| XA-41 | |
|---|---|
Vultee XA-41 during USAF testing (USAF photo) | |
| General information | |
| Type | Ground attack |
| National origin | United States |
| Manufacturer | Vultee Aircraft |
| Status | Experimental |
| Primary users | United States Army Air Forces |
| Number built | 1 |
| History | |
| First flight | 11 February 1944 (Model 90) |
| Retired | 1950 |
TheVultee XA-41 was originally ordered as adive bomber. After combat experience led theArmy Air Corps to believe dive-bombers were too vulnerable to enemy fighters, the contract was amended to change the role to low-level ground attack. Although the XA-41 was a potent weapons system, the design was overtaken by more advanced technology, and never entered production.
The Vultee engineering team decided early in the design process to build the XA-41 (company Model 90) around the 3,000 hpPratt & Whitney R-4360 Wasp Major four-row, 28-cylinderradial engine. The Model 90's large tapered wing resembled that ofVultee Model 72 – a two-seat attack aircraft/dive bomber better known as theVultee Vengeance (A-31/A-35) – including a straight leading edge, forward-swept trailing edge, and pronounced dihedral on the outer wing panels.
Designed to carry both a large internal load and external stores, the XA-41 was large for a single-engine aircraft. The single-placecockpit, set in line with the wing root, was 15 ft (4.6 m) off the ground when the airplane was parked.
As operational priorities shifted during its development phase, the original order for two XA-41 prototypes was cancelled, although the USAAF pressed for the completion of one prototype as an engine testbed for the R-4360 (the same engine used by theBoeing B-50 Superfortress).
Flying for the first time on 11 February 1944, the sole XA-41 (S/N43-35124) proved to have good performance with a maximum speed of 354 mph reached in testing and "superb maneuverability, being able to out-turn a P-51B Mustang".[1] However, with the reduction in military orders due to the approaching end of the war, no production contract was placed, and the aircraft was used as an engine testbed for the USAAF as well as being evaluated by theU.S. Navy in comparison with other contemporary attack aircraft, especially theDouglasAD-1 Skyraider andMartinAM-1 Mauler. After its Navy trials, the XA-41, bearing civil registrationNX60373N, was consigned to the Pratt & Whitney division ofUnited Aircraft to continue engine tests. These continued until 1950 before the XA-41 was scrapped.

Data from Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1947[2]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament