Grumman F4F Wildcat

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It's interesting how the typist refers to the Allies as the "United Nations", not the first time I've seen this term used in wartime correspondence, but intriguing, nonetheless.
 
According to Capt Slagle, on the -3 the gear operating crank was on the left side and operated with the pilot's throttle hand. The -4 had an emergency gear operating crank on the right for when the electric/hydraulic system failed.
F4F-3 Cockpit, gear handle on the right.

Lewis AIr Legends F4F-3,
 
I have mentioned in another thread a comment I read in a book in the 1950s about how one could tell if a USN pilot flew F4Fs by the way he wore his watch. He had it on the edge of his wrist because, if he wore it with the face on the outside of his wrist, it was scratched on the on the crank wheel when retracting the L/G, if he wore it on the inside of his wrist, he scratched it on the seat frame cranking. If one watches the "Dogfight" video series, look for the piece about Jefferson DeBlanc. In telling of his combat, he says the Zeke pilot shot the watch off of his wrist, and he touches the edge of his wrist just where F4F pilots wore it.
 
While looking over F4F photos, I found a remarkable sequence of photos depicting a failed take-off from the escort carrier USS CORE (CVE-13). The pilot, Julius Brownstien, dictated in detail what is happening in all 9 of the pictures, from take-off attempt to climbing out of a rapidly sinking Wildcat. Apparently, his take-off signal was mistimed during rough seas and the carrier's bow was heading down a trough when he started forward causing a loss of lift. An excellent read can be found at:
F4F Wildcat – History, at Random
 
I had originally intended to post this interesting picture, when I discovered the story above, but I think this is worth giving the eyeball.. Imagine making this climb while the ship is steaming forward and the waves are lifting it…

 
What XBe said. The airplane marked 6F16 is most definitely a Wildcat. Reminds me that you could get in a pretty decent cyber food fight on Facebook with all the people who insisted Wildcats were Hellcats and vice Versagofigger!
 

Note this image taken during the voyage - if needed they would catapult off, and ditch alongside a destroyer.

Text for photo:

 
Note this image taken during the voyage - if needed they would catapult off, and ditch alongside a destroyer.

Text for photo:


View attachment 694478
Thanks for the additional info on the pic. After reviewing these pics and more, I think a great disservice was done when the deck personnel were not commended for keeping that floating airstrip somewhat usable on the way to target. Reminds me of one of those little puzzles where one square is missing and you move the others to create a picture…
 
It's interesting how the typist refers to the Allies as the "United Nations", not the first time I've seen this term used in wartime correspondence, but intriguing, nonetheless.
The story of that discussion between Roosevelt and Churchill.
Wordorigins.org
 

Watches and gear cranks are only a problem in an F4F if one wears his watch on the right wrist. Like most righties, I've always worn my watch on the left wrist with face on the inside of the wrist. That's the way my father, a career naval aviator and an F4F driver, wore his, so, an early influence. I asked him once, probably about the time of my first wristwatch why he wore it that way when most everyone else I saw wore the face on the outside of the wrist. He said something along the lines of flying an airplane or even driving a car it was easier to glance down at the inside of the wrist without moving the hand from whatever it was doing and turning the wrist over. Works for me.
 
ALL F4Fs and FMs had hand cranked landing gear, no electric, no hydraulic, nothing but Mk I right arm turning a chain drive. Period. Full Stop.
Well, then the FM2 that visited our local airport back in the mid 80s must have been a one-off or a civil STC mod. While I was fueling his plane, I joked about the landing gear crank, and he said that it was for emergency extension only, and normal operation was electrically controlled hydraulic.
He had a cool little passenger compartment installed in the aft fuselage with blue tinted windows disguised in the horizontal bars of the national insignia. Musta raised hell with the CG.
 

Really doesn't matter what some fellow told you at the local airfield. Either
a- he was pulling your leg, or
b- some sort of post manufactured, post service, modification.

In squadron, USN, active service, if you wanted the landing gear up or down, 28 turns on the crank, one way or the other, was the only option. See below, if the FM was any improvement over the F4F such improvements were most certainly not in the landing gear operation.

AN 01-190FB-1 Pilot's Handbook of Flight Operating Instructions – Navy Model FM-2 British Model Wildcat VI Airplanes –

Note item #10


And operating from page 15
 
Well, there it is in black and white. Thanks for that. That plane was clearly far from stock, with its well upholstered passenger compartment, modern com/nav equipment (including ILS), autopilot, and truly ferocious strobe light anticollision system. I'm guessing the landing gear was probably modded as well.
His R1820 rattled and clattered like they all do, however. Some things never change.
 

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