Author Topic: This month's "FLIGHT JOURNAL"  (Read 1579 times)

Offline eddiek

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« on: July 18, 2003, 05:55:45 AM »
Interesting reading, though you have to take it with a grain of salt......
Top fighters rated for the ETO and PTO.
ETO:

#1:  P-47
#2:  FW-190 series

I like and respect Corky Meyer's opinions and write ups.  He was a test pilot for Grumman back then, when WWII was raging, and he got to fly all manner of aircraft.
What I keep wondering is if and when HTC and other flight sim makers are going to look at the data and adjust the F6F's true top speed to over 400 mph.  Meyer wrote a nice article about a year ago, in which he described side by side testing of the F4U and the Hellcat, and he described an error in the placement of the pitot tube for the airspeed indicator on the F6F that caused it to read slow.  Side by side testing showed the F6F to be every bit as fast as the Corsair ABOVE 5K, but below that the Corsair was faster.

FWIW, before the flaming starts, bear in mind that the fighter rating seems to be based on how much impact overall a fighter had on the war.  Based on that criteria, I kinda agree with their opinion.  The Jug and 190 did it all, and did it better than their counterparts.

Offline ra

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« Reply #1 on: July 18, 2003, 06:56:11 AM »
What were the best rated for the PTO?

Offline oboe

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« Reply #2 on: July 18, 2003, 07:02:44 AM »
I'd venture to guess the A6M series, and either the F6F or the
P-38.

Offline eddiek

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« Reply #3 on: July 18, 2003, 07:45:19 AM »
F6F was rated the best in the PTO.

Offline F4UDOA

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« Reply #4 on: July 18, 2003, 10:17:47 AM »
Eddiek,

I respect Corkey Meyers opinion as much as anyone but do you really expect the lead Grumman test pilot to pick anything but the F6F?

I have been trying to contact Mr.Meyer as I have several questions for him.

In the fall FJ is doing a special issue on the F4u. In general Flight Journal does not give very positive view of the F4U. In fact last year FJ did an issue where they reviewed the best WW2 fighters based on the findings of the 1944 joint fighter conferance. Barely a mention of the F4U was made even thought the pilots at the conferance voted the F4U the best carrier fighter by an overwhelming majority.

I already know without seeing the issue that it will be an "Ensign Eliminator special". It will never mention that the F4U started  replacing the Hellcat in 1944 when the Navy decided it was a superior fighter A/C and suitable if not equal as a carrier qualified fighter (and it was until the early 60's in the reserves). It will not mention the superior performance of the F4U compared to the F6F or the far superior ordinance carrying capability.

In fact the F6F was a true 400MPH fighter but by the time of late 1944 the production F4U-1A had a top speed of 430+MPH. This will not be mentioned in Flight Journal.

Rant mode off   :D

Offline udet

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« Reply #5 on: July 18, 2003, 12:41:11 PM »
Corky's approach is centered on overall effectivity. In now way was a the P47 better than the FW190, or the 109G :p

Offline rshubert

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« Reply #6 on: July 18, 2003, 01:26:42 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA
Eddiek,

I respect Corkey Meyers opinion as much as anyone but do you really expect the lead Grumman test pilot to pick anything but the F6F?

I have been trying to contact Mr.Meyer as I have several questions for him.

In the fall FJ is doing a special issue on the F4u. In general Flight Journal does not give very positive view of the F4U. In fact last year FJ did an issue where they reviewed the best WW2 fighters based on the findings of the 1944 joint fighter conferance. Barely a mention of the F4U was made even thought the pilots at the conferance voted the F4U the best carrier fighter by an overwhelming majority.

I already know without seeing the issue that it will be an "Ensign Eliminator special". It will never mention that the F4U started  replacing the Hellcat in 1944 when the Navy decided it was a superior fighter A/C and suitable if not equal as a carrier qualified fighter (and it was until the early 60's in the reserves). It will not mention the superior performance of the F4U compared to the F6F or the far superior ordinance carrying capability.

In fact the F6F was a true 400MPH fighter but by the time of late 1944 the production F4U-1A had a top speed of 430+MPH. This will not be mentioned in Flight Journal.

