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Can you imagine the value today if those aircraft had been preserved? Well, no one wants a Barracuda, but a Seafire.... yes please.Dunno but on another forum thrown up by a Google search a guy said his father was on HMS formidable and they also threw Barracudas over the side to make hangar space for the clear up in Singapore.
Well I suppose if they preserved a lot of them they wouldn't be worth much, there are stories that some scrap planes in US were valued on the fuel in the tank. Here is a picture of RAF Thruxton in May 1945 (from Wiki) The race circuit was made from the perimeter taxiways. Look how many planes are parked up, it says they were to go to USA, whether they did or not is another matter.Can you imagine the value today if those aircraft had been preserved? Well, no one wants a Barracuda, but a Seafire.... yes please.
https://www.historicandclassicaircraftsales.com/seafire-3
Dunno but on another forum thrown up by a Google search a guy said his father was on HMS formidable and they also threw Barracudas over the side to make hangar space for the clear up in Singapore.
The Corsair was quickly withdrawn from FAA service, why? Perhaps lend lease required them to be returned?
isn't that a Firefly?For the what-iffers, why not put a Griffon in the Fulmar...
isn't that a Firefly?
isn't that a Firefly?
The firebrand seems to have another characteristic undesirable in a carrier aircraft: a long nose thereby giving visibility issues. It's likely caused by putting the fuel tanks ahead of the cockpit behind the engine. Aircaft such as the Hellcat, Fw 190 put it behind and underneath.
The Hellcat was considered viceless in terms of handling and had good visibility. The Corsair gets the glory only because of a post war 440mph variant with an powerful engine the Hellcat never got.
The development of Seafire was opposed by many, including Churchill, on the grounds of maximizing Spitfire production. Perhaps we would have seen more Mk XIV, XVIII and F22.
The RN would have done well to stick to hellcats and corsairs for its fleet carriers.
At that meeting Fairey should have been told, if he won't make the Seafire, we want a single seat Fulmar then. Make your two seaters to fill the immediate demand and then switch over to a single seat version."At a meeting held with Richard Fairey in May 1938 it was put to him that his firm could possibly help in producing as many Sea Spitfires as possible by March 1940. Fairey then stated that if he was to accept an order for Spitfires he would have to abandon work on types in production at the time.
We must kill the Fulmar in its conception phase.
Why the focus on Fairey anyway?
The original design and F4F-4 prototype had power folding wings but they were deleted due to pilot concerns that the aircraft was underpowered and already overweight, The fact is that the Seafire wing folding mechanism was readily powered by the Armstrong method.Why didn't the Seafire ever have power folding wings like the Sea Fury, Corsair, Hellcat, etc?
You mean the strong arm method? I jest, but what is the tech you're referring to.The fact is that the Seafire wing folding mechanism was readily powered by the Armstrong method.
You mean the strong arm method? I jest, but what is the tech you're referring to.
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Just watch all these chaps clamouring over the wings at 6:36 to get this Seafire folded and sorted.
Here you can see the FAA's Corsair's wing unfolded without the engine running. I imagine the deck hands much preferred the auto fold aircraft.
What was the Armstrong method you were referring to?It seems to take little effort and all of about 20-30sec to fold the wings manually. Hydraulic wing folding will add weight on an already overstressed arrestor and LGs, and will add extra maintenance. It would probably have delayed the Seafire III's introduction into 1944.
To be fair, the Corsair was the better fighter compared to the Hellcat. That's why it was the longest produced U.S. piston engine fighter - 11 years. Granted, the Corsair had some early landing issues on carriers which arguably limited deployment to Marine squadrons during the war (Navy pilots generally did not use land bases). Some of the longevity of production was likely due to the Navy's issue with the new jets, taking off/landing on a carrier. However, looking at a mid-1943 Corsair compared to a 1943 F6F-5, the Corsair was faster and had a superior roll rate than the Hellcat. Hellcat was better at diving. I'm not at all implying the Hellcat was a bad fighter, just that the Corsair was better. Both used the same R-2800 engine, but Vought's design of a slimmer fuselage, closer cowled engine, cooling ducts in the wing and flush riveting throughout made the difference. Just my humble opinion.