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@ericthemauve8 ай бұрын
How about hiring a real human being to do the narration?
@endi33866 ай бұрын
@@ericthemauve A real human does do the narration
@ericthemauve6 ай бұрын
@@endi3386 Really? Why is he trying to imitate a Robovoice?
@endi33866 ай бұрын
@@ericthemauve If you think that he sounds like a 'robovoice' I don't think you have any idea what they sound like lmao
@bonehead27686 ай бұрын
@@ericthemauveNo, he's not imitating a robot - he just has a very dull, flat way of narration. if he'd try to imitate a Bot it MIGHT add some energy to his otherwise droning voice and give it some life, eh??
@Kysushanz9 ай бұрын
When I first started work, my office senior had flown Kitty Hawk and Corsairs with the RNZAF in the Pacific. He had some fascinating stories to tell over a beer or two! He really liked the Corsair. Sadly, he is now long gone - his name for remembrance was Richard Henderson Looker. RIP Dick.
@straitjacket86898 ай бұрын
Wish I could have heard his stories must have been epic
@DarrenWalley7 ай бұрын
@straitjacket8689 I bet.
@larrybremer49305 ай бұрын
I got to meet Pappy Boyington during my service in the USMC. The man's career was legendary in so many ways, both good and bad.
@hangie658 ай бұрын
Excellent and well-told story. What a sad and ignominious end to such a wonderful aircraft in British service.
@10_rds_Fire_For_Effect9 ай бұрын
Two Corsairs in New Zealand. One fully restored and flying in it's original WWII Pacific campaign RNZAF markings, and one currently under restoration. The one flying is the only surviving original Corsair out of approx 300+ that served with the Royal New Zealand Air Force against the Japanese. That Corsair sat in a museum in Auckland, not in flying condition until it was sold to an American buyer who took it back to the US. He repainted it in US Navy livery and restored it to flying condition. It was again purchased by a NZ buyer and shipped back to NZ in 2004. It has recently been repainted back to it's WWII RNZAF livery and will be flying in airshows in NZ.
@ajknaup35304 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this. I'm a huge WWII history fan & I'd no idea thr RNZAF had so many fighters in the fight.
@ryanparker72582 ай бұрын
I’m glad that that aircraft went back and repainted in it original colours and is still being flown. Who ever brought it and shipped it back to New Zealand and repainted it a big thanks from a WW2 UK nut. ( I’m also an army veteran)
@FinsburyPhil9 ай бұрын
It's worth noting that FAA 'fighters' like the Fulmar and later Firefly were built to a requirement for operations where they weren't expected to meet other fighters but long range patrol bombers far from land. Because of the length of flights involved they were specified with a navigator ('Observer' in FAA terms), so were two seaters - they were never going to be on a par with single seat fighters.
@Kevin-mx1vi9 ай бұрын
@@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qeNo-one can see into the future so they designed aircraft for the purpose they would serve according to the best knowledge they had at the time, and it was quite reasonably assumed that FAA fighters were likely to face slower long range bombers and torpedo aircraft, so they were designed to outperform those types. Remember too that British naval aircraft were designed for use primarily over the North Atlantic where there were no nimble carrier based fighters such as those possessed by the Japanese.
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe9 ай бұрын
@Kevin-mx1vi millions of lives at stake here. British invented carriers for Chist sake. Blame it on theRAF
@Kevin-mx1vi9 ай бұрын
@@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe What are you saying ? That the people who layed out the specification for the aircraft should have been superhuman and forseen the future ? Get real.
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe9 ай бұрын
@Kevin-mx1vi It's just fine to lose a argument. You will do better next time. Have a great weekend! Don't ya know.
@Kevin-mx1vi9 ай бұрын
@@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe You are either a troll or an idiot. Same difference, really.
@antonalerte11898 ай бұрын
I will admit that I wasn’t expecting much from the video besides “The FAA got the Corsair because they needed good carrier planes” but this is a very well done and researched presentation. The narrative script and use of archival footage is exemplary. Thank you.
@ibnLodinАй бұрын
Agreed. It's told in a refreshing way that's entertaining yet very informative
@veritasvincit27458 ай бұрын
My grandad was a Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm Airframe Rigger and eventually got stationed at RNAS Coimbatore HMS Garuda in India. He worked on a lot of different aircraft types including Swordfish, Wildcats and Seafires but loved the Corsair. Easy to fix and didn't throw many problems up. He passed away in 1988 when I was 20 but I was inquisitive enough to ask about these things when I was young.
@billfarley91674 ай бұрын
British designed aircraft were not known to be friendly to engine mechanics. American designs made it easier for fast maintenance.
@russellmarriott93969 ай бұрын
One of the great fighters of WW2. A fantastic looking aircraft and desperately sad that so many were dumped at the end of the war.
@chriscarter57208 ай бұрын
But then the RAF, RNAS and all the allied Air Forces had more aircraft and pilots than were needed for peacetime operations. The pilots could be demobbed and sent home, the only thing to do with the aircraft was to scrap them. My dad's last trip was to fly a Spitfire MkVIII from Darwin to Oakey to join the pile of Spits which were scrapped at the unit in the years following the war. My dad, Flt Lt T.C. 'Nick' Carter 549 Sqn RAF came home, raised a family and lived until 6 June 1999.
@maxschell88236 ай бұрын
Read the book "Hap Arnold" by Bill Yenne. At the end of WWII thousands of aircraft were scrapped not just the F4U Corsairs e.g B-17, B-24, B-29, P-51 etc. . This pull quote from page 285. "USAAF disposed of 33,600 aircraft, including 10,934 heavy bombers and 8,014 fighters."
@patrickcroft31584 ай бұрын
The US used them in Korea.
@manmonkee4 ай бұрын
@@chriscarter5720 I actually heard that dumping the Corsairs was Lend Lease avoidance, Any plane that survived the war had to be paid for in full or shipped back to the USA. Not sure the details but it was cheaper to dump them in the sea. Thats what someone told me anyway,,,,,
@geordiedog17499 ай бұрын
Hampton Grey was attacking a destroyer thought to be about to evacuate the Japanese emperor hence the importance attached to it.
@Conn30Mtenor9 ай бұрын
was killed and won the VC.
@TheWolfsnack4 ай бұрын
He was also a Canadian (from British Columbia) rather that a Brit.
@Dog.soldier195012 сағат бұрын
@@TheWolfsnackBrit light,as Canadians were British subjects until1947
@100nortonfan78 ай бұрын
In the early '70's, there were a few Corsairs in El Salvador's Air Force, stationed at Ilopango airport. I was working for Pan Am at the time, and enjoyed watching these planes fly by, land and taxi to their respective hangars across the field form me. Loved seeing them!
@BlackballBoy5 ай бұрын
My Dad was on HMS Illustrious, 1941-45, and had photos of Corsairs in his possession - some bent on deck landings. I met an NZ pilot of these great fighters once. Thanks for the video.
@scottmccambley7649 ай бұрын
The Hampton Gray Corsair was originally a Goodyear replica. It was the pride and joy of the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum and often few tandem with their Spit, Hurricane and Mustang or B25 on weekends. Never knew dark sea blue could look so cool. Gray now has a Royal Canadian Navy Icebreaker named after him. There are six in the class all named after Canadian War Heros
@boomerang48648 ай бұрын
My father was one of the Fleet Air Arm pilots who taught the Americans to land on carriers. He was a test pilot and flew all the planes you mentioned. He received a congratulatory telegram from the US for a job well done. Have all this in his log book to this day.
@brucestarr44388 ай бұрын
The USN & USMC owe a debt of gratitude to Airmen like your father. They figured out how to successfully make the Corsairs a fleet carrier aircraft.
@mikeholland10316 ай бұрын
A myth that has been debunked a thousand times
@jackasswhiskyandpintobeans93445 ай бұрын
I doubt that.