Rant mode off   :D


Actually, F4UDOA, you said it all in the first sentence.  It is an opinion call, and nobody's opinions are completely unbiased.  I noticed yours seem to be colored by your obvious love for the F4U, for example.

For the record, the F4U is one of my favorite aircraft of all time.

Offline F4UDOA

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« Reply #7 on: July 18, 2003, 02:20:53 PM »
Your right,

I am biased. But I'm not a contributing editor of a magazine.

My dissapointment is the attempt to re-write history by some authors or publications.

The facts are more than enough to make a  decision. If the topic of the artical which had the most kills I would be the first to say the F6F.

However this is not the case. In fact the F4U had far more kills in 1943 than the F6F when the war was still in doubt. The F6F scored most of it's kills in late 1944 in the Marianes campain. I think timing counts for something. FYI I have the docs to back this up.

The same can be said of the scores achieved by some aces in WW2. It is one thing to have 26 kills when your Joe Foss in an F4F-4 in 1942 and completely another to have 40 in a P-38 in late 1944. Bong had more kills but Foss faced tougher pilots and had less than a superior A/C to do it in.

But hey if we are just comparing numbers then there is no arguement from me who was the top ace.

Offline Widewing

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« Reply #8 on: July 18, 2003, 03:12:00 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA
Eddiek,

I respect Corkey Meyers opinion as much as anyone but do you really expect the lead Grumman test pilot to pick anything but the F6F?

I have been trying to contact Mr.Meyer as I have several questions for him.

In the fall FJ is doing a special issue on the F4u. In general Flight Journal does not give very positive view of the F4U. In fact last year FJ did an issue where they reviewed the best WW2 fighters based on the findings of the 1944 joint fighter conferance. Barely a mention of the F4U was made even thought the pilots at the conferance voted the F4U the best carrier fighter by an overwhelming majority.

I already know without seeing the issue that it will be an "Ensign Eliminator special". It will never mention that the F4U started  replacing the Hellcat in 1944 when the Navy decided it was a superior fighter A/C and suitable if not equal as a carrier qualified fighter (and it was until the early 60's in the reserves). It will not mention the superior performance of the F4U compared to the F6F or the far superior ordinance carrying capability.

In fact the F6F was a true 400MPH fighter but by the time of late 1944 the production F4U-1A had a top speed of 430+MPH. This will not be mentioned in Flight Journal.

Rant mode off   :D


Several things to mention.

Post war interviews of Japanese fighter pilots revealed that they considered the F6F their most dangerous foe. Not the P-38 or the F4U. Many of them believed that the Hellcat could match their late-war Zeros in maneuverability.

Even if we ignore the Japanese pilots, we can't ignore that the F6F shot down a great many Japanese aircraft than any other type, Navy, Marines or Army.

As the war progressed and Vought fixed or minimized the problems with the F4U that caused the Navy to reject it for carrier duty, they began to appear in greater numbers. Nonetheless, the primary carrier fighter remained the F6F through the end of the war. Production continued until November of 1945, albeit at a much reduced rate (just like every other military aircraft). One can easily trace the increase in F4U deployment to the Kamakazi threat. As the Kamakazis became the greater threat, the Navy increased the number of fighters deployed aboard ship. Many land based Marine squadrons were hastily carrier qualified and sent to the fleet (with this process beginning in October of 1944, with the first new deployments on 12/28/44 aboard the Essex).

F4Us could lift more weight of ordnance than the F6F, but seldom if ever did so from a carrier. There were strict rules in place for maximum loads for both deck runs and catapult launches. Virtually all Corsairs flying with very heavy loads operated from shore facilities.

When the F4U-4 appeared in February of 1945, the Corsair had finally and clearly overtaken the F6F as fighter. However, that would be short lived as the the F8F was being delivered to squadrons and would begin arriving in theater by August. In terms of fighter capability, the F8F was superior to the F4U-4 in every category except maximum speed above 20,000 feet. Oddly, nearly every publication I've seen quotes Navy numbers for the F8F where it's maximum speed is listed as 421 mph at 19,700 feet. However, these numbers came from a single aircraft, tested at full load. Grumman test data shows a maximum speed of 445 mph (exactly the same that Grumman AND the Navy list for the F7F). French Armee De l'Air data also indicates a speed in excess of 440 mph for the F8F-1.

