 | P-47 carrier capable?| Aviation Discuss P-47 carrier capable? in the World War II - Aviation forums; Anyone knows something about this, what version of P-47 that is, when and where it happend?... |
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06-05-2008, 02:55 PM
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#1 | | Member
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Warsaw
Posts: 94
Country: | P-47 carrier capable?
Anyone knows something about this, what version of P-47 that is, when and where it happend?
Last edited by marshall : 06-05-2008 at 02:58 PM.
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06-05-2008, 03:11 PM
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#2 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Fresno, CA
Posts: 2,397
Country: | YouTube - P-47 Thunderbolt USS Manila bay (WW II)
On 23 June Manila Bay came under enemy air attack during refueling operations east of Saipan. Two fighter bombers attacked her from dead ahead, dropping four bombs which exploded wide to port. Intense anti-aircraft fire suppressed further attacks; and, as a precautionary and rather unusual move which Admiral Spruance later characterized as "commendable initiative", Manila Bay launched four of the Army P-47's she was ferrying to fly protective CAP until radar screens were clear of contacts USS Manila Bay (CVE-61 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
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Last edited by comiso90 : 06-05-2008 at 03:15 PM.
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06-05-2008, 03:40 PM
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#4 | | Member
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Warsaw
Posts: 94
Country: | Thanks for the info. Something I wasn't expecting to see, a Jug taking-off from a carrier... |
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06-05-2008, 04:00 PM
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#5 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Edmonton
Posts: 1,337
Country: | Most planes could take off from carriers, but I'm not so sure they all could land on them. I'm pretty sure the P-47s could not land on them, they would have been lifted by crane onto the ship.
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06-05-2008, 07:01 PM
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#6 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Adelaide
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Country: | Some more pics. P-40's were also launched from carriers at one stage.
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06-05-2008, 07:17 PM
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#7 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Las Vegas, Nevada
Posts: 264
Country: | Wow. A Jug definatly couldn't have landed on a carrier. To darn heavy. I bet they also ate up alot of space |
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06-05-2008, 08:24 PM
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#8 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Abingdon, VA.
Posts: 125
Country: | Marshall, I'm just guessing here but if they did use a variant for carrier trials I would tend to think it would have to be the M. They made somewhat lighter, two fewer guns and so on but again I'm just stabbing in the dark. I will try to find out more.  |
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06-05-2008, 11:11 PM
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#9 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 8,312
| A P47 landing on a carrier would have damaged the deck .... but not the P47
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06-06-2008, 12:46 AM
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#10 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 366
Country: | Taking off is the easy part. Landing is pretty easy too. Landing and walking away from it is more tricky.
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06-06-2008, 01:18 AM
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#11 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 2,035
Country: | The P-47 (particularly the earlier D models) wasn't all that much heavier than the Corsair, and considderably lighter than a/c like the SB2C.
However it had a relatively high landing speed, and landings would have been pretty hard. (think about what would happen to the arrestor hook and wire...)
This was due to a combination of high wing loading and a lower lift airfoil (nearly all USN a/c used the high lift NACA 23000 series), and smaller flaps.
If you enlarge the flaps (and make them fowler type), added the necessary carrier equipment, and completely removed the turbocharger system (cut over over 1,000 lbs off weight and replaced with 2-stage supercharger like on F4U) and subsequently cleaned up the fusalage a bit (with the turbo ducting now gone, reducing drag and weight) it might just have been a workable (and probably more than decent) carrier fighter.
Of course, by then you'd have a considderably different a/c, with different optimised performance characteristics. And the F4U would still be better suited, being specifically designed for it.
And remember though, they took B-25's off from a carrier.
Last edited by kool kitty89 : 06-06-2008 at 01:20 AM.
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06-06-2008, 01:22 AM
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#12 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 2,035
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by comiso90 YouTube - P-47 Thunderbolt USS Manila bay (WW II)
On 23 June Manila Bay came under enemy air attack during refueling operations east of Saipan. Two fighter bombers attacked her from dead ahead, dropping four bombs which exploded wide to port. Intense anti-aircraft fire suppressed further attacks; and, as a precautionary and rather unusual move which Admiral Spruance later characterized as "commendable initiative", Manila Bay launched four of the Army P-47's she was ferrying to fly protective CAP until radar screens were clear of contacts USS Manila Bay (CVE-61 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
. | How and where did the P-47's flying CAP land?
And it looks like the P-47's in the youtube clip are being catapult launched.
Last edited by kool kitty89 : 06-06-2008 at 01:25 AM.
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06-06-2008, 10:30 AM
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#13 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 308
Country: | Those P-47's were being ferried to their newly seized bases in the Marianas (as I guess it says). There was no intention for them to land back on the carrier, just be catapulted off and land ashore.
P-39's also did this, in the Pacific, in addition to P-40's as already mentioned. When P-40's were ferried across the Atlantic on the carrier Ranger on a few occasions, they flew off, IOW were not catapulted, similarly to the 700+ Hurricanes and Spitfires flown off to Malta in 1940-42 from RN, and on 2 occasions USN (USS Wasp), carriers. In a tiny handful of those cases a/c with mechanical trouble did manage to land back aboard, a Spitfire did so on one of the Wasp missions.
Late in the war the USN conducted landing trials with PBJ's (ie B-25's) on carriers. Catapulting or flying off from carriers was feasible for a broad range of WWII a/c not designed for it. Landing was harder but also feasible in a one-off emergency or trial in fairly many cases, especially on a bigger carrier. Day in/day out carrier operations with a reasonably low operational loss rate is where the purpose designed carrier plane usually had the advantage. Even somewhat successful carrier planes adapted from land planes were sometimes weak in that aspect. Needless to say the *pilots* also had to have carrier landing training; there was no attempt to do that in any of the USAAF ferry/fly off operations, usually minimal training even in the taking off part, but it usually went OK anyway.
Joe
Last edited by JoeB : 06-06-2008 at 10:34 AM.
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06-06-2008, 10:42 AM
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#14 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Montrose, Colorado
Posts: 2,177
Country: | They probably would have had to have a lot of wind also for the launch. The takeoff distance on land with zero wind, paved strip, sea level, full load of fuel and ammo for P47D-25 at 14411 pounds was 2540 feet. The TO distance for F4U4, same specs, at 12281 pounds was 630 feet. |
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06-06-2008, 11:01 AM
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#15 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008 Location: carbon canyon
Posts: 154
Country: | jugs on carriers. hi all,was the corsair as fast as a jug-p47.lee.
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