@bigwoody47044 ай бұрын
excuse me, but By the end of 1942 4 of the 5 US aircraft carries got sunk in the massive battles in the Pacific. At the time (DEC.'41) of the sinking of the RN ships Repulse and Price of Wales Britain had 4 carriers - one active carrier in the North Atlantic,one had been sunk,one had run aground in Jamaica and had to get repaired in Virginia(Hampton Roads I believe) and the last carrier sat in Scapa Flow waiting to train & fill out the crew as of Dec 8. The point being the USA had been taking off from aircraft carriers long before your(Boomerangs) father was around. Now if you are talking about landing corse airs on British ships maybe. As the Pacific fleet was using them as land based as The Corsair’s cockpit was so far back in its fuselage that Porter found it difficult to see the landing signal officers on the port side of its deck. The fighter’s ultra-long “hose nose” made it nearly impossible for the pilot to get timely feedback to make corrections to his approach. In fall 1942, Lieutenant Commander Sam Porter tested the feasibility of operating the Navy’s bent-wing fighter from the deck of the escort carriers. When the Corsair thumped down on the deck, the landing gear’s oleos-shock-absorbing struts-bottomed out, then bounced back like giant pogo sticks, causing the airplane to bound over the arresting wires. If other aircraft had been parked on the forward part of the flight decks, there would have been a pile-up. But the compromised visibility and wild bounce didn’t frighten Porter as much as the airplane’s behavior during the moments in between. Seconds from touchdown, flying slow and low, with flaps, gear, and arresting hook buzzing in the slipstream, the Corsair suddenly stalled. And the way it stalled would have terrified any pilot. As the airspeed bled off, the left wing-with almost no advance warning-lost lift, rolling the airplane abruptly to port. Porter rightly feared that when a less experienced aviator was faced with the Corsair’s nasty behavior, he would instinctively jam the throttle forward in a desperate attempt to grab raw horsepower to claw his way out of trouble. The sudden torque unleashed from the fighter’s powerful R-2800 engine and its 13-foot, 4-inch propeller would exacerbate the bank to the left, promptly flipping the aircraft onto its back just feet above the waves. That would have been a deadly predicament that not even the most skillful flier could escape from. As currently configured, the Corsair was a death trap, living up to its nickname: “Ensign Eliminator.” The vicious asymmetric stall was quickly mitigated once the forces acting on the aircraft were fully understood. The fighter’s monstrous propeller blades, digging into the air, shoved a twisting spiral of prop wash aft that resulted in dissimilar airflow over the wings. The left wing lost lift first, and it happened fast. But counteracting that stall was tricky. The Corsair descended to the deck at a dramatic nose-up angle of attack (up to 17 degrees). At the slow speed required for landing and in that unusual attitude, the airplane’s control surfaces were all but useless in those crucial moments before touchdown. Vought engineers and the Navy analysts participating in the carrier trials realized that they would have to diminish the airflow over the “good,” or starboard, wing-causing the Corsair’s wings to lose lift simultaneously. In order to do it, a spoiler, or “stall strip,” was affixed to the leading edge of the starboard wing, just outboard of the gun ports. Only about six inches long and about three inches wide, the simple triangular thingamabob degraded the aerodynamic performance of the right wing and made its lift roughly match that of the left. Thereafter, the Corsair behaved predictably; In late 1942 and early 1943, sailors fashioned the first versions of the stall strip from simple blocks of wood for Corsairs already in service, while assembly lines at Vought, Goodyear, and Brewster soon added factory-built metal stall strips to each new aircraft. The British Royal Navy’s Fleet Air Arm pilots(1945) developed a long, curving landing approach to keep the carrier’s deck in sight until the last moments before touchdown. When the bugs were ironed out, the F4U hit its stride. Vought’s venerable “U-Bird” went on to become one of the best naval fighters of World War II, racking up 2,140 victories in aerial combat. Only 189 Corsairs were lost to enemy aircraft.
@brandioliver8153 ай бұрын
Yes that's I've heard My fellow Americans hated the plan but when the British taught them to land at an angle BINGO
@derekowens18179 ай бұрын
The Fulmar was not a development of the Battle, but was derived from the Fairey P4/34, a different aircraft altogether. D
@Tim_Porter9 ай бұрын
FYI, ref the “Ensign Eliminator” moniker. Ensign, a naval rank, is pronounced like n-sun rather then on-sign.
@Adrella_Highwing9 ай бұрын
Not gunna to lie, that really threw me. Was going to leave a similar comment
@ericdeer58878 ай бұрын
I thought he said “on-side eliminator”
@francoistombe8 ай бұрын
Equivalent to midshipman.
@ericdeer58878 ай бұрын
@@francoistombeno, in US Naval service a midshipman is an officer cadet, an ensign is a the initial grade of the commissioned officer ranks.
@danl.9098 ай бұрын
The narration is probably by an AI 'bot.
@tombrunila26958 ай бұрын
I recommend the book "Carrier Pilot" by Norman Hanson a FAA pilot, he flew Corsairs in the Pacific.
@rossmansell58778 ай бұрын
Yep..good book. Google Fleet Air Arm books..quite anumber written by WW2 pilots....
@mac220119648 ай бұрын
My Farther in Law Richard A F Allen DFC and Bar was on that Turpitz raid flying flack suppression. A great guy who sadly passed away in 2014. I asked him what it was like, deliberately flying at a gun sighted to kill you. He said they worked out a tactic that meant it was easy to mauve around the tracer as one would start a long straffing dive, as the guns turned on them a second aircraft would come in lower and to the left to deliver the actual straffing. It was very effective and the managed to knock out almost all of the AA.
@alanwakefield24535 ай бұрын
Remarkable I'm constantly amazed by the ingenuity of that generation. In the eighties I was privileged to work as an aircraft engineer on two Spitfires in the UK ,the beautiful engineering design and production accomplished with slide rule and micrometre is too be held in the highest regard.
@MrKen-wy5dk2 ай бұрын
"mauve"? Is that British for "move"? That's why I stopped watching "Dr. Who". The Brits don't know how to speak English.
@Capt-Harpoon9 ай бұрын
Thanks for a nice video. As a Corsair enthusiast and RC aircraft modeler most of the story is well known to me but it was very well presented. I did not know about the attack at Bodø Norway. As a Norwegian it’s a bit special that the only place Corsairs operated in Europe during WW2 was in Norway.
@stupidhat17799 ай бұрын
That was new for me also, quite an important mission.
@k1200ltse9 ай бұрын
To find out more about the Corsair's introduction into service & combat in the Pacific, I highly recommend the book "Carrier Pilot" by Norman A Hanson, who flew them out of HMS Illustrious. Its a great insight into how they flew & were used.
@clivekaine90368 ай бұрын
I agree, it's a great read.
@DrBLReid4 ай бұрын
I knew a WW2 USMC Corsair pilot when I was young in Alabama. Mr. George made a USMC Capt & fighter Ace. He always tied highly of the plane.
@laurencegerrard80448 ай бұрын
I once years ago saw 4 corsairs doing formation aerobatics at a warbirds airshow. This was at Coventry airport in the UK. An amazing sight that I will never forget.
@donrobinson66139 ай бұрын
The RNZAF operated 364 Corsairs during WW2 & received another 60 US aircraft after the war which were used until 1948.
@Cdntrvler549 ай бұрын
Robert Hampton Grey, Flew off of the HMS FORMIDABLE. August 9, 1945. R.I.P.
@tpxchallenger6 ай бұрын
This Victoria Cross recipient was from Trail, BC. One thing I learned at the Internment Camp Museum at New Denver was that Trail was off limits to Japanese. I looked into it and found that was because there was a heavy water production facility there as part of the Manhattan Project.
@Cdntrvler546 ай бұрын
@@tpxchallenger Yes and at CFB Comox there is a wax figure of Grey with a good history of him plus in Ottawa there is a row of ''Busts'' of Famous and honoured Canadians, including Grey and as well Mynarski.
