The Restoration of Vought Pirate Number 2



Similar documents
National Naval Aviation Museum

Chapter 2. Basic Airplane Anatomy Delmar, Cengage Learning

parts of an airplane Getting on an Airplane BOX Museum Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate in a Series

United States Army Air Corps Painting Practices During World War II

Brief introduction

Build and Fly the Fokker D- 8

NORTH TEXAS REGIONAL AIRPORT FACT SHEET. Approximately 60 miles north of Dallas, between Sherman and Denison, Texas

BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA MERIT BADGE SERIES AVIATION

F-35 Lightning II Program Status and Fast Facts 4Q 2015

60 Years Later, Navy Man and Tragic Plane Crash Remembered

FINAL REPORT. AAIU Synoptic Report No: AAIU File No: 2005/0030 Published: 24/7/06

Aviation Supplies & Academics, Inc nd Place SE Newcastle, Washington

MILITARY INTELLIGENCE

African Americans in Aviation: The 1940s A Decade of Change PRACTICING HISTORY WITH PRIMARY SOURCES

What did the Wright brothers invent?

Front landing gear legs. Carve from balsa block

Aleda Ester Lutz A Memoir of This VA Medical Center s Namesake A GIRL FROM FREELAND...

AIRCRAFT GENERAL GTM CONTENTS

Micro. Pitts Special for the RFFS-100 by Chris O Riley

Volunteers Devoted to Kids and Aviation

AIRCRAFT RESCUE AND FIRE FIGHTING GUIDE REVISION 0. AA Flight Safety Department.4601 Hwy 360; MD 849 GSWFA.Fort Worth Texas Phone

1 Aircraft Purchase Checklist BUYING YOUR FIRST AIRCRAFT : A STEP BY STEP GUIDE

TARGET: BERLIN Dr. Daniel L. Haulman Air Force Historical Research Agency 25 May 2012

20 years later: Florida Guardsmen reflect on Operation Desert Storm

A Summary of a NIOSH fire fighter fatality investigation

SO, YOU WANT TO BE A PILOT? A GUIDE TO THE PILOT APPLICATION PROCESS

Assembly Manual For. Dolphine Jet. Wingspan: 88 in Wingarea: sp in Length: 78.8 in Engine: 50CC.

APPLICATION FOR A SPECIAL FLIGHT OPERATIONS CERTIFICATE FOR THE OPERATION OF A RECREATIONAL MODEL UNMANNED AIR VEHICLE (UAV) Revision NC draft

Historic Esmont Virginia Post Office Renovation

XB-70 VALKYRIE ENGINEERING TEAMS / PART II

98 Turbine Vulcan Build photos

Scalemodel World Competition Rules 2013.

Application For General Liability Coverage

This file contains the full script of the corresponding video, published on YouTube. November 2014:

H is for HELP! He was employed as an EMS pilot in Buffalo New York for about 2 years, than transferred to work as a relief pilot through out WI.

Inoperative Equipment

SERVICE. 28R thru 28R PA-28R-200 Arrow II 28R thru 28R

AIR AMBULANCE POLICY

CURRICULUM-VITAE. Daniel Ray Phillips 5746 Richmond Avenue Dallas, Texas (214)

ROBERT L. HOOT GIBSON CONSULTANT

A Tennessee airport ramps up safety with Milestone XProtect wireless IP video surveillance

Sikorsky HOS-1 (R-6) "Hoverfly II"

ADVANCED MANUFACTURING: AIR TRANSPORTATION CAREER PATHWAY

FACTUAL REPORT AVIATION

Improving safety through accident investigation: An NTSB perspective Robert Sumwalt

A GREAT IDEA! An Advanced, Worldwide Leader in Rapid. Leak Detection Sealant Removal Curing Repair

From A to F: The F/A-18 Hornet

Death in the line of duty...

Assembly and Operating Manual Nano warbirds FW 190 Specification: *Length: 18 1/2"(470mm) *Wing Span: 21 7/10"(550mm)

Convair HC-131A "Samaritan

Building 142 Repair Building. Historic American Buildings Survey Level II/III FINAL

COMPANY PROFILE YOUR PREFERRED PARTNER IN AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGIES SUBSIDIARIES. AERO Vodochody AEROSPACE a.s., Odolena Voda, Czech Republic

SMOOTHMOVE INSTRUCTIONS FURNITURE VAN EPOXY FLOOR FINISH KIT VOC-FREE - NO SOLVENT GENERAL INFORMATION KEY 87269AB

21ST CENTURY AVIATION MAINTENANCE TRAINING

100% SucceSSfull at Stopping overruns

Activities with Paper How To Make and Test a Paper Airplane

Existing Facilities. Current and Forecast Demand

Decision Making Under Extreme Pressure

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION SUBJ: PROCEDURES TO ACCEPT INDUSTRY-DEVELOPED TRAINING FOR LIGHT-SPORT REPAIRMEN

