Lockheed P-38 Lightning facts for kids
Quick facts for kids |
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P-38H of the AAF Tactical Center, Orlando Army Air Base, Florida, carrying two 1,000 lb bombs during capability tests in March 1944 | |
Role | Heavy fighter |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Lockheed Corporation |
Designer | Clarence "Kelly" Johnson |
First flight | 27 January 1939 |
Introduction | July 1941 |
Retired | 1949 (United States Air Force) 1965 (Honduran Air Force) |
Primary users | United States Army Air Forces Free French Air Force |
Produced | 1941–45 |
Number built | 10,037 |
Unit cost | US$97,147 in 1944 |
Developed into | Lockheed XP-49 Lockheed XP-58 |
The P-38 Lightning is a World War II fighter aircraft made by Lockheed. It was mainly used by the United States Air Force. It first flew in 1939. It was different from other fighters because it had two engines instead of one, and was twice the size of other fighters. The plane fought in the Pacific and in Europe. It could carry 4 50-caliber machine guns and a 20mm cannon. With a top speed of over 400 miles per hour the P-38 was one of the fastest fighters of its time. The P-38 is also accounted for capturing 90% of all aerial footage over Europe. By 1944, it was replaced by the faster P-51 Mustang in Europe. The P-38 was the only American fighter being built at the beginning and the end of the war. The Germans called it the "fork tailed devil."
Images for kids
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Mechanized P-38 assembly lines in Burbank, California: Planes start at the back of the building on the far right (without wings, so that section of the line is narrower). When they reach the end of that line, they shift to the center line, gain wings, and move backward down this line. Upon reaching the end, they are then shifted to the line at the left, and progress forward to the end of the line.
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Reconnaissance P-38 with bold black and white invasion stripes participating in the Normandy Campaign
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P-38s of the 370th Fighter Group at RAF Andover in southern England
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Ground crew members of the 459th Fighter Squadron, nicknamed the "Twin Dragon Squadron", working on a Lockheed P-38 at an air base in Chittagong, India – January 1945
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(L–R) Thomas B. McGuire and Charles Lindbergh discussing a mission on Biak Island in July 1944
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Lockheed P-38L Lightning at the National Museum of the United States Air Force, marked as a P-38J of the 55th Fighter Squadron, based in England
See also
In Spanish: Lockheed P-38 Lightning para niños