@NoName-ds5uq9 ай бұрын
When I was a kid I loved the TV show Baa Baa Black sheep. Ever since I’ve loved this aircraft! I’m Australian, we never had them, but I’ve served in the RAN 30+ years ago and never knew there Corsairs dumped outside Sydney Harbour. I’ve transited through Sydney Heads and exercised in the Eastern Australian Exercise Area many times. 👍
@harrisonmantooth73638 ай бұрын
NoName-ds5uq ; In 1959 when I was 14 years old, I received a flying model of the F4U Corsair. It had the .049 engine. That's when I fell in love with that plane. Still ❤️ it. And the P51, P47, P38, B25 B24 and the list goes on 😂.
@NoName-ds5uq8 ай бұрын
@@harrisonmantooth7363 great story mate, love it! I have a massive soft spot for a few British types too… Bristol Beaufighter(the stories my grandfather told about those fromhis time in the army…) and De Havilland Mosquito, both used by Australia during the war. So was the Liberator. Also the Mustang, we had them into the 50s despite having jets by then and Australian P-51s based in Japan were the first allied aircraft into combat in the Korean War. A little outdated by then…
@jackdaniel74658 ай бұрын
Wow, you too, I used to watch that show as well as a young boy, just to see the Corsairs, was my favorite show!!🇺🇸👍
@sneakerset8 ай бұрын
A neighbor of mine worked on the cast as "Sgt. Randy Kline" (1977)
@NoName-ds5uq8 ай бұрын
@@jackdaniel7465 it was mine too! I looked forward to every Friday night when it was on! I got to go to my grandparents place to watch it on their colour TV(we only had B&W) while Mum went to bingo… 🤣
@64MDW9 ай бұрын
For the same reason they used Avengers, Hellcats, Liberators, Kittyhawks, Wildcats, Mitchells, and Havocs....they were very good aircraft.
@meaders20028 ай бұрын
There was at least one RAF fighter group flying P-47s.
@michaelburke59075 ай бұрын
Fleet Air Arm also used B17's for maritime patrol as well as search and rescue.
@billfarley91674 ай бұрын
The Grumman F8F was superb.
@kerrylangman2144 ай бұрын
The radial engine's dominance in US aircraft design was crucial to actually acceiving victory in WW2.
@michaelhirst4191Ай бұрын
@@michaelburke5907I think this was RAF Coastal Command, who used several types of US patrol bombers.
@djsi38t4 ай бұрын
I loved watching the Black sheep squadron and their Corsairs..One of my favorite TV shows.
@Idahoguy101579 ай бұрын
The US Navy was still ordering new Corsairs in Korean War. Some Marine Reserve squadrons still flew Corsairs after Korea was over
@markymarknj9 ай бұрын
That's why I was surprised that the presenter here said that the US didn't want the RN Corsairs back. We used them in the Korean War; in fact, it was one of the only WWII propeller types to still be in service in the Jet Age.
@Atpost3349 ай бұрын
Keep in mind that there were so many surplus American aircraft at the close of WWII. Also, Korea was five years away. Some WWII Corsairs took part early in the Korean conflict, but several improvements to the F4U also took place in the years between the two wars.
@fazole8 ай бұрын
@@markymarknj It might also be because the RN cut about a foot off each wing to clear the low hangar overhead on British hangar decks.
@markymarknj8 ай бұрын
@@fazole that's a good point.
@s.marcus36698 ай бұрын
@@markymarknj Yes, and no.... The AD Skyraider was DESIGNED during WWII but technically didn't enter production until after VJ Day, so one could make an argument about it being a WWII DESIGN. Just the other day I was telling a friend that with the P-47 still in ANG service after WWII; it would have made a MUCH superior ground-attack plane in Korea than the vulnerable Mustang would have been.
@jonathanpersson12055 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video, it was far more thorough than most on the Corsair, its a pity that the best fighter of the war is so often overlooked. This aircraft had the agility of the spitfire and P51 but the ruggedness of the P47 with a very long range........ everything you could want in a fighter. The RNZAF operated 13 squadrons of Corsairs in the Pacific. Of the 424 aircraft we were supplied only 17 were lost to enemy action and 154 to accidents with 54 Pilots killed. So it won its battles and most of its accidents were survivable
@Cdntrvler549 ай бұрын
My dad, RNVR 785 Squadron, were being trained in the USA and there final base being USN Bangor. They flew their aircraft to start their final carrier training, these were the touch n go training on the USS CHARGER, in Chesapeake Bay. He was training on Dive bombers. Sadly one of his best friends, was in a Corsair that did not only bounce past the arrestor hooks but over the netting and over the side into the bay.
@paulkirkland32639 ай бұрын
At the height of the UK warbird scene in the mid-nineties, I remember seeing four Corsairs in formation at Duxford's Flying Legends air show.
@kikufutaba5242 ай бұрын
Carrier aviation owes so much to Britain's innovation and engineering. Thank you for a great video.
@nickdanger38022 ай бұрын
such as the Blackburn Roc turret fighter ?
@kikufutaba5242 ай бұрын
@@nickdanger3802 Haha I was offering reference to the angle deck, the optical landing systems.
@frankanderson501225 күн бұрын
@nickdanger3802 Don’t know why you had to be so derogatory. He clearly said innovation and engineering. To add to the angled flight deck and optical landing systems there was the first purpose built carrier, the first to use the offset control tower, steam catapults, the first carrier attack, armoured flight decks, the Taranto raid which gave the Japanese their idea for Pearl Harbour, first landing of a twin engined aircraft on a carrier, first landing of a jet aircraft, the list goes on. Mentioning the Blackburn Roc only demonstrates you didn’t bother listening to this video. How about the Hawker Sea Fury to show what Britain could do with the right inclination.
@nickdanger380225 күн бұрын
@@frankanderson5012 Pearl Harbor, it's not Dunkerque. Taranto raid was a success by luck. USN had better carrier aircraft. In July 1940 French munitions contracts including F4 Wildcats were "transferred" to Britain, in June 1942 3/4 of the fighters on Midway Island were Brewster Buffalos. Drach has a video comparing armoured deck carriers to USN carriers.
@Hawkertempest123 күн бұрын
@nickdanger3802 I had a friend who was an RNZN pilot who flew Barracuda's and TBM Avengers off Indefatigable during the war. He was on board when a Kamakazi hit the flight deck beside the Island killing and injuring pilots and crew in the ready room. He was thankful that the RN Carriers had armoured deck because the deck only had a big dent in it where the Kamikazi had impacted. They filled the dent with quick drying concrete and they were flying again in half an hour. If she had had a wooden deck there would have been massive casualties However if the damge penetrated through the flight deck then the consequences to the hanger space underneath would be severe and then it was a dockyard job for repairs. Witness the frequency of time spent in dock by USN carriers after kamikaze hits. RN carriers took less damage from comparable hits and could resume operations sooner. Repairs in the Far East war was mixing concrete to 8 flatten out dents in the flight deck. A USN liaison officer on HMS Formidable off Okinawa was reported as saying "When a kamikaze hits a US carrier, it's six months repair in Pearl. In a Limey carrier, it's 'sweepers, man your brooms'.
@coastlinesailingcruisingan39919 ай бұрын
the British carrier was called, Indefatigable "In dee fat a guble"
@Boric789 ай бұрын
Which he said correctly. Get over accents they mean nothing to pronunciation.
@yancowles8 ай бұрын
@@Boric78No, you're absolutely wrong, the narrator distinctly said it incorrectly. Also, your second sentence makes no sense.
@orwellboy19588 ай бұрын
@@Boric78 he wasn't even close.
@lenfirewood40898 ай бұрын
@@orwellboy1958 I blame the parents ™
@danl.9098 ай бұрын
Pretty sure it's an AI 'bot. The pronunciations of several words were funny.
@StephenDruitt9 ай бұрын
This is an unusual aviation video, as almost all of its content was unknown to me. Excellent presentation!
@aviationdeepdive9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@TheRealBobBasher9 ай бұрын
Well Done Sir! You used footage that I have not seen before. A lot of content creators use the same footage over and over again.
@sailorsam64944 ай бұрын
Keith Neiderer. Kiwi pilot. British fleet air arm. Corsair,s. WWll. Many beer with Keith. Humble brave man. Manufactured rock crushers post war working along side Sir William Stevenson in Auckland. RIP Keith.
