Skip to content
Vincony — fast, managed web hosting for your next site
The Pilots Desk
Bombers1916 bomber aircraft by Airco

DH.3

DH.3

The Airco DH.3 was a British bomber aircraft of the First World War. The DH.3 was designed in 1916 as a long-range day bomber by Geoffrey de Havilland, chief designer at the Aircraft Manufacturing Company. It was a large biplane with wide-span three-bay wings, slender fuselage, and a curved rudder. It was powered by two 120 hp (89 kW) Beardmore engines, mounted as pushers between the wings. In addition to tailskid landing gear, two wheels were placed under the nose to prevent it from tipping over on the nose. A second prototype, designated DH.3A, was built with more powerful 160 hp (120 kW) Beardmore engines, and the War Office placed a production order for 50. This order was cancelled before any could be completed, possibly because the climb rate was still far too low, with it taking 58 minutes to reach 6,500 feet, and the other contender, the Royal Aircraft Factory F.E.4 was even worse, which made strategic bombing with these machines impracticable. The two prototypes were scrapped in 1917. The DH.10 Amiens was developed from the DH.3A with much more powerful engines (boosting installed power from 320 hp (240 kW) to nearly 800 hp (600 kW)) and some detail changes were made. This development first flew in March 1918, but was too late to see squadron service during the war.

Summary from Wikipedia, photo via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA.

Manufacturer
Airco
Category
Bombers
First flight
1916-01-01

Specifications

Cruise speed
83 kt
Max speed
95 kt
Range
610 nm
Service ceiling
6,500 ft
Rate of climb
550 ft/min
Max takeoff weight
5,810 lb
Empty weight
3,980 lb
Powerplant
2 × Beardmore 120 hp
Engines
2
Seats
3
Length
36.8 ft
Wingspan
60.8 ft
Height
14.5 ft
Number built
2

Specifications are approximate and may vary by variant. Compiled from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA).

Reference and training only. Specifications vary by variant — consult the manufacturer and the official documents.