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troy
February 18th 12, 08:04 PM

Orval Fairbairn
February 19th 12, 04:21 AM
In article >, troy wrote:

> begin 644 XF2D-1_99859.jpg
> [Image]
>
> end

That would be a McDonnell XF2H-1 Banshee -- An XF2D would have been a
Douglas product, which I have not found listed in "American Combat
Planes."

Dave Dodson
February 19th 12, 06:59 AM
Orval Fairbairn > wrote in news:orfairbairn-
:

> In article >, troy wrote:
>
>> begin 644 XF2D-1_99859.jpg
>> [Image]
>>
>> end
>
> That would be a McDonnell XF2H-1 Banshee -- An XF2D would have been a
> Douglas product, which I have not found listed in "American Combat
> Planes."

Not according to this and several other references....to wit
stellar-views.com/Photos_X-Planes.html


The Research Airplane Program was a joint effort by the National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics ...... U.S. Navy - McDonnell XF2D-1 Banshee
(a/c 99859) ...

Bob (not my real pseudonym)
February 19th 12, 08:15 AM
On 18 Feb 2012 21:59:13 -0900, Dave Dodson >
wrote:

>Orval Fairbairn > wrote in news:orfairbairn-
:
>
>> In article >, troy wrote:
>>
>>> begin 644 XF2D-1_99859.jpg
>>> [Image]
>>>
>>> end
>>
>> That would be a McDonnell XF2H-1 Banshee -- An XF2D would have been a
>> Douglas product, which I have not found listed in "American Combat
>> Planes."
>
>Not according to this and several other references....to wit
>stellar-views.com/Photos_X-Planes.html
>
>
>The Research Airplane Program was a joint effort by the National Advisory
>Committee for Aeronautics ...... U.S. Navy - McDonnell XF2D-1 Banshee
>(a/c 99859) ...

Indeed appears to have been originally designated XF2D-1.

From Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:XF2D-1_NAN8-47.jpg

"The XF2D-1 (BuNo 99858) prototype of the McDonnell Banshee fighter in
flight in 1947. It first flew on 11 January 1947. During the same year
the U.S. Navy changed McDonnell's company letter from "D" to "H", and
consequently the F2D became the F2H."

Of course, like the DC-3, now Boeing can claim ownership:
http://www.boeing.com/history/mdc/banshee.htm

In an alternate universe it might have been the Boeing F11B.

Bob ^,,^

joet5
February 19th 12, 02:56 PM
Three (3) XF2D-1's were ordered (BU#'s 99858/99860). They were
reclassified XF2H-1 after delivery. BTW the FD was the original
phantom. Douglas never built a FD or F2D. Joe.

On 18 Feb 2012 21:59:13 -0900, Dave Dodson >
wrote:

>Orval Fairbairn > wrote in news:orfairbairn-
:
>
>> In article >, troy wrote:
>>
>>> begin 644 XF2D-1_99859.jpg
>>> [Image]
>>>
>>> end
>>
>> That would be a McDonnell XF2H-1 Banshee -- An XF2D would have been a
>> Douglas product, which I have not found listed in "American Combat
>> Planes."
>
>Not according to this and several other references....to wit
>stellar-views.com/Photos_X-Planes.html
>
>
>The Research Airplane Program was a joint effort by the National Advisory
>Committee for Aeronautics ...... U.S. Navy - McDonnell XF2D-1 Banshee
>(a/c 99859) ...

Orval Fairbairn
February 19th 12, 09:08 PM
In article >,
"Bob (not my real pseudonym)" > wrote:

> On 18 Feb 2012 21:59:13 -0900, Dave Dodson >
> wrote:
>
> >Orval Fairbairn > wrote in news:orfairbairn-
> :
> >
> >> In article >, troy wrote:
> >>
> >>> begin 644 XF2D-1_99859.jpg
> >>> [Image]
> >>>
> >>> end
> >>
> >> That would be a McDonnell XF2H-1 Banshee -- An XF2D would have been a
> >> Douglas product, which I have not found listed in "American Combat
> >> Planes."
> >
> >Not according to this and several other references....to wit
> >stellar-views.com/Photos_X-Planes.html
> >
> >
> >The Research Airplane Program was a joint effort by the National Advisory
> >Committee for Aeronautics ...... U.S. Navy - McDonnell XF2D-1 Banshee
> >(a/c 99859) ...
>
> Indeed appears to have been originally designated XF2D-1.
>
> From Wikipedia:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:XF2D-1_NAN8-47.jpg
>
> "The XF2D-1 (BuNo 99858) prototype of the McDonnell Banshee fighter in
> flight in 1947. It first flew on 11 January 1947. During the same year
> the U.S. Navy changed McDonnell's company letter from "D" to "H", and
> consequently the F2D became the F2H."
>
> Of course, like the DC-3, now Boeing can claim ownership:
> http://www.boeing.com/history/mdc/banshee.htm
>
> In an alternate universe it might have been the Boeing F11B.
>
> Bob ^,,^

You are right! I did not read the article and had assumed that Douglas
had the rights to the "D" manufacturer's designation. The Navy changed
the McDonnell designation from "D" to "H" to avoid such confusion with
Douglas products.

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