Sea Sabres; The North American FJ Furys

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 187

  • @JGCR59
    @JGCR59 Год назад +183

    The US navy went through so many fighters in the post-Korean War 1950s it is mind boggling. All the while retaining a single heavy strike aircraft, the Douglas Skyraider :D

    • @willowpitts6539
      @willowpitts6539 Год назад +4

      Keeping it simple

    • @NikeaTiber
      @NikeaTiber Год назад +23

      The skyraider was such a great little bomb-truck. What a legend.
      External hardpoints for up to 8,000 lbs of ordinance. For reference, that is the B-17's max internal bombload.
      Succeeded by the douglas A-4 skyhawk, which managed to fill the comically large shoes that the A-1 left, and then some.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Год назад +16

      yes. many WW2 aircraft survived the war and soldiered on for years longer (C-47, P-51, F4U, A-1, A-26, etc.).
      Then you had this short era of rapid development following WW2 in which aircraft service lives were sometimes shorter than their WW2 ancestors. Lots of designs, lots of failures and some successes.
      And then coming out of the late 50s and into the 60s we got a series of aircraft that just won't die. A-4, U-2, C-130, B-52, and many more.
      we went from aircraft lasting 6-30yrs, to lasting 1-3yrs, to lasting decades.

    • @damndirtyrandy7721
      @damndirtyrandy7721 Год назад +6

      @@NikeaTiber Good call! Many people fail to give the A-4 due diligence. It was small and easy to store in a carrier hanger or conduct deck ops. It wasn’t a supersonic monster just a capable little bomber that kept doing its job, just ask the Brits/Argentines at the Falklands. The A-4 was the Toyota Tacoma of bomb trucks. 😂

    • @LV_CRAZY
      @LV_CRAZY Год назад +2

      ​@@damndirtyrandy7721 correction: Toyota Hilux

  • @dennyliegerot4021
    @dennyliegerot4021 Год назад +39

    My father flew FJ-4Bs with VMA-223 and said they were a hell of alot of fun. I've got some great pictures he took from the cockpit...very low level over the desert. Reaching mach 1.01 effortlessly in a shallow dive on quite a few occasions. He later flew F-8s which he thoroughly enjoyed...but an entirely different animal.

    • @rosiehawtrey
      @rosiehawtrey Год назад +2

      Those F8 known for noshing on deck crew.

    • @dennyliegerot4021
      @dennyliegerot4021 Год назад +1

      @@rosiehawtrey He never carrier qual'd with one...but on the flight deck and in the air they were intimidating. Check out the videos of 60s flight ops... amazing.

    • @Me2Lancer
      @Me2Lancer Год назад +1

      @@rosiehawtrey In the late 1960s I worked on F8 Crusader avionics systems before and after test flights. When that plane engages its afterburner it soared like a rocket.

    • @TimFrickGuitars
      @TimFrickGuitars Год назад +1

      My dad flew the FJ-4 and FJ-4B in 1966, by then redesignated F1-E and AF1-E. Though technically not a supersonic jet, he said that he also broke the sound barrier in a dive, glad to get confirmation that that’s possible. He flew 29 different planes in his 10 years in the Navy and the Fury was one of his favorites. He said “it LOOKS like a jet!”

  • @mikepette4422
    @mikepette4422 Год назад +56

    The myriad post WW-II war naval jets are a really amazing aviation story. I'm fascinated by everything from the McDonnell Phantom up to but not including its bigger and more widely regarded grand child Phantom II. Those dozen or so designs were a huge struggle for the Navy because of the engine situation. You read about all the accidents and things like the Vought Cutlass being a horrible widow maker and one realizes Post War, the Navy had one of the hardest tasks incorporating the new jet technology into effective aircraft. The Fury series are very under appreciated part of that thanks for presenting it Ed.

    • @truthboomertruthbomber5125
      @truthboomertruthbomber5125 Год назад +2

      If the designers were required to make the initial flights then poorly thought out planes like the F7U would never have been proposed.

  • @billmullins6833
    @billmullins6833 Год назад +6

    In early 1980 I watched South Korean F-86s flying out of Kun-san Air Base. They were well maintained and expertly flown. I was part of an installation team installing new comm gear and had to spend time in the control tower as the new equipment "burned in". As an airplane buff I enjoyed sitting in the tower and watching the Sabers taking off and landing.

