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Bomb Damage Assessment photo of destroyed Ki-48 bombers at a Japanese airstrip in northern New Guinea, 1942-1943, photo 1 of 2 [Colorized by WW2DB]

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Caption     Bomb Damage Assessment photo of destroyed Ki-48 bombers at a Japanese airstrip in northern New Guinea, 1942-1943, photo 1 of 2 [Colorized by WW2DB] ww2dbase
Colorization Note   This photograph was originally a black and white photograph; the colorized version presented here was a derivative work by WW2DB. The colors used in this version were speculative, and could be significantly different from the real colors.

Processed using Adobe Photoshop Image Processor, with default neural filter, selecting "None" as the profile.

View the original black and white photograph at its own permanent page.
Photographer    Unknown
Source    ww2dbaseUnited States Army Air Forces
More on...   
Ki-48 Sokei   Main article  Photos  
New Guinea-Papua Campaign, Phase 2   Main article  Photos  
Photo Size 1,476 x 1,159 pixels
Added By David Stubblebine
Colorized Date 24 Feb 2023
Licensing  Public Domain. According to the United States copyright law (United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105), in part, "[c]opyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government".

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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Commenter identity confirmed Bill says:
1 Apr 2011 08:58:00 PM

Japanese Lily bombers destroyed by "parafrag bombs"
2. Commenter identity confirmed Bill says:
2 Jul 2015 03:12:14 PM

SIDE LINED AIRCRAFT:

Allied control of the air kept many Japanese aircraft grounded due to lack of supplies, oil and spare parts. Check out what looks like a field modification to that Lily with long green house canopy no production a/c had that, must have been used as a transport, anyway that's my guess.
The Lily had poor defensive armament most models carried 3 x flexible 7.7mm type 89 machine guns and 1 x 12.7mm flexible heavy machine gun. Bomb load 300kg/661lb, Ki-48-I, 400kg/ 882lb Ki-48-II, maximum bomb load 400kg/882lb Ki-48-I and up to 800kg/1764lb
Ki-48-II before wars end like all Japanese aircraft the Lily would be expended in suicide attacks against allied forces

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