Nothing but mad respect for you mountain man . The whistling death name is a myth however .
hlbly!
Completely possible. I've always thought it odd that the folks that had the most reason to fear it/hate it would give it such a complimentary name.
I've seen it referred to that way in print, but I suspect that ALL nicknames for the F4U are largely "myth". Even if a given nickname is "fact", it's possible/probable that the meaning we currently assign that name is out of context. I'd even argue that any given nickname had different meanings for different people at the time the nickname was created and used in "real time".
An F4U pilot referring to the F4U as the "Ensign Eliminator", for example, is probably using the implications of that nickname to brag about his ability to some (and maybe a
large)extent. Flying a "nasty" plane inflates the status of the individual who successfully flies it.
The "worse" attributes an aircraft is credited with, the better the pilot is inferred to be if he can simply survive in that suicidal death-trap! If the plane is "deadly" to an inexperienced pilot, then obviously the pilot who regularly flies it is a step above the others... And what if he's successful in it? Then he's obviously about as good as they come! And if he's more successful in the suicidal death-trap than most other pilots who fly it? He's obviously elite!
How many ensigns did the "Ensign Eliminator" eliminate in reality?
A nickname attributed to an aircraft probably says far more about the pilot's who flew/named it than the plane itself...
It just boils down to the fact that a flight model cannot be considered "accurate" based on whether it meets the modern, inexperienced, and unfamiliar expectations of an individual basing his opinions on a historic nickname and anecdotal evidence.