FLYBOYJ
"THE GREAT GAZOO"
Thanks Mike!
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Rich, do you have any photos of elisted pilots - the old "AP" Rating?
Do you know if he's still alive? That meeting was almost 30 years ago.
I think the Midway class COULD oeprate F-14s. But, a Midway class could not both launch and recover at the same time ... and obviously could not carry many F-14s.
The takeoff and landing areas would overlap, but it could be done. The question is, why would anyone DO it?
Larger carriers were MUCH more practical, could carry more fuel and aircraft, And for how long could a Midway-class carrier supply fuel to F-14s?
If I am not mistaken, all you need is 266 feet to launch and a similar but slightly longer area to land. The difference in landing area would be to maneuver the landed aircraft out of the way before the next victim traps ... and, of course, a bolter would be catastrophic without and angled flight deck.
But, it COULD be done, even if VERY inconveniently.
My question is that several CVs, CVLs, and CVEs were used at various times as aircraft ferries.
Does anybody know how many aircraft they could carry? Norman Friedman's Aircraft Carrier book has a chart with the capacity of planned conversions of liners, but not of the carriers themselves.
Thanks in advance for any information.
I think the Midway class COULD oeprate F-14s. But, a Midway class could not both launch and recover at the same time ... and obviously could not carry many F-14s.
The takeoff and landing areas would overlap, but it could be done. The question is, why would anyone DO it?
Larger carriers were MUCH more practical, could carry more fuel and aircraft, And for how long could a Midway-class carrier supply fuel to F-14s?
If I am not mistaken, all you need is 266 feet to launch and a similar but slightly longer area to land. The difference in landing area would be to maneuver the landed aircraft out of the way before the next victim traps ... and, of course, a bolter would be catastrophic without and angled flight deck.
But, it COULD be done, even if VERY inconveniently.
Mike64,
I'm afraid that didn't answer the question at all.
During the war there were basically two sizes of aircraft to be moved fighters (P-39, 40, 47, 51) sized and medium bomber/large fighter (P-38, B-25, 26, A-20, 26) sized aircraft. Large bombers were not transported that way.
And there was two methods to move them on aircraft transports. Storage and Ready to use or fly off.
The 1st method was as you described. All they could fit and not capsize, many times the aircraft were even partially disassembled as well to take up even less deck space. The 2nd method was used to fly off the aircraft. That was done during the landings in the Doolittle Raid, North Africa and many Pacific Islands. These aircraft were not disassembled and the bow of the carrier had sufficient space to fly off the aircraft, even though they were not capable of landing. Their own aircraft usually were the ones that they could carry in their hangers, since Army birds wouldn't fold to fit on the elevators.
I was hoping for a ball park figure of the carrier capacities in the 2 methods. I know that there were 16 B-25s carried on the Hornet.