Douglas A20 Havoc

Hi Mick, please post screenies of the P70's, I have no plans too cover any P70 skins. I have my hands full with the C and G models. Here is a colourful C, I have been playing with this morning.

Steve
 

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I didn't know the Navy had a couple of them; designated as BD-2's. I think they were used for target towing and general utility.

Here is a list of conversions for the Navy. There was one more not included here.
 

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OK, here's a look at 'em.

I have to write readme files and credits, and pack them up for uploading, so that might not happen today.

First, a P-70 (no suffix letter) from the 6th Night Fighter Squadron, the first squadron to take the P-70 overseas, and for a while the only Army night fighter unit in the Pacific. On the nose is the squadron insignia designed by Walt Disney Studios. This plane was photographed at squadron headquarters in Hawaii. The insignia doesn't show in any of the many photos I saw of the detachments sent to the combat zones.
Like all straight P-70s, it has the 4x22mm cannon pack, and the chin guns retained from its A-20 origins. The chin guns were loaded with tracers and boresighted to converge with the cannons at firing range.

I usually shoot screenies of planes in the air, but P-70s flew at night and we couldn't see 'em.
 
This one's from the 6th NFS's Detachment A, based at 12 Mile Drome, near Port Moresby, New Guinea in the summer of 1943.

This the the camo scheme I mentioned earlier, the one the Brisbane depot put on the first batch of P-70A conversions, the ones fully designated as P-70A-1. Only the cowlings and the neutral gray undersurfaces were sprayed in flat black, with the rest of the plane left in the original olive drab. The skin is an authentic camo scheme applied to the twelve (one source says thirteen) planes of that first Brisbane batch, but my assigning it to Det A of the 6th NFS is presumptive, as I could find no photos of these planes at either of the operational locations, so who knows if any A-1's actually went to a combat unit. If they did it had to be one of the 6th's detachments because at that time there weren't any other night fighter units in the Pacific.

The P-70A-1's were conversions of conversions. They were built as glass nosed A-20 bombers. Early in the war "Pappy" Gunn and his folks got to work on the 3rd Bomb Group's A-20's and turned them into strafers, with four more forward firing .50's in the painted-over nose above the two that were already there. Then, when they were traded in for B-25s, the Brisbane depot added radar, sprayed the cowlings and undersurfaces black, and they became P-70A's. Later Brisbane and stateside conversions were made from early A-20G's from before the Martin turret was introduced, and then the two sub-variants became A-1 and A-2.

So here's a P-70A-1 in the unique camouflage of that sub-variant. Whether it ever really joined the 6th NFS is, to the best of my knowledge, a matter of speculation.

Steve, this one uses your 3rd Bomb Group A-20 for the base textures. I just sprayed black paint where the Brisbane depot did and gave it a serial number. I put those mid-1943 insignia on it because I like that stye of insignia, and the plane was around at that time.

 
This one is a P-70A-2 from the 6th NFS's Detachment B on Guadalcanal in the summer of 1943. The A-2's were converted from A-20G's and they came from the factory with their nose guns installed. They were converted from early A-20G's that didn't have the Martin turret, so all that they needed to become P-70's was radar. Brisbane made some or all (depending on what reference you read) of these conversions and others may have been converted stateside. Whether they were converted in the States or shipped back home from Australia (lots of empty cargo ships sailing est in those days), they were definitely present, because there are photos of some of them in stateside locations.

This one has no unique or interesting markings. I painted it because I like how it looks with the mid-1943 insignia on the black finish.
 
OK, no more pontificating. This P-70A-2 belonged to the 421st Night Fighter Squadron, based at Wakde Island, New Guinea in late 1943. I was a bit surprised to see that big, almost-white number on the tail, but there;s a photo...
 
This one is a P-70A-2 from the 6th NFS's Detachment B on Guadalcanal in the summer of 1943. The A-2's were converted from A-20G's and they came from the factory with their nose guns installed. They were converted from early A-20G's that didn't have the Martin turret, so all that they needed to become P-70's was radar. Brisbane made some or all (depending on what reference you read) of these conversions and others may have been converted stateside. Whether they were converted in the States or shipped back home from Australia (lots of empty cargo ships sailing est in those days), they were definitely present, because there are photos of some of them in stateside locations.

This one has no unique or interesting markings. I painted it because I like how it looks with the mid-1943 insignia on the black finish.


Great looking paints Mick!
 
