Dive Bombers by Renderholic
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Description
The Douglas SBD Dauntless was a World War II American naval scout plane and dive bomber that was manufactured by Douglas Aircraft from 1940 through 1944. The SBD ("Scout Bomber Douglas") was the U.S. Navy's main carrier-borne scout plane and dive bomber from mid-1940 through mid-1944. The SBD was also flown by the U.S. Marine Corps, both from land air bases and aircraft carriers. The SBD is best remembered as the bomber that delivered the fatal blows to the Japanese carriers at the Battle of Midway in June 1942.
During the time of its combat service the SBD was an excellent naval scout plane and arguably the world's best dive bomber. It possessed long range, good handling characteristics, maneuverability, potent bomb load capacity, great diving characteristics, defensive armament and ruggedness.
Their relatively heavy gun armament—with two forward-firing .50 in (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns and either one or two rear flexible-mount .30 in (7.62 mm) AN/M2 machine guns—was effective against the lightly-built Japanese fighters, and many pilots and gunners took aggressive attitudes to the fighters that attacked them. One pilot—Stanley "Swede" Vejtasa—was attacked by three A6M2 Zero fighters; he shot two of them down and cut off the wing of the third in a head-on pass with his wing tip.
The SBD's most important contribution to the American war effort, doubtless, came during the Battle of Midway in early June 1942. Four squadrons of Navy SBD dive bombers attacked and sank or fatally damaged all four Japanese fleet carriers present—three of them in the span of just six minutes (Akagi, Kaga, Sōryu and, later in the day, Hiryu). They also caught the Midway bombardment group of four heavy cruisers, heavily damaging two of them, the Mikuma so badly that she had to be scuttled.
The Dauntless was one of the most important aircraft in the Pacific Theatre of World War II, sinking more enemy shipping in the War in the Pacific than any other Allied bomber.
A total of 5,936 SBDs were produced during the War. The last SBD rolled off the assembly lines at the Douglas Aircraft plant in El Segundo, California, on 21 July 1944. The Navy placed emphasis on the heavier, faster, and longer-ranged SB2C. From Pearl Harbor through April 1944, SBDs had flown 1,189,473 operational hours, with 25 percent of all operational hours flown off aircraft carriers being in SBDs. Its battle record shows that in addition to six Japanese carriers, 14 enemy cruisers had been sunk, along with six destroyers, 15 transports or cargo ships and scores of various lesser craft.
Credits:
SBD Dauntless by Neiwil (Free at ShareCG).
Poser 9, Vue 10 Studio, with minor postwork in PSP X5
Comments (14)
doarte
A splendid air force work Applause for talent and technique +5 from doarte's MADHOUSE
ronmolina
Excellent!
ollienorthie
I hate to ever criticize esp on a great image like this but all the planes have the same number. Also the props should not be identcally positioned. But otherwise it is great.
Renderholic
You're right. I had intended to change the plane numbers. Would have been easy to convert a nine to an 8 and a 6. I just got in a hurry and forgot.
wholehog
Nice clean and crisp render. The ocean looks great!
Cyve
Wonderfully done !!!
timuerto
Excellent!
papy2
Excellent....
starship64
Beautiful image, and great history.
cvrad
nice looking model nice textures
jimlad
superb work :)
Osper
Nicely done pic. Maybe the numbering issue is a intel ploy!
Osper
I forgot to applaud your history!
mcrocket
Very nice.
Briney
Yes, I read the Dauntless were often part of a carrier's "fighter" umbrella. Great render.
3dtox
Great Scene!