Not to divert too much from the basic topic, let me present a few figures on the F8F

F8F-1
Empty weight: 7,070 lbs
Gross weight; 9,386 lbs
Max power: 2,100 hp
Max speed: 421 mph (yeah, sure :))

F8F-2
Empty weight: 7,690 lbs
Gross weight: 10,426 lbs
Max power: 2,250 hp
Max speed: 447 mph.

On the plus side for the F8F-2 had a slightly redesigned cowling reportedly worth 6 mph. On the down side was an increase in weight by over half a ton. The slight increase in power (just about 6%) could not completely overcome the 10% increase in weight. And, this is reflected in the reduced climb rate compared to the F8F-1. Yet, the Navy test data says the much heavier -2 is 26 mph faster. Grumman was incredulous at the time and argued that the Navy's data was flawed. It seems that they had a strong case too. Bob Hall was convinced that the Navy intentionally avoided using the water injection, just as they did when testing the prototype in 1944 and stated such in an internal Grumman memo. I don't recall the Navy Engineering officer's name who was placed in charge of the F8F project, but do recall that one was hired by United Aircraft in late 1945 (United Aircraft was the parent company of Vought). Competition between Vought and Grumman was more than keen, it was pure cut-throat. Grumman and Vought both placed employees in the rival's company and corporate spying was rampant. It wasn't uncommon for Navy and Army test pilots to be offered "special" incentives to make sure a particular aircraft performed as well as advertised, or even better in some cases.

Has anyone researched why the F8F was not available in early 1945? It seems that the powers in charge were unwilling to transition from the F6F to the F8F and suffer a short term loss of production while Grumman retooled their production line. Grumman was forced to maintain their delivery rate and build F8Fs with excess manpower and virtually no production space. Meanwhile, the F4U was being built by Vought, Goodyear and Brewster! United Aircraft had some serious pull with the War Production Board, who wouldn't even take Leroy Grumman's phone calls... Don't ya just love politics? Eastern Aircraft (GM) was more than willing to begin immediate retooling for the F8F, but once again the War Production Board felt that the FM-2 should remain in production. Not until February of 1945 was Eastern handed an order for the F3M-1 Bearcat. Even then, they were to continue building FM-2s until after the war ended.

More than a few people have claimed that the WPB killed as many American airmen as did the enemy. But what does one expect when it was loaded down with former excutives from Curtiss, United Aircraft and General Motors?

But, back to the original discussion.

Vought's F4U series were tremendous aircraft, with the F4U-4 being the best all around fighter-bomber of the war. However, as a pure fighter the F6F was marginally superior to the F4U-1 series. It had no vices. It was as rugged as anything else flying. It was a joy to fly around the ship (the F4U was decidedly NOT a joy in the pattern and especially on final). In terms of performance, the F4U-1 had a slight edge in speed at all altitudes and a significantly faster roll rate. Climb, turn rate and stability all favored the Hellcat.

When the F4U-4 arrived, it reset the high water mark, but only until the F8F-1 arrived.

I do agree that the F4U doesn't get the press it so richly deserves.

My regards,

Widewing
« Last Edit: July 18, 2003, 03:17:59 PM by Widewing »
My regards,

Widewing

YGBSM. Retired Member of Aces High Trainer Corps, Past President of the DFC, retired from flying as Tredlite.

Offline F4UDOA

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« Reply #9 on: July 18, 2003, 04:49:27 PM »
Widewing,

On the subject of which was the penultimate dogfighter of it's time I would be a fool to argue that and other A/C other than the F8F would be king.

However

1. No F8F ever saw combat in WW2.

2. The F4U was in US service much longer than the F8F because of range and versitility.

3. I can provide with one pilots account of a dogfight between an F8F and F4U-1D in which the F4U was victorious. This was a wingtip to wing tip on the runway start as well. I recall the story of the F8F pilot making two overhead passes on a P-51 or 38 (not sure) before it could get off the runway. Not so here. The pilot was Don Engin Author of "Wings and Warriors" former combat pilot, test pilot, Commander of the USS America aircraft carrier as well as former curator of the National Air and Space museam.

