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Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
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#1
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Re: F4U-1A
Maybe the letter a is given by the industry or designers? I will take a look today on some selected images and to see register letters on this early machines.
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#2
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Re: F4U-1A
Theory
There was a C and a D and some historian, not understanding the USN system and thinking it worked in the same way as the USAAF, decided there must be an A and a B to fill the gap. Conveniently there were two different canopies, surely they must denote the missing sub types! Theory may fall down as I do not know what would constitute the B Martin |
#3
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Re: F4U-1A
Quote:
The BuAer issued exhaustive lists of suffixes with their meanings. You can find them on the net very easily. Among other modifications: "B" stood for "aircraft built for the British under Lend-Lease". "C" was for cannon-armed aircraft. "D" was for drop tanks. Right on spot as far as the Corsair is concerned. The only one-off designation regarding the Corsair was the night-fighter version, which was designed F4U-2, while it should have been F4U-1N. But at that time, night-fighters were probably new to the BuAer and they had not yet made their mind up as how call them. |
#4
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Re: F4U-1A
The listing of Bureau Numbers for Naval aircraft at http://www.history.navy.mil/avh-1910/APP09.PDF does not show F4U-1A, only F4U-1 (and 1C and 1D). This is from the
Appendices from United States Naval Aviation 1910-1995 However, checking actual USMC flight logs I find the use of F4U-1A quite frequent. I suspect -1C and -1D to be official USN usage, and -1A to be informal "in the field" usage, based on the Army's use of A, B, C, D, etc to indicate changes. Enjoy! Frank.
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#5
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Re: F4U-1A
Thanks Frank.
I eventually found out the answer. See the attached scan from the book "F4U Corsair" by Nicholas A. Veronico et al, Motorbooks, 1994. In fact, the designation F4U-1A was only officially approved in May 1944. But at that time, Vought was building F4U-1Ds, Goodyear FG-1Ds and Brewster had gone out of business. Thus, not a single F4U-1/FG-1/F3A-1 with bubble canopy ever sported the suffix "A" on the rudder. That settles the matter once and for all. Thanks to all. Chris Last edited by CJE; 30th September 2015 at 10:44. |
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