Hi Mick, please post screenies of the P70's, I have no plans too cover any P70 skins. I have my hands full with the C and G models. Here is a colourful C, I have been playing with this morning.

Steve

Wow, that is colorful sir. Great looking paint!
 
"Sad Sack" was a P·70A-2 in use with the 348th Night Fighter Squadron at Orlando Army Air Base in early 1943. I know it still looks like the war zone, but this plane flew in Florida.
 
P-70 (no suffix) "Black Magic" belonged to the 547th Night Fighter Squadron, based at Salinas Army Air Base, California in early 1944 for night fighter training. The squadron would go to war with the P-61. Black Magic posed for a well known publicity photo in loose formation with a successor, a P-61 with the name Black Widow in the same style and location. This is the plane on the Revell kit box top.
 
Hi Mick, please post screenies of the P70's, I have no plans too cover any P70 skins. I have my hands full with the C and G models. Here is a colourful C, I have been playing with this morning.
Steve

Sweet! I'm fond of Vichy identification colors and I really like RAF desert camouflage, which that is close to, so that really grabs me!

I wish I was artist enough to draw hat Black Widow artwork. Maybe someone more talented than I will see it and be inspired.
 
OK, that's probably all the P-70's I'll paint. They tend to look an awful lot alike. Wells has given us the most colorful P-70 of all, and the next most colorful one that I've seen is beyond my ability to paint. Beyond that, I think I've found all the excuses I can to put a dab of color on a P-70.

I should get them up in the next day or so.
 
Here is a list of conversions for the Navy. There was one more not included here.

Hmmmmmmm... Does anyone know if they were painted in Navy colors or retained their Army scheme? The only pics I ever saw were in black & white, so I couldn't tell.
 

Sweet! I'm fond of Vichy identification colors and I really like RAF desert camouflage, so that really grabs me!

I wish I was artist enough to draw hat Black Widow artwork. Maybe someone more talented than I will see it and be inspired.


I was thinking about giving that one a go a while back Mick, although I would argue with you about your talents sir...those are excellent renderings!
 
I was thinking about giving that one a go a while back Mick, although I would argue with you about your talents sir...those are excellent renderings!

They're excellent because you painted them! All I did was change the markings.

Steve painted the only one that isn't on your base colors

I thought I'd mentioned that in what I wrote with one of the skins, but I see that I didn't. My apologies!

For all the black skins, I started with the "Dusty" skin, used a little digital paint remover to take off the nose art and name, and used that as a base for new markings as needed.

Changing the markings is easy. The hard part is painting the colors, details and weathering. I'm not much good with detail and hopeless at weathering. I can usually do OK with colors if they're not too complex, but all I'm really good at is the easiest part - markings.
 
Miss Laid

The A-20G 43-9224 is most likely one of the best known Havocs. As "Miss Laid" it was the first A-20 to complete 100 missions without a failure or abort. After this success she was renamed "La France libre" (what a boring name.....) to participate in a ceremony to celebrate this accomplishment.

But before it completed 100 missions, it somewhere in time completed the first 49 missions and somebody took the picture below......

3HMDRx4.jpg


After the aircraft had completed 100 missions another picture was taken.

HOnfWaw.jpg


By this time the aircraft had invasion stripes added and when you look closely you will see the invasion stripes were only applied at the lower side of the wings.
 
My repaint shows the aircraft after it had completed its 49th mission. Still without invasion stripes.

xYWDtcy.jpg


I4G09Bz.jpg


CMFVBBp.jpg


Cheers,
Huub
 
OK, one more. I wondered if the P-70A-1 might look a bit garish with the red surround to the national insignia against olive drab. It looks better against black! So I painted an alternate version of it as it appeared earlier, at any time from late 1942 through spring 1943. It's the same plane; the only difference is the insignia style.
 
Oops!!!

Most of the repaints, profiles, decal sets and even paintings show "Miss Laid/La France Libre" as 5H-E. However I checked the site from 416 Bomb group and learned that "Miss Laid belonged to 670th Bomb Squadron with code F6, instead of 668th Bomb Squadron with code 5H.

As I wanted to be sure I checked the photographs and indeed when you look closely to the picture below you will be able to see the people from 416 Bomb Group were absolute correct about their "own" aircraft. So it will be F6-E and as you most likely already can guess "La Libre France" will be next in line!

Isn't it a bit strange that when one person makes a mistake everybody keeps copying this mistake........ :banghead:

So I have to make some small changes before I can upload.......

Cheers,
Huub

n0I5uyg.jpg
 
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