Reluctant Poster
Tech Sergeant
- 1,673
- Dec 6, 2006
WWII aircraft carriers rarely used their catapults. In fact the Japanese carriers did not have them. The thwart-ship cats on the Essex class were removed to free up space for more useful functions.Then, I would say no such luck with anything before the Essex class.
However, the H4 series installed on the Essex class had to be capable of a literal no-wind launch as they were launching F6F's out of the hangar bay which would mean a much shorter Cat stroke (Restricted by width of hangar bay) and into a 90 degree crosswind.
So, I'm going to say yes! The Essex class could launch a WWII vintage piston engine airplane in zero wind conditions to probably to around 75-90 knots or so depending on if it was in the hangar bay and weight of the aircraft. (I'd imagine the H4 on a CVE could probably make easy work of an FM-2!)
(Please keep in mind, this is only based on what I've seen in various newsreels and being aware of the H4, I'm not an expert on catapults, not did I stay at a Holiday Inn.)
Fuel loads and bomb loads were adjusted to suit wind conditions. A reduction in range would have to be accepted. Due to the shorter deck run the first planes off the deck often carried lighter loads. This why part of an SDB strike would often carry 500 lb bombs while the rest carried 1000 lb.