  • @Vespuchian
    @Vespuchian Год назад +13

    I do love Furies, particularly the FJ4 which was practically a new design.
    Nice to see coverage of these oft forgotten naval fighters.

  • @yes_head
    @yes_head Год назад +32

    Very cool video, Ed. That USAF/Navy rivalry was very real, and was based on Congress pretty much pulling budget from the Navy -- who had enjoyed more or less a blank check during WWII -- and giving it to the new service, who would be fielding intercontinental atomic bombers and missiles that were seen as the future for military strategic thinking. So the USN had to beg, borrow, or steal to get whatever budget they could. The FJ-4 was a pretty cool little hot rod. Move the wing up to the top of the fuselage and you almost have a baby F-8.

    • @moblinmajorgeneral
      @moblinmajorgeneral Год назад

      Curtis LeMay was quoted as saying that while the Soviet Air Force was the rival of the US Air Force, the Navy was the enemy of the US Air Force.

  • @jonginder5494
    @jonginder5494 Год назад +17

    Ed - love your work!
    Fun fact. An Aussie Avon Sabre is up a pole in the states dressed up as an FJ-3! They do have a similar look vis-a-vis the fatter fuselage and air intake for the larger engine. The best looking Sabres/Furys imho!!

  • @marioacevedo5077
    @marioacevedo5077 Год назад +27

    Great video. About the value of having the pilot sit high in the cockpit. The Soviets recovered a Sabre that had pancaked into a swamp during the Korean War. While they never got this example to fly, one of their priorities was to find out why the Sabre was a challenge to sneak up on. They were looking for a radar warning device but the mystery was solved when a pilot sat in the cockpit and was amazed by the view (especially compared to that of the Mig-15).

    • @memonk11
      @memonk11 Год назад +2

      I think someone's pulling your leg. The Migs at the time had no radar, so a radar receiver would not have been necessary.

    • @jakobc.2558
      @jakobc.2558 Год назад +3

      ​@@memonk11 didn't the F-86 have a small rearward facing radar to warn pilots about enemys on their tail? Actualy, I am pritty sure that even late war P-51s had that feature.

    • @memonk11
      @memonk11 Год назад +2

      @@jakobc.2558 Not that I'm aware of. And a radar warning on a P-51 would have been inconceivable.

    • @I_am_not_a_dog
      @I_am_not_a_dog Год назад +6

      @@memonk11 You should educate yourself a bit before stating things so matter-of-factly. The AN/APS-13 tail warning radar system was deployed mainly on the P-47 but also on many mid- to late-model P-51s. They were withdrawn from service in mid-1944 after the Germans deployed the FuG 227 passive radar reciever, which allowed the Luftwaffe to easily locate flights of escort fighters.
      The TWR system - just to clarify on this as you seem confused, judging by your statement regarding the MiG’s lack of radar - was not a receiver system. As in, it didn’t pick-up on other radar signals in any way. All it did was alert the pilot when it’s own ‘beam’ was interrupted (ostensibly by an aircraft approaching from the rear). This warning took the form of a chiming alarm and the AN/APS-13 could be toggled on and off by the pilot, in case they were flying in-formation and didn’t care to listen to alarm bells.
      I’m sure a TWR was considered for the F-86, but I’m sure the line of thinking was that if the Luftwaffe could ‘hack’ the system, so could the Soviets.

    • @marioacevedo5077
      @marioacevedo5077 Год назад +1

      @@memonk11 No, the radar was thought to be in the tail of the Sabre. My source was the Smithsonian Aviation magazine which I think is a good source.

  • @gbalias361
    @gbalias361 Год назад +3

    In 1956/57 I wrenched the FJ-3 serving in vf-191 at moffer field and on the yorktown -- thanks for the memory boost --

  • @pauldulworth2768
    @pauldulworth2768 Год назад +2

    Once again, it’s the stuff I learn after I think I know everything that counts. And, the more I learn, the more I realize that I’ve got a lot to learn.
    Love this channel. Thank you.

  • @scullystie4389
    @scullystie4389 Год назад +3

    I got to see an FJ-4 up close at Naval Air Station Lemoore back in the mid 2000s, it flew in and parked on the t-ramp which was one row over from our Hornet squadron. Decided to go over and talk to the pilot and he gave me a walk-around. Really cool machine.

  • @trickydicky2908
    @trickydicky2908 Год назад +4

    I love your channel. May you never run out of aircraft.

