With the track record of this aircraft why is it that in can out turn almost anything...........? How can it keep up speed with many....? And correct me if I am wrong but isn't the default skin GERMAN.....?
The Brewster fighter's only U.S. combat use, on 4 June 1942 during the Battle of Midway, dramatically showed the inferiority of the F2A-3 when confronted by the Japanese Navy's "Zero" carrier fighters and well-trained aviators. In a brief battle against greatly superior numbers, Midway Island's Marine Fighting Squadron 221 (VMF-221) lost thirteen of twenty F2A-3s. Soon after, the "Buffalo" was removed from combat units and assigned to advanced training duty. In that role, it helped new U.S. fighter pilots enhance their skills before they joined operational squadrons. The aging F2A-2s and F2A-3s remained in the training mission into 1943, and a few were still in service in 1944-45.
F2A-3 characteristics:
Dimensions: Wing Span, 35 feet; Length, 26 feet, 4 inches; Wing Area, 209 square feet.
Weights: Empty, 4894 pounds; Gross, 7253 pounds
Powerplant: One 1200 horsepower Wright R-1820-40 radial engine.
Armament: Four .50 caliber machine guns (two firing forward through the engine cowling; one in each wing).
Performance (at gross weight): Maximum Speed, 320 m.p.h. (@ 14,500 feet