The Chance Vought F4U Corsair was a fighter aircraft that saw service in World War II and the Korean War. Goodyear-built Corsairs were designated FG and Brewster-built aircraft F3A.
When flown in 1940, the XF4U-1 became the first U.S. single-engine production aircraft capable of 400 mph in level flight. It was a remarkable achievement for Vought, as carrier aircraft are, compared to land-based counterparts, overbuilt to withstand the extreme stress of deck landings.
The Corsair is also popularly known as 'The Sweetheart of the Marianas' and sometimes also as 'The Sweetheart of Okinawa' for its roles in these campaigns respectively - the names were given by ground troops rather than by Naval and Marine personnel.
The Corsair has been named the official aircraft of Connecticut, due to its connection with Sikorsky Aircraft, in legislation sponsored by state senator George "Doc" Gunther; Gunther has also organized a Corsair Celebration and Symposium at Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford, Connecticut, on Memorial Day, May 29, 2006.
Another performance enhancing feature of the aircraft was its streamlining. The F4U was the first Navy plane which retracted its landing gear completely into the wing, leaving a completely smooth and flat undersurface. Air intakes were supplied by slots in the inboard leading edges of the wings, rather than by protruding scoops. Panels were attached with flush rivets, and the newly developed technique of spot welding.
However, numerous technical problems had to be solved before the Corsair entered service. Carrier suitability was especially troublesome, leading to changes of the landing gear, tailwheel, and tailhook. Additionally, a small spoiler was added to the leading edge of the starboard wing to reduce adverse stall characteristics. A noticeable problem with the Corsair design was its difficulty to recover from a developed spin, as its wing shape interfered with elevator control. Due to visibility problems on landing caused by a combination of the pilot's position and the length of the nose, which made landing tricky for poorly trained pilots, as well as the availability of the more docile Hellcat, Corsairs were not introduced in any numbers for U.S. carrier service until the end of 1944. When the aircraft finally saw combat, it was a superb fighter compared to its contemporaries, achieving a 10 to 1 victory ratio. However, nearly as many Corsairs were lost to landing accidents as the type downed enemy aircraft. Growing pains aside, Marine Corps squadrons readily took to the radical new fighter.
From February 1943 onward, the "U-Bird" flew from Guadalcanal and ultimately other bases in the Solomon Islands. Corsairs were flown by the famous Black Sheep Squadron VMF-214 led by Marine Fighter Ace Maj. Gregory "Pappy" Boyington in an area of the Solomon Islands called The Slot. Corsairs also served well as fighter-bombers in the Central Pacific and the Philippines. Night fighter versions were produced, equipping Navy and Marine units ashore and afloat. British units flying from aircraft carriers solved the landing visibility problem by approaching the carrier in a medium left-hand turn, which allowed the pilot to keep the carrier's deck in view over the dip in the port wing, allowing safe carrier operations. At war's end, Corsairs were ashore on Okinawa combating the Kamikaze suicide pilots and flying from fleet and escort carriers.
During the war, Corsair production expanded beyond Vought to include Brewster (F3A) and Goodyear (FG) models. Allied forces flying the aircraft included the British Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm and the Royal New Zealand Air Force. Eventually, more than 12,500 F4Us would be built, comprising sixteen separate models.
There were four versions used by the British as the end, and were named as such: Corsair I for F4U-1s, Corsair II for F4U-1As, Corsair III for F3A-1Ds, and Corsair IV for FG-1Ds.
A total of 2,012 Corsairs were supplied to the United Kingdom.
However by the time the Corsairs arrived, there were virtually no Japanese aircraft left in New Zealand's allocated sectors of the Southern Pacific, and despite the RNZAF Squadrons extending their operations to more northern islands, the Corsairs were primarily used for close support of American, Australian and New Zealand soldiers fighting the Japanese. New Zealand pilots noted the Corsair's poor forward view and tendency to ground loop, but found this could be solved by pilot training in curved approaches before use from rough forward airbases. 14 Squadron took its Corsairs to Japan as part of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force. Two privately owned Corsairs remain airworthy in RNZAF colours.
The AU Corsair was a ground-attack version produced for the Korean War. The Pratt & Whitney R-2800 engine, while it was supercharged, was not as highly "blown" as on the F4U.
The movie Taegukgi: The Brotherhood of War, set during the Korean War, has a battle scene with Corsairs in a ground attack role.
Carrier-based aircraft | U.S. fighter aircraft 1940-1949
Chance Vought F4U | Chance Vought F4U Corsair | Chance Vought F4U Corsair | F4U Corsair | F4Uコルセア (戦闘機) | Vought F4U Corsair | F4U Corsair
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"F4U Corsair".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world