Picture of the day. (10 Viewers)

Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules

Source de Havilland Aircraft Museum FB Page:

"Remembering Sir Geoffrey de Havilland OM CBE AFC RDI FRAeS, who died 21st May 1965. Engineer, aviation pioneer, innovator, naturalist, Hertfordshire's largest employer in his day, and the father of today's aerospace industry. A true great in the worlds of science, technology & engineering."

 
Consolidated TBY-2 Sea Wolf in flight over Naval Air Station, Patuxent River, Maryland, on 22 May 1945. One of the more interesting "what-if" aircraft of the war. The original design was not by Consolidated Aircraft, but rather by Vought, who designed the then XTBU-1 Sea Wolf to a 1939 US Navy requirement. The first prototype flew two weeks after Pearl Harbor. Its performance was deemed superior to the Grumman TBF Avenger and the Navy placed an order for 1,000 examples.

Several unfortunate incidents intervened; the prototype was damaged in a rough arrested landing trial, and when repaired a month later was again damaged in a collision with a training aircraft. Once repaired again, the prototype was accepted by the Navy. However, by this time Vought was heavily over-committed to other contracts, especially for the F4U Corsair fighter, and had no production capacity. It was arranged that Consolidated-Vultee would produce the aircraft (as the TBY), but this had to wait until the new production facility in Allentown, Pennsylvania, was complete, which took until late 1943. The production TBYs were radar-equipped, with a radome under the right-hand wing. The first aircraft flew on 20 August 1944. By this time though, the Avenger equipped every torpedo squadron in the Navy, and there was no need for the Sea Wolf; in addition, numerous small problems delayed entry into service. Orders were cancelled after production started, and the 180 built were used for training.



 

Users who are viewing this thread