Caption | Bomb Damage Assessment photo of destroyed Ki-48 bombers at a Japanese airstrip in northern New Guinea, 1942-1943, photo 1 of 2 ww2dbase | |||||||
Photographer | Unknown | |||||||
Source | ww2dbaseUnited States Army Air Forces | |||||||
More on... |
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Photo Size | 1,476 x 1,159 pixels | |||||||
Added By | David Stubblebine | |||||||
Licensing | Public Domain. According to the United States copyright law (United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105), in part, "[c]opyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government". Please contact us regarding any inaccuracies with the above information. Thank you. |
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Colorized By WW2DB |
Colorized with Adobe Photoshop |
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Visitor Submitted Comments
2. Bill says:
2 Jul 2015 03:12:14 PM
SIDE LINED AIRCRAFT:
Allied control of the air kept many Japanese aircraft grounded due to lack of supplies, oil and spare parts. Check out what looks like a field modification to that Lily with long green house canopy no production a/c had that, must have been used as a transport, anyway that's my guess.
The Lily had poor defensive armament most models carried 3 x flexible 7.7mm type 89 machine guns and 1 x 12.7mm flexible heavy machine gun. Bomb load 300kg/661lb, Ki-48-I, 400kg/ 882lb Ki-48-II, maximum bomb load 400kg/882lb Ki-48-I and up to 800kg/1764lb
Ki-48-II before wars end like all Japanese aircraft the Lily would be expended in suicide attacks against allied forces
2 Jul 2015 03:12:14 PM
SIDE LINED AIRCRAFT:
Allied control of the air kept many Japanese aircraft grounded due to lack of supplies, oil and spare parts. Check out what looks like a field modification to that Lily with long green house canopy no production a/c had that, must have been used as a transport, anyway that's my guess.
The Lily had poor defensive armament most models carried 3 x flexible 7.7mm type 89 machine guns and 1 x 12.7mm flexible heavy machine gun. Bomb load 300kg/661lb, Ki-48-I, 400kg/ 882lb Ki-48-II, maximum bomb load 400kg/882lb Ki-48-I and up to 800kg/1764lb
Ki-48-II before wars end like all Japanese aircraft the Lily would be expended in suicide attacks against allied forces
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.
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1 Apr 2011 08:58:00 PM
Japanese Lily bombers destroyed by "parafrag bombs"