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Enjoy!
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Wake was bombed several hours after Pearl Harbor, and was lost two weeks later. It remained in Japanese control for the rest of the war. Four Marine F4F Wildcats defended Wake after the initial bombing raid, and sank a Japanese destroyer in a failed invasion attempt. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Wake_Island http://www.oldgloryprints.com/Cat_an..._Over_Wake.jpg http://www.defensemedianetwork.com/w...ake-Island.jpg |
I seem to remember that the F6F saw its first major air to air combat during a raid on Wake Island on October 5th and 6th 1943, where it proved its superiority over the Zero.
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They have, maybe, 120 planes there from 10-12 different countries. |
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Thx for correcting that. |
I went to the Chino airshow a few years back... Wow! Most warbirds I've ever seen flying at once.
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This is an older video but it's still worth watching. Lots of info and they fold the wings near the end.
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cool video.
How easy do those wings fold back! Amazing. |
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Everything else just folded straight up. I built a model Hcat as a kid and it had that hinge as part of the kit, so the wings twisted and folded back on the kit, too. Very cool (Monagram, I think) https://modelingmadness.com/review/allies/us/lacombemcf6f.htm |
My father-in-law flew both the Corsair and Hellcat toward the end of WW2 through Korea. His favorite was the Corsair but he thought the Hellcat was much easier to fly.
We went to a Confederate Air show in the early 1980's and it was the first time he had seen a Corsair in about 25 years. It was the emotional I have ever seen him. |
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I interviewed a USMC Huey turned Phantom driver from Vietnam for a project in one of my senior year college courses. Great stories. He ultimately regretted the transition saying he didn't fit in with the fighter guys as they were too competitive in everything they did. He did remember busting Mach 2 though! |
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^^ During the Korean war many Mustangs were brought out of storage and guard units were activated for the ground attack role.
The Mustangs were certainly capable but were also vulnerable to ground fire from below. A hit to the cooling system/radiator resulted in a many losses. As you probably know, Corsairs were also used for (mostly) ground attack in Korea but the air cooled radials could take more punishment without having to worry about loss of coolant. |
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The Navy/Marines (Corsair) didn't fly AAF planes (Mustang), generally. They avoided liquid-cooled engines like the plague. |
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The Skyraider went on to build on the rugged radial CAS role. Until it got the Merlin engine, the Mustang was used quite a bit in WWII for ground attack. |
In SoCal we get a lot of air shows and I have seen a Hellcat a few times, also a rare P-38. Lots of Mustangs still around. A family friend with "too much money" owned a P-51 for a while and though a rated airline pilot it scared the sheit out of him. Add a little too much throttle on takeoff and the prop torque would flip the plane over. He sold it fairly quickly.
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I remember Spitfire pilots talking about that too, and the Spit had much narrower gear. Adding throttle too quickly was the issue.
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