Quote
Vought's F4U series were tremendous aircraft, with the F4U-4 being the best all around fighter-bomber of the war. However, as a pure fighter the F6F was marginally superior to the F4U-1 series. It had no vices. It was as rugged as anything else flying. It was a joy to fly around the ship (the F4U was decidedly NOT a joy in the pattern and especially on final). In terms of performance, the F4U-1 had a slight edge in speed at all altitudes and a significantly faster roll rate. Climb, turn rate and stability all favored the Hellcat.


I absolutely dissagree here.

I will quote three unbiased sources of considerable weight.

1. The 1944 Joint Fighter Conferance- Chose the F4U-1D as the best carrier production fighter over the F6F-5 61% to 31%. Also it is interesting to note that only about 30% of the attendies were Navy or Marine. Most were contract, British or Army.

2. The US Navy in Mid 1944 chose the F4U-1 to replace the F6F saying it was a superior figher and at least as suitable for carrier operation. I have the exact quote from the Navy but I have to look it up. It comes from Barret Tillmans F4U in combat.

3. The Socioty Of Experamental test pilots- They tested a F6F-5, FG-1D(F4U-1D, P-47D-40 and P-51D. They chose the F4U as the best dogfighting A/C because of light stick forces, performance and get this, a gentle stall. They were very critical of the F6F because of high stick and rudder forces as well as an inability to turn right at low speed. It is also important to note that their test were done with the F4U at a weight of 11,000LBS and the F6F was at 10,500lbs. So the F6F relative weight should have been 500lbs more than the F4U. So even with a 1,000lbs advantage it still did not win the evaluation.

The SETP as they are known is the kicker because Corkey Meyer is the founder of that orginization.

I wonder if Boone Guyton had written that artical if it would have been different?

BTW Widewing I really enjoy these conversations so keep it coming please.
:D

Offline funkedup

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« Reply #10 on: July 18, 2003, 04:58:18 PM »
Those are the two planes I would have wanted to be in if it was my butt getting shot at.  Inlines are nice, but radials get you home when you screw up.

Offline 2Hawks

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« Reply #11 on: July 18, 2003, 07:00:12 PM »
I am surprised the History Channel was even able to properly identify prop jobs from jets....

Offline Guppy

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« Reply #12 on: July 18, 2003, 07:37:38 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Widewing
Post war interviews of Japanese fighter pilots revealed that they considered the F6F their most dangerous foe. Not the P-38 or the F4U. Many of them believed that the Hellcat could match their late-war Zeros in maneuverability.
I've read some of those interviews too.

The curious thing about it is that the Hellcat was also mentioned as being superior in roll to the Corsair, which doesn't seem to be the case from the charts I've seen. Moreover, at least one evaluation apparently concluded that comparative manoeuvrability was similar for both the F4U and F6F versus the A6M5 (i.e. only turn with a Zero above 250 mph; can stay with it briefly at just over 200).

I came away with a definite impression that the Japanese pilots had formed opinions on the basis of the relative tactics used; F4Us and P-38s stuck to the hit-and-run approach, and thus were considered rather unmanoeuvrable. F6Fs seem to have fought more like super-F4Fs, using good teamwork, firepower and durability to enter and win a many-on-many dogfight.

Offline Widewing

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« Reply #13 on: July 18, 2003, 09:12:19 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA
Widewing,

On the subject of which was the penultimate dogfighter of it's time I would be a fool to argue that and other A/C other than the F8F would be king.

However

1. No F8F ever saw combat in WW2.

2. The F4U was in US service much longer than the F8F because of range and versitility.

3. I can provide with one pilots account of a dogfight between an F8F and F4U-1D in which the F4U was victorious. This was a wingtip to wing tip on the runway start as well. I recall the story of the F8F pilot making two overhead passes on a P-51 or 38 (not sure) before it could get off the runway. Not so here. The pilot was Don Engin Author of "Wings and Warriors" former combat pilot, test pilot, Commander of the USS America aircraft carrier as well as former curator of the National Air and Space museam.



I absolutely dissagree here.

I will quote three unbiased sources of considerable weight.

