120? I 3 point it at about 80. I never use the tail wheel lock and work the rudder with a twisty stick unless the rudder is gone, which is not unusual.
If you are taxing and try to do it too fast you'll ground loop it.
"A real Corsair pilot three-pointed that airplane if he had any self respect."- Colonel Henry A Mcartney
wgmount, I don't land at 120, I say slow down to 120 to 100..to further describe this.as you are lining up on your final approach with the runway be close to 120 or slower by the time you cross the end of the runway......I am near what mtnman has described most times, 90 to 80ish and flare ( 3 point ) my landings......
as Saxman has pointed out, when landing fast ...let her ROLL on the Main 2 until the F4U has slowed down to under 100 mph IAS ( preferably under 90 mph IAS ).....
enough for the tail to drop basically........by this time you should be under 80/70 mph and can lock the tail wheel.......
depending on how many notches of flaps you have extended will go hand in hand on how much slower you will need to be to keep from bouncing back into the air or to keep your Tail down.....
one thing about the F4U's BIG RUDDER, is one can come screaming into a field doing well over 300 mph IAS and come to a screeching halt down to 100 mph IAS in just a few seconds....by using the rudder/gear/cross control of ailerons & rudder.......
it just takes practice...... and one should learn to land with all the different flap settings, with none, 1 notch out, 2 notch's out, 3 notch's out, 4 notch's out, and Full Flaps extended out........ reason I say this is sometimes you might have had a Flap shot off or damaged while in a lowered position, and trying to land with for example the left flap stuck in the "3 notch's extended" position and the right flap in the "no notch's extended" position can get a little squirrelly for you if you are not accustomed to landing when damaged
hope I cleared up the 120 mph? and hope this added part helps.....