These two great birds combat debuted the same month ... the stats:
Hellcats - flew 45% of all fighter sorties during the Pacific War ... achieved a kill ratio of 19:1, and produced > 300 Aces.
Corsair - flew 44% of all fighter sorties during the Pacific War (only 15% from carrier decks) ... achieved a kill ratio of 11.1, and produced < 35 (? -- anyway, vastly fewer) Aces.
Hellcats anytime, Baby.
Food for thought... if the Hellcat was so great... where was it during Korea, when Corsairs were going feet dry every day?....
The Navy did that w/ me, too. :sleep_125the Navy turned them into drones....
The Helldiver was not warmly received by it's aircrews, most of whom wanted to go back to Dauntless's.
the Navy turned them into drones....
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There's one at NAF Andrews, gear up on a swiveling base as a windsock, the lights work and the pilots head moves back and forth. It was a drone that went nordo on takeoff and ran into the control van![]()
Correct. Patrick is near Cocoa Beach. But it is also correct that Patrick was previously "NAS Banana River" prior to being handed over to the (then) new USAF.I thought Patrick was up by Cocoa Beach...not Ft. Lauderdale.
I think that's putting it kindly. The "beast" was truly hated. Often counted up there with the Gutless Cutlass and AJ Savage as worst Naval Aircraft to ever go into service.
Funny, this didn't stop 'em from fielding the F8F for awhile . . .Non-folding wings, whispy gear, non-radial engine, slow speed handling characteristics, not stressed for CV ops, huge low speed/wave-off torque roll considerations ... and many more, I am sure.