@mitseraffej58124 ай бұрын
My wife’s grandfather flew Corsairs with the RNZAF.
@billfarley91674 ай бұрын
From Canada: Spelled "Stephenson." Canada's super spy.
@anthonydavis57798 ай бұрын
Excellent video. No mention made of British pilots, trained in USA, flying from US carriers. I met one in 1979. He said the high stalling speed was a problem in deck landings. He would not talk about "action" but said planes returning after combat did not know if controls had been damaged until too late. He never flew again but retained a slight accent!
@wilburfinnigan21427 ай бұрын
Video mentioned The Brits trained in USA on the corsairs !!! Not paying attention ????
@anthonydavis57797 ай бұрын
Trained in US and then flew from UK carriers. How many remained with US navy?
@lenfirewood40898 ай бұрын
I think on the whole the Brits and USA worked together extremely well and especially when it came to enhancing each others aircraft. Us Brits back then were masters of craftmanship and through the likes of "uncle" Henry Ford the Americans were master of mass production - there are significant flaws in each of those approaches but when both areas of expertise can leveraged together some pretty unbeatable machines were created. The 51 Mustang is an excellent example of this too I believe.
@markymarknj7 ай бұрын
Yeah, the RR Merlin made the P-51 the WORLDBEATER that it was! Your comment sums up what the "special relationship" between the UK and US is all about... 😀
@wilburfinnigan21427 ай бұрын
@@markymarknj NO production Merlin Mustang used a RR Built merlin !!! All Mustang merlins were made by PACKARD in AMERICA as were 37.137 Packard Merlins for the Brits !! !
@markymarknj7 ай бұрын
@@wilburfinnigan2142 I'm aware of the Packard Merlin, but it was still based on the RR design. Also, someone had the bright idea to marry the Merlin with the Mustang, so as to morph the airplane into the icon it became. Anyway, we both helped each other during the war!
@wilburfinnigan21425 ай бұрын
@@markymarknj Actually the USA saved the Britd @$$'s in WWII with its industrial might and huge influx of men and machines into the ETO and the steady stream of war supplies from our factories !!!
@billfarley91674 ай бұрын
Also the Hawker Sea Fury.
@stuartlynn-q8q9 ай бұрын
I'm glad you Brit's figured out how to land the Corsair on carriers
@kenneth98748 ай бұрын
They weren't the first.
@stuartlynn-q8q8 ай бұрын
@@kenneth9874 they may not have been the first to land on a carrier , after all it was built for the Navy but they figured out the pattern so pilots weren't blind and a few other things. Then the US Navy started using it again on our carriers
@kenneth98748 ай бұрын
@@stuartlynn-q8q it had been done before.
@grahvis8 ай бұрын
It was a practice arrived at by previous experience with the Spitfire which had the same long nose, reducing visibility.
@austinguest50548 ай бұрын
You can thank Eric Winkle Brown for that Sir 🇬🇧
@TheLateBird79 ай бұрын
Your videos are ever increasing in scope. The information you gathered about the end-of-life of the Royal Navy Corsairs was very interesting, a topic rarely covered in aircraft overview videos. Also, great selection of original footage.
@aviationdeepdive9 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@johnlincoln79949 ай бұрын
A very interesting video the F4U was definitely a very capable carrier strike aircraft, after the British modifications something I wasn't aware of , your videos sometimes seem like the Dark skies video series but you have taken a lot more time in selecting the correct film scenes unlike the dark skies series who just use anything that looks like an aeroplane on black n white film.
@brianperry9 ай бұрын
They [Dark Skies] cater for people who don't know the first thing about aircraft...Aircraft recognition Zero...
@fredericksaxton39919 ай бұрын
I am sure Dark Skies just sticks his hand in a box marked "War Film Footage" and drags out a bit and says that will do without even viewing it. :))
@dukecraig24029 ай бұрын
And it's nonsense, VF-17 was the first carrier qualified squadron in the spring of 1943, during that time it was them that worked directly with Vought to improve the F4U resulting in the F4U-1A. For doing so Vought gave them the very first F4U-1A's off the assembly line, armed with them VF-17 was assigned to the brand new USS Bunker Hill and departed the states on it bound for the Solomon Islands, but when they put in at Pearl Harbor for provisions they were told that ComAirLand, the department in charge of all US Navy aircraft, had ordered all F4U's removed from carrier service, so VF-17 was unloaded at Pearl and replaced with an F6F squadron, afterwards they were loaded onto another carrier that took them to Espiritu Santo where they operated off an airstrip there. Later in June of 1944 when the Japanese launched their Kamikaze campaign in ernest it was decided that because of their superior climb rate and speed an F4U squadron would be put on every Essex class carrier, the thinking being that they would launch first to intercept incoming Kamikaze's and F6F's would launch behind them to intercept any that made it through the F4U's. It was VF-17 and no one else that worked with Vought, and F4U's were removed from carrier service because of the lack of spare parts Vought had available to support them along with the lack of qualified maintenance crews, they weren't removed from carrier service because US Navy pilots couldn't master landing them and they weren't returned because someone taught them how, it's just another WW2 myth that was started by people taking credit for something they don't deserve and aviation writer's printing it who were eager to tell their target audience something they'd want to hear for the sake of selling books, there's not one shred of evidence to support it beyond "We say so", no copies of orders for US Navy pilots to report to some Royal Navy unit for training, no reports on such a program and no testimony from US Navy pike that they were ever part of some fictitious training program, it's just a myth started by braggers telling their children bedtime stories. Read Tommy Blackburn's book Jolly Rogers to learn the truth about US Navy pilots becoming carrier qualified, their landing technique which was exactly the same as the way they landed F4F's and all other US Navy aircraft and who it was that worked with Vought to improve the F4U resulting in the F4U-1A, Blackburn was the commander of VF-17.
@keithcrispin13689 ай бұрын
@dukecraig2402 did somebody violate your fanny ,your the best of American arseholes ive come across, nobody's taking anything away from the US forces so calm down Rambo
@maxschell88236 ай бұрын
@@dukecraig2402 YES!!! Thank you for your INFORMED explanation. There are several good books on this topic. "Whistling Death" by Boone Guyto is one of several. Vought Sikorsky / Chance Vought was working closely with the navy e.g. Lt. Commander Blackburn.
@rickdoner51818 ай бұрын
The Corsair has always been my favorite plane. I was never aware Britain had then, though I shouldn't be surprised.
@bobdylan71209 ай бұрын
The tendency for the left (port) wing to stall on landing was overcome by the addition of a short piece of right-angled alloy at a specific position on the leading edge of the right (starboard) wing.
@Markus117d4 ай бұрын
Here from "Mark from the States" Thanks for being awesome and allowing others to share and learn, I will be checking out your other videos.. 👍
@aviationdeepdive4 ай бұрын
Awesome, glad you enjoyed it, I myself am watching Marks video now.
@Chiller119 ай бұрын
The US Navy was aware of and had experimented with the curved landing approach of Corsairs sans British input. They had the option of the F6F Hellcat coming down the pike which was an easier airplane to fly and land on a carrier deck. Later, when the Navy did decide they wanted carrier based Corsairs, the US did utilize several other improvements pioneered by the British, particularly the improved canopy, that made carrier landings easier.
