Douglas A-26 “Invader”

  • MANUFACTURER: Douglas Aircraft Company
  • MODEL: A-26B Invader (re-designated as B-26B in 1947)
  • ARMY AIR CORPS SERIAL NUMBER: 44-34538
  • DELIVERY DATE: 1945
  • PROTOTYPE FIRST FLIGHT: July 10, 1942
  • CREW: Three
  • POWER: Two 2,000 Horsepower Pratt & Whitney R-2800, “Double Wasp” 18-cylinder radial piston engines
  • WEIGHTS: Basic Empty Weight – 22,850 pounds, Gross Weight – 35,000 pounds
  • FUEL CAPACITY: 800 gallons
  • RANGE: 1,400 miles
  • WING SPAN: 70 feet
  • LENGTH: 50 feet
  • HEIGHT: 18 feet, 3 inches
  • SERVICE CEILING: 22,100 feet
  • TYPICAL ARMAMENT: Up to fourteen .50 caliber machine guns, and fourteen 5-inch rockets
  • TYPICAL BOMB LOAD: Internal – 4,000 pounds
    External – 2,000 pounds
  • NUMBER BUILT: 2,448 (all models)
  • SPEEDS: Maximum – 355 miles per hour
    Cruising – 250 miles per hour
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The Invader fought in more wars than any other aircraft type of its era. Americans flew the attack bomber in World War II, Korea and Vietnam, while other air forces fought with it in Indo-China, Algeria, Biafra, Cuba, The Congo, and in at least a dozen other conflicts.

The Douglas A-26B Invader, “Feeding Frenzy,” was built at the end of World War II, spent time flying with the French in Indo-China in the 1950s and was later operated by Hughes Tool Company. It is reported that Howard Hughes himself flew this very airplane, as he did with most of the planes his companies owned. Today, “Feeding Frenzy” wears Korean War colors.