The
United States Army Air Corps (USAAC) issued a specification for a specialized bomber trainer, ordering two prototypes from
Fairchild Aircraft. The
XAT-13 powered by two
Pratt & Whitney R-1340-AN-1 radial engines, emerged as a "scaled down" bomber with a single machine gun in the glazed nose and a top turret with twin machine guns and fitted with tricycle landing gear. The concept was to have a single type that was able to duplicate the bomber crew positions from piloting, navigation, bomb aiming/dropping to aerial gunnery. The second prototype, designated the
XAT-14 was similar in layout but was powered by two 520 hp (388 kW)
Ranger V-770 inline inverted 12-cylinder vee-type engines. It first flew in late 1942. A further refinement to suit the aircraft for bombardier training with the nose gun and turret removed, led to a new designation, the
XAT-14A. Both prototypes featured an unusual construction, being built from "
Duramold" plastic-bonded plywood. At the end of the testing period, the USAAC ordered the inline version as the
AT-21 Gunner, specialized for gunnery training. The
AT-21 had a crew of five, pilot, co-pilot/gunnery instructor and three pupils. Fairchild Aircraft Company built one aircraft in Hagerstown and 106 aircraft at their
Burlington, North Carolina plant in 1943 and 1944, while
Bellanca Aircraft built 39 at
New Castle, Delaware, and
McDonnell built 30 aircraft at their
St. Louis plant. Both companies were enlisted to speed production and delivery to training units. ==Operational history==