@dukecraig24029 ай бұрын
No, just more fairytale's. Two US Navy squadrons VF-17 and VF-12 were both carrier qualified in the spring of 1943 and they landed their F4U's the same way they'd landed F4F's which was the standard way the Navy landed all their aircraft, read Tommy Blackburn's book Jolly Rogers, he was the first commander of VF-17 and had combat experience flying F4F's off of carrier's in the Mediterranean during Operation Torch, he trained his pilots to land the same way they landed all other US Navy aircraft on carrier's, pass the carrier on the downwind and count 30 seconds, make a 180° turn to line up with the carrier, at 200 yards from the carrier start watching the LSO who can easily be seen off to the left of the aircrafts nose, the big problem with landing the early "Birdcage" F4U was the struts which lacked proper rebound dampening and caused them to hop as high as 15 feet sometimes on a hard landing, while VF-17 was getting carrier qualified on a converted steamship, the USS Charger in Chesapeake Bay, they worked directly with Vought to improve the F4U resulting in the F4U-1A. VF-17 was even on the newly commissioned USS Bunker Hill with their brand new F4U-1A's on it's way to the Solomon's when they put in at Pearl Harbor for provisions when they were informed that ComAirLand (the Navy department in charge of all US Navy aircraft) had ordered all F4U's removed from carrier service citing the lack of spare parts and qualified maintenance crews as the reason, not because of some nonsense about US Navy pilots not being able to land their own aircraft on their own carrier's. The reason they were reinstated for carrier service was because in June of 1944 the Japanese launched their Kamikaze campaign in ernest, the thinking was to put an F4U squadron on each Essex class carrier and launch first once incoming Japanese aircraft were detected, using their superior climb rate and speed they'd intercept any incoming Kamikaze's first with F6F's launching behind them to intercept any that made it through the F4U's. That's the true story about the service record of the F4U in the US Navy during WW2 and not some made up fairytale nonsense by people taking credit for something they don't deserve that can't be backed up beyond "We say so", there's no record's of US Navy pilots being sent somewhere to be trained by Royal Navy personnel, no copies of orders, not even any testimony from US Navy pilot's about being sent somewhere to be trained, only claims made by people that were printed in books by authors eager to tell a target audience something they'd want to hear for the sake of selling books that was later made famous by The History Channel that God knows has repeated every WW2 myth there is which over the past 20 years that have all been debunked one at a time, no wonder they switched to alien's, that's about as accurate as most everything they aired about WW2. It's a nonsense story made up by braggers telling their children bedtime stories.
@bobmacdonald61839 ай бұрын
You will be claiming next, the captured egnima decoding machine was by a US navy sailor, aboard a US destroyer that rammed a U boat. And the sailor searched the U boat before it sank. All this did indeed happen, but it was Royal navy sailor. And a Royal Navy destroyer.
@darrenwhiteside16198 ай бұрын
@@dukecraig2402According to wartime NAVAER ACPs and US Navy flight testing the F4U-1 and F6F-3/5 had very similar climb rates and climb speeds. Do you have a source that Hellcat units were held in reserve during Kamikaze attacks? Being that it was the primary shipboard fighter until the EOW I find this hard to believe. The Corsair was eventually placed on carriers during December 1944. This was after the first organized Kamikaze attacks in October 1944, not in June as you stated in your post.
@darrenwhiteside16198 ай бұрын
But I do agree with you that it was VF-17 and not the FAA which was the primary source of the modifications making the F4U a more suitable carrier aircraft. Furthermore, British pilots were trained by the US Navy on how to fly the Corsair and this included the curved approach. It was a very common method utilized by carrier pilots by this time.
@Chiller118 ай бұрын
@@darrenwhiteside1619 The US Navy Evaluation Board recommended Corsairs replace the Hellcats on carriers in May of 1944. This is long before the kamikazes first appearance in October of ‘44. I agree that all British aircrews assigned Corsairs were trained in the US by US Navy instructors including ground and shipboard landing procedures. There were Corsair night fighter squadrons aboard Enterprise and Yorktown as early as January and February respectively 1944.
@MrOlgrumpy9 ай бұрын
Don't forget the RNZAF also used Corsairs
@ABrit-bt6ce8 ай бұрын
Curving finals to left. That's an Empire thing that is. I wonder where else that is used. RNZAF ought to be a lot larger than it is. I hope you're not needed.
@MrAdopadoАй бұрын
@@ABrit-bt6ce The curve from the left was required because of the position of the "island" on the carrier which was on the right. If you approached with a curve from the right your view of the deck would be obscured on the approach. My stepfather was a Corsair pilot so I've had this from the horses mouth!
@lightwoven53269 ай бұрын
My Father worked for the FAA as an engineer and worked on all of these. His story about this aircraft was having to stamp on the locking pins to make sure they dropped into the fixings before flight, or the wings would collapse in the first dive!
@raybame58167 ай бұрын
Nice presentation. I liked the use of the real aircraft photos to match your discussions rather than any old photo. Earned my sub and like. Thanks.
@nwolinsP8 ай бұрын
Fortunately, no one told the the swordfish it was hopelessly obsolete
@charlesfaure11898 ай бұрын
Except the Luftwaffe during the Channel dash.
@lightwoven53268 ай бұрын
Also Taranto Harbour, now that story hasn't really been covered. Used by the Japanese as a model for Pearl Harbour.
@garrymartin64745 ай бұрын
@@charlesfaure1189 Only because a communications cock up lead to them attacking without fighter support.
@CorePathway4 ай бұрын
As long as no other aircraft were in the vicinity they weren’t.
@Dave5843-d9m8 ай бұрын
The reverse gull wing also has significant aerodynamic value. It meets the cylindrical fuselage at the centreline. Therefore no need for fancy fairings to smooth airflow around what is normally an aerodynamically noisy connection.
@MBCGRS8 ай бұрын
Not a reverse gull wing... just a gull wing.
@bjcourtney51809 ай бұрын
Great content, thanks for your effort in producing it
@aviationdeepdive9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoy it!
@georgesmiley14748 ай бұрын
My grandfather was a CPO on HMS Illustrious, in 45 he went over to the USS Saratoga for two months to train on maintaining the new US planes. By then most of their UK planes were clapped out. Once they had the new planes, they did joint us/uk task force mission to take out oil refineries in Indonesia.
@mgadavered8 ай бұрын
My dad was on HMS Illustrious in the Indian ocean and Pacific he was an air frame fitter with 810 squadron
@mkendallpk43219 ай бұрын
Excellent job! I did not know that the Corsairs were flown by the British in WW2.
@Boric789 ай бұрын
and loved by them. If the Fleet Air Arm had a vote the Corsair would have won it hands down, until the arrival of the Fury. Eric Brown (worlds greatest fighter pilot) thought it was wonderful. And he thought the Zeros and Me109 were a "bit shit".
@well-blazeredman61878 ай бұрын
And not used exclusively in the Indian Ocean and the Pacific.
@scholagladiatoria8 ай бұрын
Excellent video, thank you.
@aviationdeepdive8 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@Sakai0709 ай бұрын
I live in Brunswick Maine and the old naval air base here was used to train Royal. Navy corsair Pilots. There are a few at least 2 anyways in sebago Lake that collided in mid-air during a training flight that are still there to this day with their pilots. And I do believe it's considered a uk war grave.
@Johnnycdrums5 ай бұрын
Really? Not saying you are lying, but I know Sebago like the back of my hand and never heard of it. Do you know where exactly?
@Sakai0705 ай бұрын
@Johnnycdrums I don't know the exact location in the lake but it's Documented. A guy sent an rov down and got pictures of the wreck and remains of the pilot still in it. That video is on youtube if you want to look for the sebago lake corsair. He wanted to bring the aircraft up but it's considered a war grave by the u k so they're going to stay down there I guess.
@Sakai0705 ай бұрын
@Johnnycdrums sebago lake corsair jt160, first result when I searched youtube. It's a bit of a rabbit hole once you get into researching it but quite Interesting.
@howardj6024 ай бұрын
As a child of about 4, I attended a war bond rally at the Vought-Sikorsky plant in Stratford Ct. birthplace of F4U Corsair. I still have a photo of myself on the bandstand presenting a check to a representative of the company for the purchase of a new F4U for service in the U.S. Navy. The plane was named "The Spirit of Bridgeport" the city right next to Stratford. I have often wondered what became of that aircraft. The plant produced them until about 1950 and they were a familiar sight, and sound, over Bridgeport.
@JohnnySmithWhite-wd4ey9 ай бұрын
The Corsair stayed in U.S. navy service through the Korean war as fighter bombers even changing their designation to AUs.
@sonnyburnett87258 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for the history.
@aviationdeepdive8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@iskandartaib7 ай бұрын
How about a video about British use of the P-47 Thunderbolt next? I know they were used, but they're hardly ever mentioned, while British use of the various Mustang versions get mentioned fairly often. Lots of British Mustang color schemes online, don't ever recall seeing a British Thunderbolt.
