Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair

   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair #11  
There were a lot of good aircraft developed during that war. One thing is for sure, aircraft development took some major leaps during that time period.

I can't verify this, but I read that North American designed and built the B-25 without a prototype...they went from blueprint directly to production.
 
   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair
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#15  
   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair #16  
Interesting video, James. My FIL (RIP 2013) was a Corsair pilot in WW2, tho he did not see combat. He was a South Pacific transport pilot/navigator on Marine R4Ds first, then came back to the US to be trained to fly the F4U in Florida. That was in '45. The war ended, so he did not have to go back for the planned invasion of Japan.
 
   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair #17  
Anyone read the book "Yeager"? The life story of Chuck Yeager. It's a great book, and he says that the pilot makes the difference. It's been a long time since I read it, but as I recall, he was chosen to test some enemy planes either captured or surrendered by defectors. He could get the drop on the other guy, no matter which plane he was flying.
 
   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair #18  
If I remember my WWII aviation history correct the Hellcat was designed primarily for one purpose.. That was to wipe the Japanese Zero fighter out of the air. And it had to do this with very inexperienced pilots. And it succeeded. The Corsair was more of a general purpose fighter.

RSKY
 
   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair #19  
What still kills me is that they identified a need (zero out the Zeroes), designed it, built in quantity, shipped them, trained crews and got them in combat all in a matter of a few months in some cases.

Today, they bicker about it in DC for years, sometimes decades, and all too often STILL don't get it right.
 
   / Bunches of things you didn't know about the Corsair #20  
In the early 80's my brother in law recovered a corsair that had ditched in lake Washington near Sand Point naval air station. It was restored and is on display in the Boeing Museum of Flight. After 30 years or so submerged in the lake the aluminum cylinder heads had corroded away so when the plane was raised all of the spark plugs were hanging out of the cowling. At two per cylinder there were a lot of them!
 

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