Aka F7F 'Tigercat',
Perhaps one of the best twin engine fighters of the war, the F7F was the first carrierborne twin engined warplane to see service in the US Navy, a massive armarment of 4 20mm Hispano M2s in the wing leading edges and four 12.7 mm Browning M2s in the nose and performance even with, if not superior to the P-38. Also able to carry up to 4,000 of disposable stores(same as P38) and a range of 1,900 miles with DT and 1,200 with internal fuel. The Tigercat had excellent handling characteristics and very good manueverablity for a twin engined fighter but wasn't successfull as a carrierborne fighter and was removed for operation with the U.S. Marines and as a night-fighter.
Now for the numbers:
Max speed; 450 mph at 21,500 feet declining to 367 mph at sea level.
Climb; 6,040 feet per min at sea level.
Service ceiling 40,700 ft.
F7F is a good alternative to the P38 which we've already seen in most WW 2 Flight sims, and perhaps will be considered as the next U.S. a/c in AH.
Thanks,
Nath29
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"Then I played the trump. The Spitfire was clawing wildly through the air, trying to follow me in a roll, when I dropped the nose. The Thunderbolt howled and ran for earth. Barely had the Spitfire started to follow--and I was a long way ahead of him by now--when I jerked back on the stick and threw the Jug into a zoom climb. In a straight or turning climn, the British ship had the advantage. But coming out of a dive, there's not a British or a German fighter that can come close to a Thunderbolt rushing upward in a zoom. Before the Spit pilot knew what had happened, I was high above him, the Thunderbolt hammering around. And that was it--for in the next few moments the Spitfire flier was amazed to see a less maneuverable, slow-climbing Thunderbolt rushing straight at him, eight guns pointed ominously at his cockpit."