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#1
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Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American
aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? -Much Thanks -CMTalleyrand |
#2
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![]() "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? ... cannot think of a reason why not for both landing & launch; compared to the WWII carriers a Nimitz class flightdeck would be huge!! |
#3
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![]() "Dudhorse" wrote: "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? ... cannot think of a reason why not for both landing & launch; compared to the WWII carriers a Nimitz class flightdeck would be huge!! It's been done befo in August 1995 USS Carl Vinson sailed to Pearl Harbor to take part in ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of the end of the war, and a dozen warbirds embarked on the cruise Two B-25s, two TBMs, 3 or 4 Corsairs, an F8F, two P-40s, and a pair of Mustangs were aboard. One of the B-25s didn't launch when an engine blew, but all other warbirds launched off Oahu, and landed at Hickam AFB. They then launched from Hickam after the ceremonies were over and recovered aboard the carrier. All of the warbird pilots had done FCLP to get used to carrier landing procedures and techniques. And they didn't need arrester gear. Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
#4
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I knew they launched off the Carl Vinson, but this is the first time I
heard that they were allowed to recover on the carrier. Hard to believe that the Navy would risk some civilian pilot slamming into the back of the carrier or the island superstructure. "Matt Wiser" wrote in message news:3f688b24$1@bg2.... "Dudhorse" wrote: "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? ... cannot think of a reason why not for both landing & launch; compared to the WWII carriers a Nimitz class flightdeck would be huge!! It's been done befo in August 1995 USS Carl Vinson sailed to Pearl Harbor to take part in ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of the end of the war, and a dozen warbirds embarked on the cruise Two B-25s, two TBMs, 3 or 4 Corsairs, an F8F, two P-40s, and a pair of Mustangs were aboard. One of the B-25s didn't launch when an engine blew, but all other warbirds launched off Oahu, and landed at Hickam AFB. They then launched from Hickam after the ceremonies were over and recovered aboard the carrier. All of the warbird pilots had done FCLP to get used to carrier landing procedures and techniques. And they didn't need arrester gear. Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
#5
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![]() "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? Yes, in fact thats what was done for the 1970's film of the Battle of Midway IRC No surprise given that a modern carrier has a much longer flight deck than anything available in WW2 Keith |
#6
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![]() "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "Charles Talleyrand" wrote in message ... Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? Yes, in fact thats what was done for the 1970's film of the Battle of Midway IRC No surprise given that a modern carrier has a much longer flight deck than anything available in WW2 Keith Bob Aumack, (ex-Blue Angel F11 boss) flew the last SBD off the carrier for the movie. It was no sweat, and he had a royal ball doing it. Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/CFI Retired For personal e-mail, use dhenriquesATzarthlinkDOTnzt (replacezwithe) |
#7
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In article ,
Charles Talleyrand wrote: Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? Given the much lower take off and landing speeds of WW2 aircraft, I'd not think there'd be a problem. At the extreme of low take off and landing speeds, ISTR the fleet Air Arm museum's Swordfish landing on and taking off from Illustrious a year or so ago as part of the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Taranto raid - which of course would not present any problem to a Stringbag as Illustrious, while smaller than US carriers, is a lot bigger than many of the ships Swordfish operated from. -- Andy Breen ~ Interplanetary Scintillation Research Group http://users.aber.ac.uk/azb/ "Time has stopped, says the Black Lion clock and eternity has begun" (Dylan Thomas) |
#8
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![]() ANDREW ROBERT BREEN wrote: snip ISTR the fleet Air Arm museum's Swordfish landing on and taking off from Illustrious a year or so ago as part of the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Taranto raid - which of course would not present any problem to a Stringbag as Illustrious, while smaller than US carriers, is a lot bigger than many of the ships Swordfish operated from. Really? Got a reference for that? The WWII Lusty didn't have a sodding great ramp on the bow like the current one does. I'm sure the FAA never got clearance for the Swordfish to do ski-jumps in WWII so when was the appropriate clearance work done? |
#9
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In article ,
NoHoverStop wrote: ANDREW ROBERT BREEN wrote: snip ISTR the fleet Air Arm museum's Swordfish landing on and taking off from Illustrious a year or so ago as part of the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Taranto raid - which of course would not present any problem to a Stringbag as Illustrious, while smaller than US carriers, is a lot bigger than many of the ships Swordfish operated from. Really? Got a reference for that? The WWII Lusty didn't have a sodding great ramp on the bow like the current one does. I'm sure the FAA never got clearance for the Swordfish to do ski-jumps in WWII so when was the appropriate clearance work done? Nope, completely off the top of my head and from memory. Given the take-off and landing run for the Stringbag there should have been more than ehough deck before it reached the ramp, either in take off or landing, and there was certainly a Stringbag on Lusty for the Taranto 60th. I support it's possible that it either landed on and was taken off in harbour, or vice versa, or harbour lofted on and off - in which case I'm confusing it with an earlier Taranto anniversary when a Swordfish certainly flew onto and off a more modern 'carrier - Eagle or Park Royal, maybe. I've certainly seen photographs of a Stringbag on the deck of the current Lusty, and it's possible I've conflated it with accouints of earlier landings-on to more or less modern 'carriers. -- Andy Breen ~ Interplanetary Scintillation Research Group http://users.aber.ac.uk/azb/ "Time has stopped, says the Black Lion clock and eternity has begun" (Dylan Thomas) |
#10
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![]() "ANDREW ROBERT BREEN" wrote in message ... In article , Charles Talleyrand wrote: Suppose someone tried to land an F4F Wildcat on a modern American aircraft carrier. We'll give the carrier a few hours to prepare, and lets assume the carrier is at sea and moving. Can a WWII fighter land on a modern carrier? Can it get back in the air? Given the much lower take off and landing speeds of WW2 aircraft, I'd not think there'd be a problem. At the extreme of low take off and landing speeds, ISTR the fleet Air Arm museum's Swordfish landing on and taking off from Illustrious a year or so ago as part of the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Taranto raid - which of course would not present any problem to a Stringbag as Illustrious, while smaller than US carriers, is a lot bigger than many of the ships Swordfish operated from. Sure there could be problems. Maybe the arresting cables have grown in diameter and no longer can be reliably caught by the F4's hook. Maybe the catapult cannot be dialed down low enough for the light weight plane, or the connection between them has changed shape and size. Things become incompatable over time. If things were still compatable 60 years later that would be amazing. Things have changed so much since then. Note how the fuel is different, the O2 systems are different, the ammo is different, etc. Of course someone said similar planes have flown off modern carriers. The question becomes Did they use the arrresting gear? Did they use the catapult? -Thanks |
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