PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Aichi H9A
rdfs:comment
  • The Aichi H9A (二式練習飛行艇, Navy Type 2 Training Flying Boat) was an Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service flying boat used during the first years of World War II for crew training. An uncommon type, it was not encountered by Allied forces until spring 1945, and was never assigned an Allied reporting name.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
max takeoff weight alt
  • 16535.0
loaded weight main
  • 7000.0
max speed more
  • 180000.0
Guns
  • 1
climb rate main
  • 4.5
number of props
  • 2
length alt
  • 55
span main
  • 24 m
power/mass alt
  • 0.200000
cruise speed main
  • 222.0
cruise speed alt
  • 138
height alt
  • 17
Introduced
  • 1942
primary user
Type
  • Flying boat trainer
type of prop
  • nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engines
loading main
  • 110.600000
range alt
  • 1340
length main
  • 16.95 m
useful load main
  • 2100.0
power alt
  • 710.0
area main
  • 63.3
power main
  • 529.0
bombs
  • 2
height main
  • 5.25 m
span alt
  • 2400.3
range main
  • 2150.0
Manufacturer
max speed main
  • 317.0
engine (prop)
  • Nakajima Ha-1 Kotobuki 42
power/mass main
  • 0.150000
climb rate alt
  • 876.0
ceiling main
  • 6,780 m
empty weight main
  • 4900.0
loaded weight alt
  • 15432.0
area alt
  • 681.353
First Flight
  • September 1940
max speed alt
  • 197
jet or prop?
  • prop
loading alt
  • 22.600000
empty weight alt
  • 10803.0
plane or copter?
  • plane
ceiling alt
  • 22245.0
max takeoff weight main
  • 7500.0
Retired
  • 1945
cruise speed more
  • 60000.0
Crew
  • Normal crew of 5
Number Built
  • 31
ref
  • Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War; Warplanes of the Second World War, Volume Five: Flying Boats
useful load alt
  • 4629.0
abstract
  • The Aichi H9A (二式練習飛行艇, Navy Type 2 Training Flying Boat) was an Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service flying boat used during the first years of World War II for crew training. An uncommon type, it was not encountered by Allied forces until spring 1945, and was never assigned an Allied reporting name.