Mitsubishi G4M

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AIRCRAFT SPECIFICATIONS


Full Name:Mitsubishi G4M
Variants:G4M-1 to G4M3c and G6M
Type:Land-based naval torpedo bomber and missile carrier
Country of Origin:Japan
Manufacturer:Mitsubishi Jukogyo K.K.
First Flight:October 1939
Engine(s):(G4M1) two 1,530 hp Mitsubishi Kasei 11 14-cylinder two-row radials; (subsequent versions) two Kasei 22 rated at 1,850 hp with water/methanol injection
Wingspan:81 ft 7.75 in (24.89 m)
Length:(G4M1) 65 ft 6.25 in (19.97 m); (subsequent versions) 64 ft 4.75 in (19.63 m)
Height:(G4M1) 16 ft 1 in (4.9 m); (subsequent versions) 13 ft 5.75 in (4.11m)
Weights:Empty: (G4M1) 14,860 lb (6,741 kg); (G4M2) 17,623 lb (7,994 kg); (G4M3) 18,500 lb (8,391 kg)
Loaded: (G4M1) 20,944 lb (9,500 kg); (G4M2,3) 27,550 lb (12,500 kg)
Maximum Overload: (G4M1) 28,350 lb (12,860 kg); (G4M2,3) 33,070 lb (15,000 kg)
Maximum Speed:(G4M1) 265 mph (428 km/h); (G4M2) 271 mph (437 km/h); (G4M3) 283 mph (455 km/h)
Initial Climb:(G4M1) 1,800 ft (550 m)/min; (G4M2,3) 1,380 ft (420 m)/min
Service Ceiling:(All) About 30,000 ft (9,144 m)
Range:(With bombs at overload weight) (G4M1) 3,132 miles (5,040 km); (G4M2) 2,982 miles (4,800 km); (G4M3) 2,262 miles (3,640 km)
Armament:(G4M1) Three manually aimed 7.7 mm in nose, dorsal and ventral positions and 20 mm manually aimed in tail; internal bomb load of 2,205 lb (1,00 kg) or 1,764 lb (800 kg) torpedo externally; (G4M2) as before, but electric dorsal turret (one 7.7 mm) and revised tail position with increased arc of fire; (G4M2e and, retroactively, many earlier G4M2) one 7.7 mm in nose, one 20 mm in dorsal turret and manual 20 mm in tail and two beam windows; (G4M2e) adapted to carry Oka piloted missile

AIRCRAFT HISTORY

Designed to an incredibly demanding 1938 Navy specification, the G4M family (given the code-name "Betty" by the Allies) was the Imperial Japanese Navy's premier heavy bomber in World War II; yet the insistence on the great range of 2,000 nautical miles (3,706 km) with full bomb load made the saving of weight take priority over defence and the aircraft was highly vulnerable and not very popular. The wing was of the same Mitsubishi 118 section as the Zero-Sen and boldly designed as an integral fuel tank to accommodate no less than 5,000 litres (1,100 gal). The company kept recommending four engines and being overruled by the Navy, which, during the early flight-test stage, wasted more than a year, and 30 aircraft, in trying to make the design into the G6M bomber escort with a crew of ten and 19 guns.
Eventually the G4M1 was readied for service as a bomber and flew its first missions in South East China in May 1941. More than 250 operated in the Philippines and Malayan campaigns, but after the Solomons battle in August 1942 it began to be apparent that, once intercepted and hit, the unprotected bomber went up like a torch (hence the Allied nickname "one-shot lighter"). Total production reached the exceptional quantity of 2,479, most of them in the many sub-types of G4M2 with increased fuel capacity and power. Finally the trend of development was reversed with the G4M3 series with full protection and only 968 gal fuel.

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