  • @jb6027
    @jb6027 Год назад +3

    One of your best videos yet. I love all things Sable/Fury. Well done you!

  • @RevMikeBlack
    @RevMikeBlack Год назад +1

    The short fuselage makes it look very MiG-like. Interesting video. Thanks.

  • @mastathrash5609
    @mastathrash5609 Год назад +7

    Love the FJ , great video as always Ed. 👍

  • @cbroz7492
    @cbroz7492 Год назад +2

    ...there used to be a Fury as a gate guard at the entrance to the War Memorial Auditorium in Ft Lauderdale, FL

  • @mpetersen6
    @mpetersen6 Год назад +5

    One pilot that flew the Saber/Fury off of carriers was F Lee Bailey

  • @mattmenefee3889
    @mattmenefee3889 Год назад +3

    I have always wanted to know more about the Fury series…thank you for posting/ making this! Love your channel.

  • @darwindemartelaere3195
    @darwindemartelaere3195 Год назад +4

    Fury's arrived on my dad's carrier, the USS Randolph CVA-15 (an Essex class 27C) in 1956.

    • @beancat1650
      @beancat1650 7 месяцев назад +1

      My grandfather got to see them in the Mediterranean, 58-59 on Randolph as well!

  • @Pwj579
    @Pwj579 Год назад +1

    You're right, the original FJ Fury prototype with straight wing, was predecessor of the F-86A swept wing.

  • @atempestrages5059
    @atempestrages5059 Год назад +2

    Awesome episode- thanks Ed. Never heard of the Fury before this video, now I'm looking up everything I can on it.

  • @radiosnail
    @radiosnail Год назад +3

    Extremely interesting. I had no idea the Sbre came from the Fury. I always thought it was the other way round.

  • @brucewelty7684
    @brucewelty7684 Год назад +5

    I grew up loving the Sabre. It was just recently that I learned of the Sea variant.

    • @alp7292
      @alp7292 6 месяцев назад

      This jet flew 2 years before the sabre

  • @scottgregory4255
    @scottgregory4255 Год назад +2

    Love it, from this day forward the F-86 is now named the Land-Fury

  • @nicolatesla9429
    @nicolatesla9429 Год назад +2

    I really like the chubby design of the FJ-4. Especially combined with the azorback-esque canopy. The 2 sets of divebrakes on the FJ-4B are also an awesome feature.

  • @tauncfester3022
    @tauncfester3022 Год назад +2

    The FJ-1: I've sim modeled in FlightGear. It's a remarkable if a little slow carrier operations jet. My Uncle flew carrier fighters in the Pacific during WWII and was stationed in Oakland after VJ day, where he was close to the operations of the first FJ-1 squadron. He said it reminded him of a jet powered Grumman Wildcat, sturdy and easy to fly but not exactly fast, He never mentioned flying it but he did send me models of US carrier planes for Christmas as a kid, and the FJ-1 was one of them.

  • @johnassal5838
    @johnassal5838 Год назад +2

    Cool. I've been fascinated by the story and waiting for a while for someone to do a vid on the barely known *first operational Navy jet.*

  • @stevecallagher9973
    @stevecallagher9973 Год назад +3

    a great episode! You can certainly see the influence of the captured aero research flowing through this airframe much like the B 47 stratojet as well. Out of curiousity would you consider presenting a segment on the Royal New Zealand Airforce?

  • @EstorilEm
    @EstorilEm Год назад +1

    Wow that FJ-3 was a beautiful plane, especially with the Navy squadron markings of the era!

  • @billwhite1603
    @billwhite1603 Год назад

    Very cool. I remember growing up seeing the F-80 shooting star with straight wings that had fuel tanks on the wing tips. But also we saw what I eventually thought was F-86s. The only issue is we were in North Atlanta with no airforce base anywhere close. But we did have Dobbins Naval Air station next to Martin Marietta now Lockheed Martin.

  • @luvr381
    @luvr381 Год назад +2

    The 50s was such a fascinating time for aviation.

  • @lostinpa-dadenduro7555
    @lostinpa-dadenduro7555 Год назад +2

    I’d like to see a video about the history and production of cockpit canopies. From none on the first planes, to early windscreens, the bubble canopy, to today. And so forth. 😀

  • @mattjacomos2795
    @mattjacomos2795 Год назад +41

    May I suggest the Australian CAC 27 Sabre, the Sabre with a RR Avon engine, for a follow up video? It flew with the RAAF up until 1968 and there were some based in South Vietnam, although they did not fly combat missions, but did practice with the USAF fighters based there.

