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WhatMeWorry
December 17th 05, 09:10 AM
I've trying to write a simulation of WW2 carriers. The hull and flight
decks and planes are
to scale. Right now, I've got the Essex, Independence, and Sangamon
classes
implemented with working planes....Well, plane. An F3F rides up the
back elevator,
lauches over the bow, flys aroung a bit, lands in the back (stern?),
and goes down
the front elevator.

Obviously, not a very realistic scenario: doubt the US would have
beaten
Japan if our carriers only operated one airplane apiece.

I want to be able to realistically show all 90+ aircraft on a WW2 Essex
operating
in a historical correct manner (Or at least within historical
parameters)

Therefore, I've been Googling, Amazoning, and searching libraries like
crazy, but
I've only been able to find just mere snippets of info. Like an old
Time-Life book
of two pages of diagrams. And in an oral history book, a pilot
mentions "deck
load launch" versus a "full air group". Every little bit helps but I
need something
alot more comprehensive.

Does anybody know of a book, a treatise, an old naval manual?, an ex
pri-fly officer,
who could give me very detailed information. On such things like
spotting airplanes,
takeoff intervals, landing intervals etc. I can find tons of web sites
and books on the
planes and ship themselves. But almost nothing on this aspect of axial
deck carriers.

thanks.

W. D. Allen Sr.
December 17th 05, 08:01 PM
The Grumman F3F is a biplane that was replaced by the F4F before World War
II. Fleet carriers were employed F4F fighters, SBD dive bombers, and TBD
torpedo bombers at the time of Pearl Harbor.

The TBD was a death trap that was replaced by the TBM after the battle of
Midway. The SBD was an excellent aircraft that was replaced in part by the
SB2C, another poor aircraft. The F4F was replaced by the F6F, an excellent
fighter. It was joined later in the war by the F4U, another excellent
fighter.

All the above information and more about WW II Navy aircraft is available
on
the web.

Good luck

WDA

end

"WhatMeWorry" > wrote in message
ups.com...
>
> I've trying to write a simulation of WW2 carriers. The hull and flight
> decks and planes are
> to scale. Right now, I've got the Essex, Independence, and Sangamon
> classes
> implemented with working planes....Well, plane. An F3F rides up the
> back elevator,
> lauches over the bow, flys aroung a bit, lands in the back (stern?),
> and goes down
> the front elevator.
>
> Obviously, not a very realistic scenario: doubt the US would have
> beaten
> Japan if our carriers only operated one airplane apiece.
>
> I want to be able to realistically show all 90+ aircraft on a WW2 Essex
> operating
> in a historical correct manner (Or at least within historical
> parameters)
>
> Therefore, I've been Googling, Amazoning, and searching libraries like
> crazy, but
> I've only been able to find just mere snippets of info. Like an old
> Time-Life book
> of two pages of diagrams. And in an oral history book, a pilot
> mentions "deck
> load launch" versus a "full air group". Every little bit helps but I
> need something
> alot more comprehensive.
>
> Does anybody know of a book, a treatise, an old naval manual?, an ex
> pri-fly officer,
> who could give me very detailed information. On such things like
> spotting airplanes,
> takeoff intervals, landing intervals etc. I can find tons of web sites
> and books on the
> planes and ship themselves. But almost nothing on this aspect of axial
> deck carriers.
>
> thanks.
>


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John Dallman
December 17th 05, 08:49 PM
In article om>,
(WhatMeWorry) wrote:

> Does anybody know of a book, a treatise, an old naval manual?, an ex
> pri-fly officer, who could give me very detailed information.

You're going to need the original operational manuals, unless you get
lucky with someone who can remember - and they'll be pretty old by now.
Time to start finding out about how you get access to the US National
Archives and the like, I think.

---
John Dallman, , HTML mail is treated as probable spam.

WhatMeWorry
December 17th 05, 11:27 PM
Thanks. I try the US National Archives. Guess this is not considered
top
secret anymore :)

Mike Weeks
December 18th 05, 01:39 AM
WhatMeWorry wrote:
> Thanks. I try the US National Archives. Guess this is not considered
> top
> secret anymore :)

Also try the library at the Naval historical Center:

http://www.history.navy.mil

MW

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