TriangleP wrote:
Gold Star for you Mark, for gallantry above and beyond the call of duty! Your series of picture posts make WIX an enjoyeable experience for many people. Well done!
I love these A-20s, the low altitude missions they performed made them the plane to fly for pilots hooked on these kinds of missions. A-20s were used by the RAF in Europe for missions later done by the de Havilland Mosquito. The 5th AF used to them to great effect attacking airfields and shipping at low altitudes in the Southwest Pacific. These guys were a gutsy bunch!
Rob, Jerry and The Inspector are right, the A-20 was a pre-war design and had a smaller, narrow fuselage that I think didn't lend itself to retrofitting a comfortable cabin space. The writing was on the wall when A-20 production ceased in 1944 and the Douglas A/B-26 light attack bomber was produced to replace it. Consequently, the A-26 had a postwar role in the Air Force that the A-20 didn't have. The A-26 had a larger payload and was faster, so any executives or corporations wanting an fast plane would have looked past any surplused A-20s and chosen the Douglas B-26 because of its performance. Also, the A-26 had an airframe size that lended itself to making a cabin better than the A-20. B-25s had a postwar career in military and civilian use for the same reasons. A WIX poster recently wondered why de Havilland Mosquitos didn't have a strong postwar career either. Although it was a high performance machine, I think it's narrow fuselage just didn't allow it to be modified for executive transport or for carrying hogs too well.
Regarding the non acceptance of DH Mosquitos as executive transports, bending double and crawling on your hands and knees to get to your seat in an executive airplane only became fashionable when the LEAR 23 hit the market, s/n 003 who's former owner was some guy named Frank Sinatra now sits in front of the MoF restoration facility @ KPAE