Doughboy
Staff Sergeant
True...So that's a moot point.If you take that stance, then you can say that about any allied fighter flying during that tim - not just the Hellcat.
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True...So that's a moot point.If you take that stance, then you can say that about any allied fighter flying during that tim - not just the Hellcat.
JB, would not it be true to assume that in the six months or so the Corsair served in the Pacific without the Hellcat being present the quality of IJN pilot in all types would be better than later in 1943. A lot of the Corsair missions flown in early 1943 were escort missions with AAF bombers and the IJN fighters probably would strive not to accept combat with the escort fighters unless the conditions were favorable to them. All those factors would, it seems to me, place a little higher value on the Corsair kills then than later in the war. 88171, there were more Hellcats built during WW2 than Corsairs and the Corsairs were more expensive. There were three companies building Corsairs since Vought had smaller facilities than Grumman.
The quality of the design may not differ but the quality and delivery impact may suffer or be enhanced depending on how well the subcontractor performs. Case in point - Brewster produced Corsairs which had documented production quality problems.I don't see how sub-contracting has anything to do with the quality of the design of the plane and its role in the war. It was just the easiest way to get as many produced as possible.
I don't think there was necessarily a big difference in Japanese quality in Solomons from early to late 1943. The general trend was wearing down of Japanese fighter arms, but OTOH the Japanese deployed their carrier fighter sdns to land operations at Rabaul in November 1943. This force represented an attempt to rebuild a fresh high quality force during the war, as opposed to frontline units continuously in action continually being worn down. Also, part of the fighter opposition in early-mid 1943 in the Solomons was JAAF, whereas in 1942 it was all JNAF, and later in 1943 went back to all JNAF.JB, would not it be true to assume that in the six months or so the Corsair served in the Pacific without the Hellcat being present the quality of IJN pilot in all types would be better than later in 1943. A lot of the Corsair missions flown in early 1943 were escort missions with AAF bombers and the IJN fighters probably would strive not to accept combat with the escort fighters unless the conditions were favorable to them. All those factors would, it seems to me, place a little higher value on the Corsair kills then than later in the war.
The quality of the design may not differ but the quality and delivery impact may suffer or be enhanced depending on how well the subcontractor performs. Case in point - Brewster produced Corsairs which had documented production quality problems.
P-38 could take off a carrier? Interesting.
If a Mitchell bomber can take off from a carrier, no reason a P-38 couldn't. Just couldn't store one on a carrier except topside.
Corsair, by far and away the best fighter- F/B in the PTO. On top of it's impressive combat abilities, it was a comfortable and stylish plane to fight a war in
The only major drawback was it's long nose. Made for bad visibility during take off and landings.
Yes, that I am aware of, but that's one company. My point is it doesn't really affect which was the better fighter, because if quality is consistent, the plane itself doesn't differ from company to company (usually, there are some minor variations such as FG-1As not having folding wings, and were delivered to the Marines, but that would have been specified by the Marines). If you look at the Avenger, most of them were built by GM, but the quality of those planes were fine and most would agree that that was a superb aircraft.
My point is, sub-contraction did not affect the F4U's combat record, so I don't see why it should be brought up at all.
Didn't the Hellcat shoot down more than any other fighter?
12,571 Corsairs produced total, 12,275 Hellcats, so a single Grumman plant producing Hellcats output virtually the same amount of airframes as 3 different firms producing Corsairs from multiple production facilities over a much longer time period: I.E. the Hellcat was the easier aircraft to produce.