate
- Poor energy retention
- Slow speed
- WEP only works on low altitude
- Unprotected engine, any gunfire get your engine knocked out or badly damaged, forcing you to return to base
History
Introduction
The SBD ("Scout Bomber Douglas") was introduced in 1940 and was produced by Douglas to 1944. However its roots goes further than that. Predecessor of SBD, Northrop BT-1 was designed in 1935, in 1937 Northrop Corporation was taken over by Douglas and Northrop BT-2, developed from BT-1 served as a basis of what was to be SBD. In 1938, US Navy and US Marine Corps placed order for a new dive bomber designated SBD-1 and SBD-2. SBD-1 was delivered to Marines in 1940 and SBD-2 to Navy in early 1941 replacing obsolete SBU Corsair and SBC Helldiver carrier based dive bombers. The SBD unusual for carrier aircraft, did not possesed folding wings, designers opted for integral strenght of the plane instead. Next version, SBD-3 had increased armour protection, self-sealing fuel tanks, and the rear gunner´s 7.62 mm Browning M1919 machine gun was double mounted instead of a single mount on previous aircraft. Most produced version of SBD was SBD-5, over 2400 of these were built, equipped with more powerful 1200 hp Wright R-1820-60 Cyclone engine and increased ammo supply. US Army Air Force used denavalized variant of SBD, called A-24 Banshee. These were flown during early stages of war, and quickly withdrawn from service.
Operational history
The SBDs first action was during attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, most of the Marine Corps SBDs of Marine Corps Scout Bombing Squadron 232 (VMSB-232) were destroyed on ground while parked at Ewa Mooring Mast Field. The first victim of SBDs, 3 days after attack on Pearl Harbor was Japanese submarine I-70 which was sunk by SBDs from Yorktown-class carrier, USS Enterprise making it first Japanese warship sunk by U.S. aircraft during WWII. After that, SBDs were present at every US Pacific theater campaign, supporting troops with precision strikes and patrolling around allied ships.
Battle of the Coral Sea
At beggining of May 1942 SBDs participated in Battle of the Coral Sea where they sank Japanese light aircraft carrier Shōhō and damaged fleet carrier Shōkaku. During the battle, SBDs were flying anti-torpedo combat patrols focused on intercepting Japanese torpedo bombers trying to sunk USS Lexington and USS Yorktown, scoring several victories. One of the pilots, Stanley "Swede" Vejtasa scored two kills of A6M fighters after being attacked by them, and cut wing of third with his own wingtip during head-on pass.
Battle of Midway
The most successful action of SBDs happened during Battle of Midway in early June 1942, where four squadrons of Navy SBDs attacked Japanese fleet, and sank all four aircraft carriers present, aswell as multiple cruisers and destroyers. The carriers sunk were Akagi, Kaga, Sōryū and Hiryū. Later that day, SBDs sighted a group of Japanese heavy cruisers en route from bombarding Midway. The group consisted from four Mogami-class heavy cruisers Kumano,Suzuya, Mikuma and Mogami. Heavily damaging Mogami and Mikuma, with one of these, namely Mikuma, sinking later.
Guadalcanal Campaign
During the Guadalcanal Campaign, the SBDs were conducting sorties from both US Navy carriers and Henderson Field, sinking Japanese shipping trying to reinforce the island with new troops. Aircraft carrier Ryūjō fell victim to 31 SBDs from USS Saratoga. In total another three aircraft carriers were damaged, one heavy cruiser and nine transport vessels sunk during the six months lasting campaign.
Battle of the Phillipine Sea
The Battle of the Phillipine Sea was last major battle where SBDs participated, before being replaced by more powerful Curtiss SB2C Helldiver bombers. The Helldiver was faster, could carry bigger payload, and had more powerful engine, but had few characteristics that made it hard to fly. SBDs were favoured by pilots due to superior handling at low speed, crucial for carrier landing. Pilots nicknamed the plane "Slow But Deadly"
Overview
In total, 5936 SBDs were produced, with last assembled at 21st July 1944. During its career, SBD sunk six aircraft carriers, fourteen cruisers, six destroyers, fifteen cargo or transport ships and numerous lesser craft. During and after the war SBDs served with Free French Airforce and French Navy, retiring in 1949. Other foreign users include Royal New Zealand Airforce, Royal Navy and after the war some examples were sold to Chile, Mexico and Morocco.
Archive of the in-game description | |
---|---|
A carrier-based dive-bomber/reconnaissance aircraft. The most well-known U.S. Navy bomber, and perhaps the most significant dive-bomber of the war. Despite the fact that the decision to write off the SBD as outdated was made before the war, the bomber was still actively involved in combat, and in 1942 it sunk more enemy ships than all other Navy aircraft combined. Originally, the series was called the XBT, and showed as many innovations as it did drawbacks. This aircraft had a revolutionary honeycomb wing structure and a reasonably small fuselage. But its wings could not be folded, and occasionally it would spontaneously go into a barrel roll, which caused a series of catastrophic accidents. After intensive research in conjunction with NACA, the dive-bomber was radically redesigned, most of its shortcomings were removed, and it was named the Scout Bomber. The SBD-3 variant was a Scout Bomber which was finally fit for combat. It had self-sealing fuel tanks, armour, and bulletproof cockpit glass. To keep its performance characteristics, the aircraft's weight was reduced by replacing its duralumin sheeting with a much lighter material. Also, all the equipment designed to keep the plane afloat in the event of a water landing was removed. Soldiers dubbed the SBD the "Slow But Deadly". This aircraft destroyed the pride of the Japanese carrier force at the Battle of Midway, inflicting damage from which the Japanese Imperial Navy was never able to recover. |
Media
- Skins
- Videos
See also
- Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
External links
- [Profile] SBD-3 Dauntless - Slow But Deadly
- Official data sheet - more details about the performance
Douglas Aircraft Company | |
---|---|
Strike Aircraft | A-20G-25 · A-26B-10 · A-26B-50 · AD-2 · AD-4 · A-1H |
Bombers | TBD-1 · B-18A · SBD-3 · BTD-1 · A-26C-45 · A-26C-45DT |
Turboprops | A2D-1 |
Jet Aircraft | F3D-1 · F4D-1 |
A-4 Skyhawk | A-4B · A-4E Early |
Export | ▄Havoc Mk I · ▄Boston Mk I · ▄DB-7 · ▂A-20G-30 · ▄AD-4 · ▄AD-4NA |
A-4 Skyhawk | A-4H · A-4E Early (M) · Ayit · A-4E |
The Douglas Aircraft Company merged with McDonnell Aircraft Corporation in 1967 to form McDonnell Douglas. |
USA bombers | |
---|---|
Dive | SB2U-2 · SB2U-3 · SBD-3 · SB2C-1C · SB2C-4 |
Torpedo | TBD-1 · PBY-5 Catalina · PBY-5A Catalina · TBF-1C · BTD-1 |
Medium | B-10B · B-18A · B-34 · PV-2D · B-25J-1 · B-25J-20 · A-26C-45 · A-26C-45DT · B-26B |
Heavy | B-17E · B-17E/L · B-17G-60-VE · PB4Y-2 · B-24D-25-CO · B-29A-BN |
Hydroplanes | OS2U-1 · OS2U-3 · PBM-1 "Mariner" · PBM-3 "Mariner" · PBM-5A "Mariner" |