    • @K1W1fly
      @K1W1fly Год назад +6

      Arguably the best of the breed...

    • @peabase
      @peabase Год назад +4

      @Yulis You can call it imperial, but it's not a matter of ego. Both the Canadian and Australian Sabre outperformed the US original thanks to better engines. The latter also swapped the obsolete machine guns for autocannon.

  • @FlywithMagnar
    @FlywithMagnar Год назад +1

    Another great video from Ed! I am learing a lot. When you have the opportunity to visit New York, you should visit Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum. They have an FJ-3 in pristine condition.

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 Год назад

    Thanks Mr. Ed Nash.....
    Shoe🇺🇸

  • @amandastevenson4948
    @amandastevenson4948 Год назад +1

    Incredible I actually didn't know the last model of the fury was so distinct thanks

  • @samgeorge4798
    @samgeorge4798 Год назад +3

    Is a video about the aj-2 savage on your list?. The photo of the Fury getting refuled reminded me of how interesting of a plane it is

  • @aaronlopez492
    @aaronlopez492 Год назад +6

    Ed nice dig at the navy "Sea Sabre'😂.

  • @memonk11
    @memonk11 Год назад

    Yet another outstanding video.

  • @cateclism316
    @cateclism316 Год назад

    Nice to see the Sabre in Navy colors!

  • @richardlehoux
    @richardlehoux Год назад +3

    I never saw the FJ4 and it look great. Very agressive

  • @richardscales9560
    @richardscales9560 Год назад +1

    I've always been surprised that 4 20mm cannon wasn't the standard armament for all Sabres from the start.

    • @Mishn0
      @Mishn0 Год назад

      Maybe the Navy had better shots and didn't need the rate of fire that the Air Force did? 😜

  • @cmdredstrakerofshado1159
    @cmdredstrakerofshado1159 Год назад

    Great video on a over looked Fabulous 50s fighter +A grade 👍

  • @Gausdave213
    @Gausdave213 Год назад

    Very interesting video and plane. Thanks

  • @MyCaptainPugwash
    @MyCaptainPugwash Год назад +2

    Could you do a story on the CAC Sabre maybe????

  • @massmike11
    @massmike11 Год назад +3

    The FJ4b was the best looking of the bunch.

  • @sergeipohkerova7211
    @sergeipohkerova7211 Год назад +7

    I always wondered how the F-86 D Sabre (the one armed with only air to air rockets) would fare if it maybe had two 20mm cannon and provisions for 4 AIM9 Sidewinders. I feel like the Fury probably wouldn't be as good as the F9F Cougar in terms of naval applications.

    • @chrisoddy8744
      @chrisoddy8744 Год назад +6

      Later export versions of the Sabre Dog (the F-86K) resolved these issues and saw good service with foreign air arms (the French used them for sure)

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 Год назад +3

      I was about to say I tended to agree but had second thoughts & did some checking.
      Turns out 'though both F9F & FJ4 were fairly similar in performance although the FJ4 edged it in all parameters in range / flight endurance the FJ4 seems far superior.
      So, I think its the other way around the Cougar wasn't as good as the Fury.
      BUT - and this is IMPORTANT - Kevin Bloody Wilson has a *great song about a Cougar* 😋

    • @sergeipohkerova7211
      @sergeipohkerova7211 Год назад +3

      ​@@babboon5764you're probably right, I just mean probably the general ruggedness of the Cougar probably made it perfectly fine for shipboard use, and it already came in its earliest versions standard with the four 20mm cannon like the Panther. I just assumed maybe the Fury would have bad sea legs like the Seafire.

    • @Ratelau
      @Ratelau Год назад +1

      Australian F86s had 4x 20mm canon. I'm not sure about missiles. Ours were called the CAC-27 as we built most of our own

    • @tauncfester3022
      @tauncfester3022 Год назад +2

      @@sergeipohkerova7211 The Seafire's main problems were it's non adjustable flaps and the weakness and narrowness of their landing gear. Also the Seafire was better landed on it's mains with the tail somewhat low but not 3 point, with it's tailhook this dynamic meant that it was better to 3 point land it but you are deep into stall while bringing it in with the tail that low.
      Which the Panther shared none of these problems, their trike gear were wide enough and quite strong and the had a very effective set of flaps and airbrakes.