@edhoward-bearder30815 ай бұрын
The Mustang was developed solely to satisfy RAF requirements not USAAF
@iskandartaib5 ай бұрын
@@edhoward-bearder3081 True. Nevertheless, Britain was a minor user of the Merlin variants, though of course they probably used far more Mustangs than they did Thunderbolts.
@wilburfinnigan21425 ай бұрын
@@edhoward-bearder3081 The Mustang was the brain child of Dutch Kindelberger and Lee Atwood that they had mostly developed and sold to the Brits who were desperate for fighters and took what they could get, and this info from the people at North merican, not some Butt hurt embarassed Brit....The Brits wanted the P40 and North American refused to build an obsolete plane.
@wilburfinnigan21425 ай бұрын
@@iskandartaib Brits used about 3,000 mustangs and all but the first 618 were Merlin verions !! !
@thedude1-wn2ij5 ай бұрын
I knew a lovely old gent that flew these in the Fleet Air Arm. He’s long gone now but I remember him with a glass of red as good company. He flew Seafires in the Mediterranean, then the Corsair. I remember him talking about the torque of the engine being severe before take offs. He didn’t talk too much about the war, but he mentioned losing friends in the Mediterranean whilst strafing. He had a DFC or DSC too, can’t remember which.
@kjg26268 ай бұрын
A very informative video indeed. One small error is seen when discussing the Blackburn Roc, wherein it is stated that the turret had only a single Browning .303 machine gun. Actually, the turret - the same Boulton Paul power-operated turret as fitted to the firm's Defiant - was equipped with four .303 machine guns. The main problem with the Roc was its pathetically slow speed, and its lack of any forward facing armament.
@gleggett38178 ай бұрын
think he was referring to the single rear gun of the Skua
@trevorfuller10788 ай бұрын
@ kjg2626: You wonder why the Blackburn company prewar & during the war didn’t match up their own planes to fly & operate with Rolls Royce Merlin Engines too that would have definitely made up for any shortfalls in engine-power output deficiencies in their models that were nearly all specifically built for naval/ carrier operations??!! It would have been logistically easier to supply & upkeep them too, as with other numerous British-made aircraft then at those times??!!
@gleggett38178 ай бұрын
@@trevorfuller1078 finite number of Merlins to go round and the Merlin wasn't a done deal at the time the Roc and Skua were designed. A radial might be specified for particular reasons eg for operations in tropics where liquid cooled engines don't perform as well. And even as the Roc and Skua were being built and entered service, the aircraft to succeed them was under development. Fulmar and Firefly first flying in 1940 and 41. Add to that, Blackburn didn't build the Roc, it was Boulton Paul who did the detailed design work and manufactured them.
@trevorfuller10788 ай бұрын
@@gleggett3817 : True but RR Merlin’s were also being manufactured by one or two companies in the States under licence as well as in Canada & Australia too I believe! The Blackburn company could also produce good planes but sometimes quite often in fact, they were late to the party in design concepts for anticipating future needs & requirements!!
@gleggett38178 ай бұрын
@@trevorfuller1078Packard didn't get their verrsion of Merlin running until 1941. Specification for Skua was drawn up by Air Ministry in 1934 two years before first production Merlin engine took a plane into the air
@nigelmattravers59138 ай бұрын
Excellent video, very informative. Well done
@andrewfischer85649 ай бұрын
still am amazed the martlet/wildcat only once late in the war mixed it up with 109s you would think in the med there might be same for the corsair
@buddweston14148 ай бұрын
Hi, liked your F4U Doc. My father served with Corsairs with the Royal Navy. I have original official photos he had kept. There was no mention however of HMS Venerable Carrier, on which he served with them. With the American fleet under Admiral Halsey for part of this. He also came out to Australia, where I live now, (he eventually moved here after the war). He was cheif artificer to the Fleet Air Arm crews, often accompanying them to land bases, including one they established near Sydney.
@consul62628 ай бұрын
My father was an airframe rigger with the FAA, served thoughout the war, there are photos of his time in Australia, I asked why he was there, as some appear to be on a cattle farm! He said they were waiting for the invasion of Japan, where they would be on forward air bases, but fortunately the war ended before this happened.
@stansdds9 ай бұрын
I'm not aware of any proof of the Brewster built Corsairs having their wings fall off in flight. From what I understand, the Brewster Corsairs were built just as well as those by Vought, but Brewster was woefully understaffed and could not keep up with production demands.
@RT-mm8rq8 ай бұрын
I've read the same thing about Brewster built Corsairs but I don't know what the source material was for that book.
@raymondtonns25214 ай бұрын
thank you for these little known facts regarding the corsair and the men that flew them
@joechang86969 ай бұрын
there is a story, late in the war, pacific theater, a Corsair pilot on his way to his unit stopped at a depot. there were many Corsairs parked. He asked what was up. A serviceman said these had reached 500 hours on the engine and were being sent back for rebuild. He asked if he could swap. the man said sure. He thought for a moment, but decided against it. The Corsairs being sent back were US Navy blue, and his was Royal Air sea green. Their Corsairs were operated to 2500 hours on the engine before rebuild
@dukecraig24029 ай бұрын
Nonsense story, engine's had log's that determined when they'd be replaced, not the entire aircraft sent somewhere, but when the engine would be replaced according to how much time was spent at different throttle settings, and the engine manufacturers laid down the specifications for everything not whatever country had the aircraft. And you just didn't "stop in to some depot out of the clear blue" and swap aircraft. Not only is it a nonsense story every aspect about it is nonsense, like the fact that the crew chief is who signed for the plane and if you came back with a different one there'd be some serious problems with it.
@DunedinMultimedia29 ай бұрын
Great stuff
@aviationdeepdive9 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Snake-ms7sj9 ай бұрын
The problem with the Corsair as a carrier fighter was the poor forward visibility over the long nose when landing on the deck. The Brits solved this by landing on the deck at a somewhat sideways angle just before touchdown, so the pilots could see along one side of the fuselage instead of straight ahead over the nose, to be better able to see the approaching deck. You can see them doing that at 7:27
@maxschell88236 ай бұрын
Royal Navy teaches the U.S. Navy the curved approach to the aircraft carrier? Read "F4U Corsair at War" by Richard Abrams. Go to the chapter "Corsairs with the Royal Navy" by Lieutenant Commander (A) Norman S. Hanson. Yes, Lieutenant Commander Hanson also wrote the book "Carrier Pilot." These pull quotes from "F4U Corsair at War". Deck landing on a full-sized deck essayed by the first two squadrons when they joined HMS Illustrious in December 1943, proved to be distinctly hazardous." Further; "Illustrious" Captain decided that further deck-landing training was essential." Also NOTE "the fact that the current RN landing "pattern" was totally unsuited for the Corsair." If you have the book "Whistling Death" by Boone Guyton you will find the U.S. Navy was instructing the Corsair curved approach BEFORE the Royal Navy had Corsairs.
@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg2 ай бұрын
Formidable, Illustrious, such Ship's, such Men. Ultimately Victorious.
@robertwoodroffe1239 ай бұрын
My uncle! FAA ( DSO ) apparently trained American pilots in the British technique to land Corsair on carriers ! But using Brewster Buffalo’s , Because they were obsolete, !
@Jim-re3sr8 ай бұрын
Great video
@stupidhat17799 ай бұрын
Thank you Royal navy for showing us Americans how to land our plane on a carrier lol. It is my favorite plane of the war, an uncle worked on a carrier deck in the Pacific during the war and he taught me about the Corsairs when I was in grade school. The Sweetheart of Okinawa. This was a very good video, I watch quite a lot of WW2 documentaries, this was top notch!
@JD-tn5lz9 ай бұрын
The Americans knew very well of the angled approach, it was just simpler to pass the Corsair on to the Marines and other ground based squadrons and use the new Hellcat onboard instead. It wasn't until the US Navy saw it's superior potential as a fighter-bomber and as an interceptor (superior to Hellcat) that they really wanted to try carrier decks again. So no, as much as folks would love to give the Brits credit for something, hard fail here.