1. The 1944 Joint Fighter Conferance- Chose the F4U-1D as the best carrier production fighter over the F6F-5 61% to 31%. Also it is interesting to note that only about 30% of the attendies were Navy or Marine. Most were contract, British or Army.

2. The US Navy in Mid 1944 chose the F4U-1 to replace the F6F saying it was a superior figher and at least as suitable for carrier operation. I have the exact quote from the Navy but I have to look it up. It comes from Barret Tillmans F4U in combat.

3. The Socioty Of Experamental test pilots- They tested a F6F-5, FG-1D(F4U-1D, P-47D-40 and P-51D. They chose the F4U as the best dogfighting A/C because of light stick forces, performance and get this, a gentle stall. They were very critical of the F6F because of high stick and rudder forces as well as an inability to turn right at low speed. It is also important to note that their test were done with the F4U at a weight of 11,000LBS and the F6F was at 10,500lbs. So the F6F relative weight should have been 500lbs more than the F4U. So even with a 1,000lbs advantage it still did not win the evaluation.

The SETP as they are known is the kicker because Corkey Meyer is the founder of that orginization.

I wonder if Boone Guyton had written that artical if it would have been different?

BTW Widewing I really enjoy these conversations so keep it coming please.
:D


I know several members of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots, Dudley Henriques (former President) being the guy I know best.

One of the things that jumps out at you reading the Report of the Joint Fighter Conference is the utter divergence of opinion. One guy loves a characteristic, another hates it. Every test reads that way. I have always viewed this "conference" as a boondoggle, with little merit. The vast majority of the pilots never flew a combat mission, with a considerable portion being civilians. That in my mind, marks their opinions as being of very limited value. As the late, great Erik Shilling said, "If you didn't fly it in combat, you were not qualified to judge its attributes and limits." He was referring to the P-40.

Yet, even using the reports from this highly suspect boondoggle, we find that the F6F was rated as having the best cockpit layout. It finished well ahead of the F4U-1D in engine controls, outward visibility, and pilot comfort. Of all the fighters tested, the F6F-5 was voted as having the best rudder, best ailerons at low speed, best stability, best stall and best instrument and night flying characteristics.

But here is where the test report goes wacky. Both the F4U-1D and F6F-5 were rated as better fighters than the F4U-4 above and below 25,000 feet!! :eek: Indeed, the fighter voted best above 25k was the P-47D-30, even though the P-47M was part of the program! Talk about creating a credibility gap...... Still wonder why I have little regard for their conclusions? ;)

I read that little book that compared the various fighters (in the late 1980s or early 90s, I think). I remember complaints about the FG-1s rudder. I also recall that the F6F proved to accelerate faster in a dive too. But, unfortunately, I don't have a copy handy.

As too the F4U-1D beating the F8F. I find this story to be a bit over the top for several reasons.

1) Acceleration, the F8F accelerated at better than twice the rate of the F4U-1D.
2) Takeoff run, the F8F required just under 400 feet to get airborne, the F4U-1D needed 700 feet. So, the F8F would be climbing out while the Corsair was just halfway to V2 speed.

If they took off side by side, the F8F pilot clearly had not applied full power, or he would have been long gone.

Finally, there's the saying, "on any given day". Gloster Gladiators shot down Bf-109Fs. But, we all recoginze that the Gladiator was vastly inferior to the Messerschmitt.

One other thing about the F6F-5 as modeled in AH. It lacks the provision to carry two 150 gallon drop tanks under the wings, along with the centerline tank. This gave the Hellcat a total fuel load of 700 gallons (as compared to about 560 gallons max for the F4U-1D). That translates into a max range in excess of 2,400 miles. It should be noted that the Navy rarely needed employ the three tanks or even just the under-wing tanks. But, it would be nice to have it available in the game.

My regards,

Widewing
« Last Edit: July 18, 2003, 09:23:32 PM by Widewing »
My regards,

Widewing

YGBSM. Retired Member of Aces High Trainer Corps, Past President of the DFC, retired from flying as Tredlite.

Offline GRUNHERZ

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« Reply #14 on: July 18, 2003, 11:01:11 PM »
Remember reading that F4U vs F8F runway "dogfight" thing. Dont remember the specifics but the F4U pilot cheated somehow.