  • @Dysfunctional_Reprint
    @Dysfunctional_Reprint 5 месяцев назад

    It is wild that the Fury-2,3 and 4 was a Naval Sabre and a Sabre was a Fury-1 that didn't suck, the Fury was basically a Mustang with a jet in it, and the Mustang was a Tomahawk but we can build it better.

  • @Jon.A.Scholt
    @Jon.A.Scholt Год назад

    Always a great day when Ed uploads his Grade A content! just wanted to post this to appease the Algorithm Gods!

  • @jeremycaufield8605
    @jeremycaufield8605 Год назад +3

    Always been a fan of Naval Aviation, the Fury is a favorite, though I thought the final version of the Fury was the F-6.

    • @williammagoffin9324
      @williammagoffin9324 Год назад +2

      The F-6 was the post 1962 designation for the Douglas F4D Skyray. Post 1962 the FJ-3 became the F-1C, FJ-4 became the F-1E, and the FJ-4B became the AF-1E.

  • @caribman10
    @caribman10 Год назад

    Was there ever a time before the 1980s when airframe and powerplant development were parallel? The F-14D was the beginning of a renaissance that has yet to peak. Let's hope that continues.

  • @applicationuser9764
    @applicationuser9764 Год назад +9

    I'm not the sharpest star in the sky, but I always thought it would be very hard for saber pilots and mig pilots to tell each other apart at distance. I'm sure there had to be mistakes made at some point.

    • @jimdavis8391
      @jimdavis8391 Год назад +3

      The filthy trail of exhaust coming out the back of a Sabre was one giveaway.

    • @damndirtyrandy7721
      @damndirtyrandy7721 Год назад +2

      @@jimdavis8391 Disnt Mig-15 have a horizontal stabilizer mounted on the top of the vertical??Another clue… but agree that to the majority of people you couldn’t be 💯 at distance..

    • @Mishn0
      @Mishn0 Год назад +1

      With a little practice, recognition is pretty easy. Wing sweep angle, the size of the vertical stabilizer, the position of the horizontal stabilizer, the placement fore and aft of the wing. I'm sure the pilots at the time could differentiate a Sabre from a MiG at a couple of miles range in a split second. Recognition is an EXTREMELY powerful feature of the human brain. Think of how you can pick a familiar face out of a crowd. It's only been very recently that computers have come close to a human's recognition ability.

  • @fooman2108
    @fooman2108 8 месяцев назад

    There are two of them that fly out of Driggs, Idaho. Driggs has about half a dozen of these early fighters flying in and out of there.

  • @2854Navman
    @2854Navman Год назад

    Hey, those are Delaware ANG Sabres in the opening! 👍👍

  • @MrOlgrumpy
    @MrOlgrumpy Год назад +3

    Don't forget the RAAF version of the Sabre built by CAC with the more powerful Rolls Royce engine

    • @clark9992
      @clark9992 Год назад +1

      Also, the Canadair Sabre. The mark 6 generally considered to be the ultimate Sabre version.

  • @sealove79able
    @sealove79able Год назад

    What a marvelous beautiful great interesting video and aircraft I knew nothing about. What was the twin prop aircraft that was air refuelling the Fury in the photo?Have a good one.How about a video about the Super Sabre?

  • @Pwj579
    @Pwj579 Год назад

    The FJ-4 was definitely the predecessor the A4 "Bantam Weight Bomber" high-subsonic light attack aircraft.
    When the F4D and F8U supersonic fighters entered service in 1956 and 1957 , the FJ-3/FJ-4 were obsolete as fighters.

  • @wor53lg50
    @wor53lg50 Год назад +1

    I think its a nice looking bird to be fair....didnt they tweak the airframe or the old designs slightly and used it as a night intruder in the early years of vietnam war...

  • @jasonz7788
    @jasonz7788 Год назад

    Great job thank you

  • @cliffwood4610
    @cliffwood4610 Год назад

    thanks for the punctuation,I would hate to miss the results of your hard work...

  • @SolomonSamson747
    @SolomonSamson747 Год назад

    That wing on the FJ-1 looks mighty familiar ;)

  • @willowpitts6539
    @willowpitts6539 Год назад +2

    You would think for the price point these types of planes would still be available

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Год назад

    @EdNashsMilitaryMatters >>> 👍👍

  • @BenState
    @BenState Год назад +1

    Can you look at the MB326?

