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De Havilland Mosquito
The Mosquito was a twin-engined aircraft of plywood monocoque construction, designed originally as a fast, unarmed light bomber. This concept was regarded as an aberration by the authorities, but the performance of the Mosquito silenced the critics. At night it operated with impunity over Germany to the end of the war, because the Luftwaffe never had a night fighter fast enough to intercept it. The Mosquito also served with distinction as fighter-bomber, reconnaissance aircraft and night fighter. It was one of the finest aircraft of W.W.II, with a versatility only matched by the German Junkers Ju 88. The night fighter versions remained in production until 1947. The amazingly adaptable design was effective for day and night fighting, day and night bombing, anti-shipping attack, and photo reconnaissance.
The bomber version of the Mosquito could deliver the same bomb-load to distant targets as the four-engined Boeing B-17. Mosquitos were also used as high-speed transports by British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) to maintain communication with neutral Sweden and bring back strategic items such as ball-bearings. Passengers, if any, rode in the bomb bay. Because of the glued-and-screwed wooden construction, early Mosquitoes were not suited to the tropics where exposure to high humidity and rain caused the airframe to warp and the glue to dissolve.

                                       

 Type:Fighter-bomber

 Power plant Two Rolls-Royce Merlin XXI engines
 Wingspan 54.2 ft 16.51 m
 Length 40.9 ft 12.47 m
 Height 15.25 ft 4.65 m
 Weight 22,300 LB 10,115 kg

 Speed 380 mph 611 km/h

 Ceiling 36,090 ft 11,000 m

 Range 1,205 mi 1,940 km

Armament 4x 20 mm cannon, 4x 7.7mm machine gun; 2x 227 kg bomb or 2x 227 lt (or 2x 454 lt) ext.
tanks or 8x 27 kg rockets