Mitsubishi K3M

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Template:Short description

The Script error: No such module "Nihongo". was a trainer built by Mitsubishi which was used by the Imperial Japanese Navy in an extremely wide variety of roles, including light transport, liaison aircraft, utility aircraft, and occasionally light bomber. Its Allied reporting name was Pine.

Design & Development

The Mitsubishi K3M was designed by British aeronautical engineer and aircraft designer Herbert Smith from Sopwith working in Japan for Mitsubishi. The prototype, designated Mitsubishi 4MS1, made its maiden flight in 1930. The aircraft was strut-braced, high-wing cabin monoplane with fixed wide-track landing gear, and it was powered by a single Script error: No such module "convert". water-cooled radial piston engine. Pilot and gunner were located in separate open cockpits, with an instructor and two pupils in the enclosed cabin in the fuselage. Later passenger variants seated five passengers in the cabin.

Total production of all versions was around 625 aircraft, with production mostly undertaken by Kyushu Hikoki K.K. and Aichi Kokuki. Production continued until 1941, and examples pressed into service as liaison aircraft in the postwar period were found in a variety of national markings.

Operational history

The first version of the K3M offered to the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service was prone to stability problems, and more importantly, problems with the water-cooled Template:Cvt Mitsubishi-built Hispano-Suiza 8A eight-cylinder liquid-cooled engine.

The improved K3M2 used a Hitachi Amakaze 11 nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engine, rated at Template:Cvt for take-off and Template:Cvt at sea level. The first K3M2 production examples entered service in 1932 as the Navy Type 90 Crew Trainer. It was superseded in production with the K3M3, using a Nakajima Kotobuki Template:Cvt air-cooled engine.

The Navy Type 90 Crew Trainer was primarily a land-based aircraft, although a few were fitted with floats.

The Imperial Japanese Army Air Force (IJAAF) had an interest in the aircraft as part of its modernization program and as a potential supplement to the Nakajima Ki-6. Two examples were acquired and tested, and the airframe was given the designation of Ki-7. One prototype used a Template:Cvt Mitsubishi Type 92 nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engine and the other a Template:Cvt Nakajima Kotobuki nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engine. The IJAAF did not order either version into production.

The civil version was offered to commercial operators with a Template:Cvt Nakajima-built Bristol Jupiter VI nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engine. The Mitsubishi K3M was used for both civil and military roles, and some remained in operation until well after World War II.

Variants

Mitsubishi K3M1
Initial version
Mitsubishi K3M2 (Japanese Navy Type 90 Crew Training Aircraft)
Initial production version for Imperial Japanese Navy
Mitsubishi K3M3 (Japanese Navy Type 90 Crew Training Aircraft)
Final production version for Imperial Japanese Navy
Mitsubishi K3M3-L
Military transport used by Imperial Japanese Navy
Ki-7
Version for Imperial Japanese Army, 2 built
Mitsubishi MS-1
Civil transport version

Operators

Military operators

File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan

Specifications (K3M3)

File:Mitsubishi k3m.gif
Mitsubishi K3M

Template:Aircraft specs

References

Notes

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Bibliography

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External links

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Template:Mitsubishi aircraft Template:Japanese Navy short aircraft designations Template:Japanese Army Aircraft Designation System Template:Allied reporting names