  • @Furnerfamilyadventures
    @Furnerfamilyadventures Год назад +1

    i always wonder what the CAC Sabre would of been like if it was nasalized.

  • @jwrappuhn71
    @jwrappuhn71 Год назад

    Excellent.

  • @JohnSmith-de2mz
    @JohnSmith-de2mz Год назад

    My Dad was a Air Force Fighter pilot on exchange duty with the Navy in 1957 and flew the Fury off the Bon Homme Richard on a 6 month tour of the Pacific

  • @eze8970
    @eze8970 Год назад

    TY🙏🙏

  • @tomlobos2871
    @tomlobos2871 Год назад +1

    the data captured from germany were kurt tank's Ta-183 drawings.

  • @stevetournay6103
    @stevetournay6103 Год назад +1

    FJ-1 is interesting, a sort of American parallel to the Supermarine Attacker: wings borrowed from an advanced piston fighter (Mustang; Spiteful) and grafted onto a jet design. In the FJ-1's case the result looks like a jet-engined T-28...
    Re the interservice rivalry and naming of airplanes, the Navy would get its own back later with what the Air Force borrowed and, sheepishly, initially called the F-110 Spectre...better known as the iconic F-4 Phantom II.

  • @terrynewsome6698
    @terrynewsome6698 Год назад +4

    The saber has a few mig 21 under its belt from the 1971 war

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel Год назад

      And the Indian's Folland Gnats nailed a few of the Pakistani Sabres
      That said - All 3 were excellent aircraft.
      The results reflect a combination of factors.
      Who saw who first, who had the height advantage, what their status (fuel load & armaments) were at the time etc..

  • @bengrindell7693
    @bengrindell7693 Год назад +1

    Its a 'real' pity the four 20mm cannon weren't adopted for the land braced fighter!! Many Mig 15's wouldn't have made it back!!

  • @etwas013
    @etwas013 11 месяцев назад

    And the engine that was a near copy of the Jumo004? Seems pretty important to mention.

  • @PBGetson
    @PBGetson Год назад

    Can you do an episode on the Land Furys?😁

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Год назад +1

    Interesting that the Fury got 20 mm cannons while the Sabre still used the 50. calibre machineguns. This despite the fact that towards the end on WW2 the USAAF recognising that the machinegun no longer had the stopping power it once had.

    • @truthboomertruthbomber5125
      @truthboomertruthbomber5125 Год назад

      This would be the basis for a great video !! Compare muzzle velocity, velocity drop at various distances, trajectories, projectile weight, rounds per second rate of fire of the system, gap between each round at the various distances, etc.
      One advantage of the six .50 MGs was the sheer number of projectiles in the stream . Less likelyhood of the target flying through a gap in the bullet stream. During WWI they discovered that upping the rate of fire dramatically increased hits.

    • @RedXlV
      @RedXlV Год назад +2

      10 F-86s were tested in Korea with four FMC T-160 20mm revolver cannon (which had a significantly higher ROF than the Navy's Colt Mk 12) instead of the usual six .50 cal. This was highly successful and the T-160 was adopted as the M39, which became the standard armament for the F-86H, along with the F-100 Super Sabre, F-101 Voodoo, and F-5 Freedom Fighter/Tiger II.

    • @truthboomertruthbomber5125
      @truthboomertruthbomber5125 Год назад

      @@RedXlV GUNVAL ?? I would have to dig out my copy of Mig Alley although I don't remember the author detailing the higher ra te of fire aspect. Thanks !

    • @RedXlV
      @RedXlV Год назад

      @@truthboomertruthbomber5125 1,000 RPM for the Navy's Colt Mk.12, 1,500 for the T-160/M39.

    • @truthboomertruthbomber5125
      @truthboomertruthbomber5125 Год назад

      @@RedXlV I dug out my copy of Mig Alley and found the pilot interview detailing GUNVAL. No mention of any technical details just a pilot interview of his mission flying one of the test aircraft and getting a Mig 15 kill. The 20mm hits were so effective that he was temporarily mesmerized and flew through the smoke and debris fortunately not hitting anything but getting oil on his canopy. He said the Mig appeared to stop.
      An issue that they were having was compressor stall and he ran into this and had a heck of a time recovering until he saw that the speed brake toggle sw handle was broken off in the ON position. He was able to get the nub pushed into the OFF position and teh brakes retracted and he was able to gain speed and come out of the compresssor stall.

  • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
    @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 Год назад

    the highlights of the air force's sabres is the f variant, then the Navy's is the -4 fury

  • @StanVice
    @StanVice Год назад

    I wanna see the landing gear on fj-2

  • @konekillerking
    @konekillerking Год назад +1

    Ed, you might look at using a different phrase than “ crash program “ when discussing prototypes. 😅

  • @darwindemartelaere3195
    @darwindemartelaere3195 Год назад

    FJ4 Fury's ( nuke capable ), sat ready alert on the Randolf dury the Suez Canal crisis while on station at Point Moses

  • @FinsburyPhil
    @FinsburyPhil Год назад

    The FJ-4B reminds me of a mini A7 Corsair (sort of)

  • @Technoid_Mutant
    @Technoid_Mutant Год назад

    At Camp Shields, Okinawa, about four clicks from Kadena, AFB, I would see an F86 in JDF paint trundle over with a huge missile under the starboard wing. Bastard load. A few minutes after, I'd see a bunch of F15's go over in pursuit. I asked a fellow at the Kadena PX what the fuck? He said the JDF operated the F86 as a target drone first-stage, once released the drone would be engaged by the 15's, eventually run out of gas and parachute into the water where the Air Force (!) would bring it in for refurbishment and re-use. The 15's are big planes by comparison and a whole lot louder. That little sewing machine going over was a super cool treat.

    • @Mishn0
      @Mishn0 Год назад

      It probably wasn't a drone. It was more likely a towed target. There were a couple of kinds, one looked like the just the fins of a big missile, four triangular wings in a "+" shape and no body. The other looked like a big bomb but was made from styrofoam or something like it. They reeled them out on a long cable a few hundred yards long and the attacking fighters could shoot at them with the towing aircraft still safe. They'd drop them before the towing aircraft landed.

  • @sealove79able
    @sealove79able Год назад

    The original Fury looks like the Swedish Tunan a bit.

  • @chriskortan1530
    @chriskortan1530 Год назад

    I could never understand why the Navy stuck with the underwhelming F9F Cougar/Panther for so long. The low speed handling and easier carrier landing now makes sense.

    • @Mishn0
      @Mishn0 Год назад

      That and they were basically indestructible. Did you ever see the picture of the Cougar trainer hanging by its tailhook from the deck edge safety nets on the carrier?

  • @danpatterson8009
    @danpatterson8009 Год назад

    As convoluted as that story was, I have to imagine that getting budgets through Congress (and fending off that arch-enemy, the USAF) had a lot to do with it.

  • @levischittlord6558
    @levischittlord6558 Год назад

    FJ-4 v MIG-17 in Vietnam would have been quite interesting.

  • @russdority6295
    @russdority6295 Год назад

    I think the Lear Jet has the same wing as the FJ-1

  • @toomanyuserids
    @toomanyuserids Год назад

    The FJ-4B was probably everything the A-4, A-7 needed to be. Never mind the USAF.

  • @TheIndianalain
    @TheIndianalain Год назад

    The FJ-1 really looks like it has been fitted with a pair of spare P-51 wings whose machine guns hadn't been installed yet 😊

    • @birlyballop4704
      @birlyballop4704 Год назад

      Including the kink in the leading edge root of the P-51 wing for the undercarriage.

    • @tauncfester3022
      @tauncfester3022 Год назад

      @@birlyballop4704So the kink is actually larger on the FJ-1. Also the Mustang didn't have the kink until the D model. The wings were not exactly entirely from the Mustang, as they were tasked with holding two moderately sized tip tanks and had to be reinforced, were thicker and deeper in chord at the root, and had a heavier duty set of shorter, retractable main gears set further back from the wing's leading edge. Trike geared.

  • @kurtpena5462
    @kurtpena5462 Год назад

    Land Furies!
    Exactly!
    Fly Navy!

  • @mikepette4422
    @mikepette4422 Год назад +3

    There's no doubt that the money game and playing congress was very important but, yes the navy really didn't like eating humble pie and soiling their lovely Carrier Fleet with Air Force planes. Or admitting they NEEDED it badly even with the Korean War over.