@steriskyline44709 ай бұрын
@@JD-tn5lzsource - "trust me bro"
@dukecraig24029 ай бұрын
Another BS WW2 myth, VF-17 and VF-12 were both carrier qualified in the spring of 43, VF-17 is who worked directly with Vought to improve the F4U resulting in the F4U-1A, they were given the very first F4U-1A's off the assembly line when they were assigned to the USS Bunker Hill, before leaving for their assignment in the Solomon's the skipper of the Bunker Hill told VF-17's commander Tommy Blackburn that he'd heard through the pipeline that the Navy had intended to pull all F4U's from carrier service citing the lack of spare parts and qualified maintenance crews, he ask Blackburn what he intended to do, request for VF-17 to be switched to F6F's so they could stay with the Bunker Hill or request that they be allowed to keep their F4U's and take whatever land based assignment they got, Blackburn told him if he had things his way they'd stay on the Bunker Hill and get to keep the aircraft they'd spent so much time with and had total faith in, the Bunker Hill's skipper told him "That's just what I wanted to hear, let's go talk to the Admiral", after pleading their case the Admiral in charge of the task force said he'd see to it that VF-17 got to keep their F4U'S and get to stay on the Bunker Hill, as a result the USS Bunker Hill departed the states with VF-17 onboard along with their F4U'S, but when they put in at Pearl Harbor on the way to the Solomon's to take on provisions they were told that ComAirLand (the department in the US Navy that was in charge of all naval aircraft) had ordered all F4U's removed from carrier service because of the lack of spare parts and qualified maintenance crews, as a result VF-17 and their F4U's were unloaded from the Bunker Hill at Pearl and replaced with a carrier qualified F6F squadron, afterwards they were loaded onto a carrier that took them to the Solomon's where they occupied and operated out of an airstrip on the island of Espiritu Santo. During just 76 days of combat VF-17 had a confirmed score of 154.5 Japanese aircraft with a kill to loss ratio of over 11 to 1, and during that period 13 VF-17 pilots made ace status, that exceeded the Blacksheep Squadron by a factor of ⅓ more. It was after the Japanese launched their Kamikaze campaign in ernest in June of 1944 that the Navy decided to return F4U's to carrier service, their superior climb rate and speed over the F6F was utilized to intercept incoming Kamikaze's, the thinking was to start by putting an F4U squadron on every Essex class carrier that would launch first to intercept incoming Kamikaze's with F6F's launching behind them to intercept any that made it through them, that's why the US Navy removed F4U's from carrier service in the first place and then returned them later, not because US Navy pilots couldn't master landing them on carrier's and later returning them to carrier service after someone taught them how, that fairytale is not only absolutely laughable but there's not one shred of evidence that it's true beyond "We say so", there's no record's of US Navy pilots being trained by Royal Navy personnel on how to land F4U's on carrier's, there's no copies of orders assigning them to be trained by the Royal Navy, and there's no testimony whatsoever from US Navy pilots who were sent anywhere to be trained by Royal Navy personnel, it's just another WW2 myth made famous by the producers of The History Channel that God knows never fact checked anything, like ball turret gunner myths and M4 Sherman myths it's just more nonsense that was born in the years after the war from people taking credit for something they had no right to printed in books by authors eager to make a target audience happy for the sake of selling books, but at the end of the day it's nothing more than a nonsense yarn born from braggers telling their children bedtime stories. It's the most ridiculous claim ever made in military history that pilots like that needed someone to teach them how to land their own aircraft on their own carrier's, US Navy pilots combat record's speak to their flying skills, along with the fact that they've done other things such as landing on the moon, which is probably the evening that the F4U myth was started by someone who experienced a jealous rage when he saw ex US Navy pilot Neil Armstrong pilot the Eagle to a landing on the moon. There's not one bit of truth nor is there one bit of evidence beyond "We say so" to the nonsense myth that the Royal Navy had to teach US Navy pilots how to land their own aircraft on their own carrier's, and no one can come up with one shred of evidence beyond hollow claims because it simply isn't true.
@guypenrose54779 ай бұрын
I think your response has taken that rather too literally. The spirit of it is that the US Navy didn’t routinely use the Corsair at sea until the Royal Navy showed that it could be done routinely. I don’t think there was any suggestion that the RN formally trained the US Navy. The only evidence I have is LtCdr Norman Hanson RNVR who stated in carrier pilot that the US Navy felt that the Corsair needed a higher than average pilot to land it on a deck, whereas the Hellcat was much more straightforward and was therefore the more logical choice.
@stupidhat17799 ай бұрын
@@guypenrose5477 that was my takeaway also.
@i-a-g-r-e-e-----f-----jo--b8 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks! I watched a different channel (In their Own Words) and the British pilot veterans had some disparaging remarks about American pilots. Looking at your video I see a few British crashes as well!
@Knight68319 ай бұрын
The British Empire had a Corsair like design prototype known as the Bristol Type 133 which if modifed to increase its length and re-engined could have been the British Vought Corsair
@grahamsmith20229 ай бұрын
Counter rotating smaller props would have been an interesting if expensive modification for this awesome aircraft to give it more prop to deck clearance on landing.
@richardsawyer54289 ай бұрын
My favourite American aeroplane. There's just something about it, especially considering that it took both British and American engineers to get it to it's best whilst a Canadian is possibly one of the aircraft's most famous pilots.
@beagle76229 ай бұрын
I was watching the original “War of the Worlds “ . At the very beginning they showed a few aircraft of World War Ii Supermarine Seafire with a fuel Drop Tank under the fuselage. It was interesting to see it show up in this old film.
@onenote66199 ай бұрын
Because the twin-engined 'fighters' sucked in air-to-air combat and the early-model Seafire conversions were awful. On top of that, the Americans didn't want it because they had the F6F Hellcat, which was better at landing on carriers - at least to begin with.
@Huttworker8 ай бұрын
I saw one at the warbirds museum Wanaka Airport NZ. Sometime about the mid nineties
@scottbrower90529 ай бұрын
Fascinating.
@davejones679 ай бұрын
All news to me. Thanks!
@johnwiles43919 ай бұрын
I'd like to point out something that is almost always left out when discussing the Corsair's bent wing. The aerodynamic benefits of a wing protruding more or less at 90 degrees from the fuselage was at least as important as the benefit of shorter landing gear/greater propeller diameter. The same principle is demonstrated by the mid-fuselage wing on the Mig-15. I have read that this consideration was primary and the consequent benefit of shorter landing gear functioned to seal the deal, so to speak.
@rocketguardian20019 ай бұрын
Do you have references? I'm curious.
@johnwiles43919 ай бұрын
@@rocketguardian2001 I'm afraid I don't remember where I saw this but I definitely did see it and as I recall, the source was reputable. I hope you can forgive me! Having said that, the aerodynamics of the wing protruding directly out of the fuselage being superior is beyond question. Witness even the difference the F4F and the F6F where the low wing compromise was made to accommodate the larger propeller on the F6F. That much I saw on Greg's Airplanes and Automobiles channel. Edited for completeness.
@johnwiles43919 ай бұрын
@@johnklatt3522 Thanks for swooping in and rescuing my credibility!
@donaldbowen54239 ай бұрын
ITS CALLED INTERFERENCE DRAG, AND IS WHY F4F'S HAVE A 90 DEGREE ATTACHMENT SEE" GREG'S PLANES" FOR A DETAILED ENGINEERING REPORT@@rocketguardian2001
@donaldbowen54239 ай бұрын
GREG'S AUTOS AND AIRPLANES@@johnwiles4391
@Raz.C8 ай бұрын
I freakin LOVE the corsair!! I don't care for most US WWII aircraft, but the F4U Vought Corsair? It's beautiful and AWESOME!!
@JDS11ify9 ай бұрын
The Brits got the Corsair because the Yanks couldn't figure out how to safely land it on their carriers. The Brits figured out that a swooping turning approach would allow the pilot to maintain visual with the deck until the last minute. Success! The Yanks were told the secret, adopted it and used it and the Corsair with success in the Pacific. BTW ... Ensign, not onsign.
