welcome man to this very first
Video clip..
Celui du premier vol de control d'essai du
Chance vought
Corsair F4U4 210, a
Darois LFGI par
Christophe, apres tout l'hivers, l'avion en maintenance dans le hangar, par
Didier Rohmer, notre engeneer. La saison meeting aerien va pouvoir commencer et grand plaisir de voler cet avion de collection, veteran de la guerre du pacifique aux performances grandioses pour l'epoque.. l'avion de la serie TV "les tetes brulees" du
BAA BAA
BLACK SHEEP wing team de awesome "
Greg Papy BOYINGTON" interprete par "
Robert Conrad" alias egalement "
James West"..
First run up test
F4U and check flight for this unique south pacific theater wild
Navy /
Marines CORSAIR warbird survivor, after the all winter maintenance in workshop (home base is
Dijon Darois), all is ok, see you soon on airshow. enjoy film and movie, thumb up.. enjoy the film..
Arnold.
The gull-winged
F4U-4 Corsair was one of the finest fighter-bomber aircraft produced during
WW II. It stood at the summit of piston-engine fighter technology and development, and it was a formidable weapon from the closing months of WW II through the
Korean Conflict (1951-53). Though the first F4U-4s only reached front-line units in early
1944, they compiled an impressive combat record against
Japanese air, land, and sea forces. In
Korea, the Corsair was outclassed as a fighter (though it shot down at least one
Chinese MiG-15 jet fighter), and it was used mostly as a ground-attack fighter/bomber. Its speed and ruggedness, and its huge bomb load capacity (rivaled only by late-model P-47s) made it very effective in the ground-attack role.
As successful as the Corsair became, its beginnings were unpromising. In
1938 the
U.S. Navy called for designs for a new single-seat, carrier-based fighter. The Chance-Vought
Corporation won the contract with a unique gull-wing design powered by the largest aircraft engine then available—the 2,000-horsepower
Pratt & Whitney R-2800-8
Double Wasp radial piston engine. The gull-wing design was necessary to provide adequate ground clearance for the airplane's huge three-bladed propeller. The gull- wing also proved to be a low-drag design and, because it put the folding wings' hinge points closer to the deck, the design gave the Corsair a lower profile in an aircraft carrier's cramped hangar deck.
The Corsair prototype first flew in May
1940 but, citing landing gear problems and poor visibility over the nose, the Navy decided the Corsair was not suitable for carrier duties. Even after modifications solved these problems, the Navy was still slow to adopt the Corsair. But the Marines embraced it, making it one of their principal fighter/bombers. The Navy gradually realized its value as an outstanding carrier-based aircraft, rivaled only by the
Grumman F6F Hellcat. By late 1944, Chance-Vought was building
300 Corsairs a month—one every 82 minutes.
The F4U-4 version appeared in 1943. It had an upgraded
P&W; R2800-18W engine (2,450 hp) and a new
Hamilton Standard four-blade hydromatic propeller. Corsair production ended in
1952, with 12,571 built.
Today, fewer than 30 airworthy Corsairs are known to exist.
Many people know the Corsair as the airplane flown by
Major Greg "
Pappy" Boyington and his "
Black Sheep Squadron" (
VMF-214).
Pappy's
Black Sheep shot down 94 enemy aircraft. The squadron included nine aces in its ranks. Corsairs were flown by the
US Navy and Marines, the
Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm, the
Royal New Zealand Air Force, and the
French Aeronavale.
Corsair
Performance
The Corsair had strong virtues that made it a dangerous opponent. Its speed (especially at high altitudes), roll rate, climb rate, and maneuverability were comparable to the best fighters of the day—the
P-51 Mustang,
P-38 Lightning, and
Japanese Zero. It handled well at slow speeds and in stalls. While it could not out-turn a Japanese Zero, its superior speed and rate of climb gave it the advantage when used with the right tactics. The Corsair's 1,000-mile range was roughly the same as the long-range
Republic P-47, but still much shorter than a
P-51's combat radius.
The aircraft's six .50-caliber machine guns or four 20-mm cannon (F4U-4B & -4C) gave it more-than-adequate firepower, and it could take off with a heavier bomb load than some of the medium twin-engine bombers of the era. A Corsair could endure an incredible amount of punishment—more than the tank-like
P-47 Thunderbolt, as even the
Army Air Force admitted.
One "vice" plagued the Corsair throughout its production run. At low speeds, the huge
R2800 engine produced huge amounts of torque. If an inexperience pilot jammed the throttle to the firewall on takeoff, the torque could easily twist the airplane onto its back and "ruin the pilot's afternoon." This tendency earned the Corsair the nickname "
Ensign Eliminator."
Experienced pilots said the F4U was no more challenging to fly than any other high-performance fighter then in service.
- published: 05 Nov 2007
- views: 33338