    • @timgarrett203
      @timgarrett203 Год назад

      They did it again with the F-18 E/F…🧐

    • @alan-sk7ky
      @alan-sk7ky Год назад

      @@timgarrett203 but got it's own back with the Skyraider and Corsair 2

  • @herbertkeithmiller
    @herbertkeithmiller Год назад

    And the F//A-18E Super Hornet is just a new version of the older F/A-18C ....

    • @Mishn0
      @Mishn0 Год назад

      Sort of. About the only things in common they have is a general outline similarity and the number "18". Sort of like the similarities between the Tu-22 and the Tu-22M.

  • @Thorr97
    @Thorr97 Год назад +1

    "Land Furies" Hah! Yeah, them''s fightin' words alright!

  • @razor1uk610
    @razor1uk610 Год назад +1

    *_Flies Feet Dry,.. and so! ...Dry Fury!_*_ it is_

  • @macjim
    @macjim Год назад

    And then there was … the super sabre..

  • @Johnnydiamondlonglive
    @Johnnydiamondlonglive Год назад

    Capital! Another gem!

  • @babboon5764
    @babboon5764 Год назад +1

    Bgrd if I can remember which of the US Aces turned Test Pilots it was (Guy got a rep for being able to fly anything & made his name flying a downed B-25 Mitchel (I think) off some insanely short runway & possibly a cliff) ....
    Anyway, the point is, *HE said the F-86 was the nicest handling aeroplane (well he probably said 'airplane' what with being a colonial and that) he ever flew* .

    • @Airsally
      @Airsally Год назад +1

      I believe that was the late R.A. Hoover. Rip Bob. There a RUclips vid of him flying a sabre demo in the Philippines.

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 Год назад

      You might well be on the right track - That name's definitely striking a chord of memory.
      But despite a search I can't find a link to him and recovering the downed B25.
      Its an incident happened in (I think) the Med or the Italian campaign.
      I recall one of the technical expert ground crew went out to the site to help the very young, very gifted pilot repair some damaged systems, strip and chuck out every non-essential thing to lighten it then insisted in flying out with him - The crew chief lying on the bomber's floor if memory serves.
      They got medals for it (a pretty good swap for the Airforce a flyable Mitchell for a couple of gongs).
      Maybe someone can clarify / confirm?

  • @atempestrages5059
    @atempestrages5059 Год назад

    Also is this finally the F-1 I've been looking for all these years? Tri-Service Designation is weird man... gaping holes in the numbering.

    • @stevetournay6103
      @stevetournay6103 Год назад +1

      Well not really; earlier USN types were assigned the first several new numbers while the USAF stuff ran out the Century Series, and then the types that began development later slotted into the new "start over" low number range...
      F-1: FJ Fury
      F-2: F2H Banshee
      F-3: F3H Demon
      F-4: F4H Phantom II (initially F-110 in USAF)
      F-5: N156 Freedom Fighter
      F-6: F4D Skyray
      F-8: F8U Crusader
      F-9: F9F Panther/Cougar
      F-10: F6D Skyknight
      F-11: F11F Tiger
      F-12: interceptor variant of Blackbird
      Then the newer ones...
      F-14 Tomcat
      F-15 Eagle
      F-16 Falcon/Viper
      F-17 Cobra
      F-18 Hornet
      F-19 (Stealth project)
      F-20 Tigershark
      F-21 Kfir (borrowed IAI Mirage variant)
      F-22 Raptor
      F-23 Black Widow II
      Big gap exists above that, yes. This seems to be because the newest F series are an extension of the X series, not the original P/F series. Thus we have the Boeing X-32 followed by the F-35 Lightning II...

    • @Mishn0
      @Mishn0 Год назад

      @@stevetournay6103 Good post👍, but....the Skyknight was the F3D, not F6D. You should also mention the gap between F-111 and F-117. Those spooky jets from Tonopah. Did you know that the original designation for the BOMARC missile was F-99?

  • @alphakky
    @alphakky Год назад

    The Navy got its revenge on the Air Force when they adopted the F4H Phantom II (F-110), and the AD Skyraider (A-1) .

  • @Farweasel
    @Farweasel Год назад +1

    People argue about the merits of F9Fs & FJ4s
    Objectively - the Fury was the better aeroplane
    The Cougar has its *own song* 'though
    ruclips.net/video/PDqchtH2Nvk/видео.html

  • @skaldlouiscyphre2453
    @skaldlouiscyphre2453 Год назад

    How does the FJ-4 compare with the Canadair Sabre and Avon Sabre?