@nickdanger38029 ай бұрын
Almost everything the FAA applied to Corsairs had been learnt from landing bodged up Seafires on carriers.
@Slaktrax7 ай бұрын
A good video, well presented and detailed, thank you.
@6496496491348 ай бұрын
My understanding is that instead of just having a crewman on the carrier deck signalling the pilot by waving “paddles “, the British Navy installed lights on the carrier deck that were only visible to the Corsair pilot if he was at the correct height off the deck. The combination of the lights plus their idea of turning into a landing position is what enabled the British to successfully use the Corsairs on carriers. My understanding is that after the USA Navy adopted these British solutions , then the Americans were able to use Corsairs on their carriers. (If I am mistaken, I welcome documentation that revises my understanding)
@perh82588 ай бұрын
In the book Jolly Rogers, Tom Blackburn describes how as CO of VF 17 he lead the first ever carrier use of the Corsair on the Bunker Hill in Sept. 43. Yes we used British tech to make it easier, later
@CmoreChap5 ай бұрын
The last thing the Corsair design had was "Carrier-based practicality" (00:29); which was why it was confined the shored based operation with the USMC before the Brits worked out how to get around the Ensign-killer characteristics inherent in the design; good landing gear and folding wings aside.
@geordiedog17499 ай бұрын
Thanks for getting the FAA and the RAF right at the start of the war. Bloody crabs. The Fulmar wasn’t actually a descendant of the Battle. There are some similarities in look but it’s not a Battle derivative. It’s from a pre war specification from the FAA. The first Corsairs were bought by a Royal Navy dude on his own jeopardy. Balls or what? Brewster !! What a disaster.
@brucenorman89049 ай бұрын
In regard to the Brewster the Finns want to have a word with you.
@brucebeauvais13249 ай бұрын
The Marines of Midway and the RAF of Singapore had a different experience. There seems to be a differences between Brewster designed and built vs Brewster contract builds. There is a reason that Brewster ,as an aircraft company, doesn’t exist post WWIl.
@boomslangCA9 ай бұрын
@@brucenorman8904 The Finn's were successful in spite of the Buffalo not because of it. When they converted to ME109's their kill rate skyrocketed showing that the Brewsters were really holding them back.
@geordiedog17499 ай бұрын
@@brucebeauvais1324 Yeah, Finns did ok. Different oppo though. The Bifaloo was a good kite until you put extras on it. Like radio. Self sealing tanks etc. I do feel a bit sorry for the BB.
@geordiedog17499 ай бұрын
@@brucenorman8904 I know, i know. But, to be honest. Me in a balloon with my uncles shot gun could have bagged a few of that calibre of opposition at that time . (Also, see tactics v aeronautics by some clever bloke who’s name I’ve forgot)
@henriyoung3895Ай бұрын
Great video thanks. Sad that they were dumped into the sea.
@jayhopkins69908 ай бұрын
Hampton Gray was Canadian that should be mentioned just saying from a Canadian🙂🍁
@michaellabonte44558 ай бұрын
There are a number of significant flaws in this video. The FAA did NOT come up with the curved approach for the Corsair. There are photos and film of American navy aircraft using the curved approach in the late 1930s, and there are photos and film of the USN using the curved approach with the Corsair when it was undergoing carrier trials in 1942. The Corsair was not disapproved for carrier operations by the USN in 1942-1943. The reason it was decided to use the Corsair from land is carrier logistics and maintenance. There was and still is limited storage space for spare parts on an aircraft carrier and limited space for additional maintenance personnel, and the decision was made to ‘pure fleet’ the carrier borne fighters with the F6F Hellcat.
@perh82588 ай бұрын
yes, you are correct In the book Jolly Rogers, Tom Blackburn describes how as CO of VF 17 he lead the first ever carrier use of the Corsair on the Bunker Hill in Sept. 43.
@maxschell88236 ай бұрын
@@perh8258 Yes, 100%. Plus Boone Guyton in his book "Whistling Death" mentions the "curved approach" while monitoring a navy carrier training exercise. All this BEFORE the British had Corsairs.
@EricinSoKo9 ай бұрын
The gull wing being for engine/prop clearance is a myth. The hellcat used the same engine and a similarly sized propeller. The full wing was for drag efficiency in how the wings met the fuselage and to enable the Corsair’s relatively short landing gear which doubled as dive brakes.
@Justin-nj4gs9 ай бұрын
The gull wing was chosen because they wanted a shortened landing gear and so put them at the lowest bend of the wing. The gull wing otherwise did not offer wide performance margins it was the air inlets in the wing roots that made a difference not the gull.
@johngaither92634 ай бұрын
The USN had the Corsair in 1942. At a time when F-4 Wildcats were being chewed up by Japanese Zeros. The USN was either unwilling or more likely unable to correct the deficiencies of the Corsair and relegated it to land airfields. The Brits saw the value of the Corsair and thru some drastic steps made it work despite the operational losses they suffered and by early 1943. A time still before the introduction of the F6F Hellcat by the USN. The navies negligence in not making the Corsair carrier friendly resulted the loss of many planes and perhaps even ships.
@nickdanger38024 ай бұрын
USN had F6 Hellcats. Brits used them because they did not have anything better. Most of what the FAA applied to Corsairs was learned on Seafires, bodged up Spits.
@timbarnett38984 ай бұрын
Guess? Because Americans didn't like aircraft carrier landings with cockpit far back, with limited visibility. So US used plane for land based.
@Tyrs_Finox8 ай бұрын
You could probably make a video by itself on how the lend lease terms of "pay for plane or return" turned into "dump them in sea" just by itself. Although that might be a tad off topic for an aviation channel. Good video!
@brianperry9 ай бұрын
Excellent, The British Navy in the Pacific flying possible the best navy fighter of WW2...a point overlooked by many documentary's...mostly American...about the War in the east..
@johngaither92634 ай бұрын
Pretty easy to overlook. The BPF didn't even reach the Pacific until March 1945. Their serviceable time at sea was half that of the USN. They had to be there to oversee British interests in Hong Kong after VJ day. Admiral King didn't even want them, but Nimitz went to their rescue, and they got to stay. Except for the cruiser Uganda whose crew voted to return home after VE day. Had it not been for their reinforced flight decks against the Kamikaze they would have been of debatable value.
@michaelhirst4191Ай бұрын
@@johngaither9263Uganda was Canadian
@SPQRTempus9 ай бұрын
To expand on the reason for using the curved approach, in a descending turn an aircrafts inside wing is flying at a lower angle of attack than the outside wing during the turn so is far less likely to stall.
@kevindolin43154 ай бұрын
The USN was indebted to the FAA and its ingenuity in making the Corsair carrier capable. When the the USN was able to add the Corsair to its stable of F6F Hellcats, they had an unbeatable combination. Such a sad end for those FAA Corsairs, and no-one having the foresight to preserve them for future generations to admire. Aviation museums would have loved to have gotten their hands on one. Thank you for this excellent presentation. Lots of interesting new material.
@nickdanger38024 ай бұрын
For using the same "ingenuity" previously applied to Seafires, bodged up Spits ? FAA used them because they did not have anything better. Britain could not build a carrier fighter to compare with F4 Wildcat, let alone Hellcat or Corsair.
@seanmorris9 ай бұрын
Also worth noting the British lessened the port wing stall trouble by adding a 6" triangular 'stall strip' to the starbord wing leading edge outboard of the guns. With this added both wings would stall at the same point. They initially added these themselves made from wood but later they came from the factory already fitted.
@maxschell88236 ай бұрын
Read Boone Guyton's book "Whistling Death." Guyton was the Corsair PRIMARY TEST PILOT working for Chance Vought in Stratford, Connecticut. On page 176 March 1944 Guyton notes that the "6 inch wedge attached to the leading edge of the right wing". Guyton also mentions the people Vought was working with on this modification. Remind me again. When did the Royal Navy get Corsairs?