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Rafe35 said:Survivability: There was no other single engine fighter flown during the war that could absorb greater battle damage than the F4U Corsair and still get home. Even the USAAF admitted that the F4U was a more rugged airframe than the tank-like P-47 Thunderbolt. That is a remarkable admission. The big Pratt Whitney radial engine would continue to run and make power despite have one or more cylinders shot off (Both fighter used Pratt Whitney).
Advantage: Tie
DAVIDICUS said:What areas?
I know the F4U-4 Corsair have bullet-proof "Malcom Hood" windshield that supposed to protect the pilot while engaged against fighters and Anti-Aircraft guns. I know the Japanese could not shoot down the F4U-4 Corsair before War ended because it was faster and much better than past Corsair variants, but still unsure about P-47N Thunderbolt (I know they had few kills like F4U-4 but were they shot down by Japanese or AA guns?).FLYBOYJ said:Rafe35 said:Survivability: There was no other single engine fighter flown during the war that could absorb greater battle damage than the F4U Corsair and still get home. Even the USAAF admitted that the F4U was a more rugged airframe than the tank-like P-47 Thunderbolt. That is a remarkable admission. The big Pratt Whitney radial engine would continue to run and make power despite have one or more cylinders shot off (Both fighter used Pratt Whitney).
Advantage: Tie
I've been up close to both of em, I could tell you the Corsair in some places is a lot more beefer than the -47. I think this robustness came from not only the desire to have a strong fighter, but also from it being designed as a carrier borne aircraft.
DAVIDICUS said:I understand that the aluminum skin on the Thunderbolt was thicker than the Corsair's. There were no fabric control surfaces either. The semi-monocoque and multi-cellular structure of the P-47's fusalege and wings certainly looks more rugged in drawings than the Corsair too.
Any thoughts on ruggedness in flight as opposed to with respect to crash landing on a carrier deck?
FLYBOYJ said:DAVIDICUS said:I think the ruggedness of the Corsair was based around it being operated on a carrier
I read somewhere that the forging for the inboard section of the wing was built extra heavy not only for the landing gear/carrier issue but because of the Gull wing and the desire to avoid failure at that point.
wmaxt
wmaxt said:FLYBOYJ said:DAVIDICUS said:I think the ruggedness of the Corsair was based around it being operated on a carrier
I read somewhere that the forging for the inboard section of the wing was built extra heavy not only for the landing gear/carrier issue but because of the Gull wing and the desire to avoid failure at that point.
wmaxt
That sounds right!
Jank said:The F4U4 that saw service didn't have as powerful an engine as the "C" series 2,800hp powerplant that was installed into the P-47N. It also didn't have the supercharger that the P-47 had.
A later development of the F4U4 had a more powerful engine that developed 2,760hp but these came too late to see service and still couldn't generate that hp level at high altitude like the 47.
Sal Monella said:Real men don't go for fabric covered control surfaces. Fabric is what womens' skirts are made of.
Sal Monella said:Lastly, until the dash 5, the outer top wing panels and the control surfaces of the Corsair were fabric covered. The F4U-5 was the first all metal skinned Corsair.
Real men don't go for fabric covered control surfaces. Fabric is what womens' skirts are made of.