Cell Phones Past, Present, and Future

THE PATH TO BECOMING A MARINE CORPS AVIATOR

A Message from the Flight Camp Director:

A/S Nielsen & Winther

Documenting Your Model for a Scale Contest

Mercy Medical Angels THE SHORTEST DISTANCE FROM HOME TO HOPE

details >>> HERE <<<

ROYAL CANADIAN AIR CADETS PROFICIENCY LEVEL TWO INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE SECTION 6 EO C IDENTIFY PARTS OF A ROCKET PREPARATION

Sikorsky HUS-1G (HH-34) Seahorse

Model Aircraft Design

The Invention Of The Jet Engine. Milo Whittle

General aviation & Business System Level Applications and Requirements Electrical Technologies for the Aviation of the Future Europe-Japan Symposium

COLUMBUS REGIONAL AIRPORT AUTHORITY. Economic Impact Study Update. Executive Summary

On the trail of Halifax bomber BB378 of 138 Squadron from RAF Tempsford Crash-landed in Denmark on

The History of Tinker AFB

Thomas J. Duffy prepares for takeoff in his P-51 Mustang at Millville Airport in South Jersey.

Becoming a Pilot. Questions Answered by a Professional Pilot.

Report of Investigation. into the Crew Fatality Caused. by a Deck Lifter Onboard. M.V. Dyvi Adriatic

Aeronautics AERO, FLTEC, ATCAD

AVIATION INVESTIGATION REPORT A08W0162 CONTROLLED FLIGHT INTO WATER

Report to the Minister of Justice and Solicitor General Public Fatality Inquiry

ABOUT US VISION AND MISSION

Pilot Professionalism It Isn t Just For The Big Guys

at night Bright Who says the workday ends at 5 p.m.?

COMPLETE KIT PARTS LIST

WEATHERING SCALE AIRCRAFT

30a. 31a. 30b b. 29a 28a 1/48SCALEHEMSDAUPHIN PAGE2/10

SebArt professional line

In 1948 President Truman ordered the desegregation of the United States Military.

FSI LOGO Revision 1.0

Data Review and Analysis Program (DRAP) Flight Data Visualization Program for Enhancement of FOQA

Automation at Odds. A 737 stalled when a radio altimeter malfunction caused the autothrottle and autopilot to diverge during an approach to Schiphol.

AMA Gold Leader Club #458 Airplane Bench Building Instructions. Charlie Meyer and Joe Di Prima

Transcription:

The Restoration of Vought Pirate Number 2

Pirate Fighter leads VOUGHT into jet age By Art Schoeni (Vought Photographer and Historian) One in a Series The single men all lived in tarpaper shacks on the windswept desert. Heat from pot-bellied stoves set in the middle of the building was poor. The nearest toilet and shower facilities were across the street, not a popular location on cold winter mornings. A combat report from the war zone? Nope, just how 50 men lived when they took the first XF6U-1 jet Pirate fighter to Muroc Dry Lakebed, Calif., in October, 1946, for its first flight. The Pirate was Vought's first jet airplane and it was flown from Stratford, Conn., factory to Muroc in a Fairchild C-119 to begin its test program. About the time the Pirate finished its Muroc (now Edwards AFB) tests the XF-86 Sabre was making its first flights there. So were the Northrop XB-35 Flying Wing and the Bell X-1 rocket aircraft. Henry C. Nissen was in charge of the test program, with Luther Boyer as flight test engineer. The jet Pirate started out as a twin- engine propellered carrier fighter with R-2800-E engines. The Navy wanted a jet fighter so the company submitted a V-340 proposal. It received a contract award on Dec. 24, 1944 while the war still going On. Three experimental Pirates were built with J-34-WE-22 engine of 3,000 pounds thrust. Compare this to the 15,000 pounds thrust jet engine in the A-7E Corsair II. The jet engine was so light two men could lift it. Underpowered as it was, the Pirate with its blunt nose and straight wings at first was under 500 miles per hour, less than the F4U-5 Corsair which topped that mark in a Patuxent test flight. The XF6U-1 weighed 9,000 pounds, less than half that of an A-7. At Muroc, Edward Owens, Vought's chief test pilot, made the first flight in the experimental airplane on Oct. 2, 1946. The company produced 30 F6U-1s with the J-34-WE-30A engine of 3,200-pounds thrust. To boost the speed, the new solar afterburner was added in 1948, upping thrust to 4,200 pounds. So unsure were flight line men about how the burner would work they viewed its first operations at Patuxent from a tent with a window in it, located some 50 yards away. First production F6U flight was made by Robert Baker at Stratford on Oct. 2, 1948. That year at Patuxent, Paul Thayer landed a Pirate on a golf course when his aircraft had an engine failure caused by a major control system malfunction. He walked away from that crash landing unhurt. The Vought plant moved to Dallas during the F6U and F7U production programs. Because of the then-short runways at NAS Dallas, the disassembled F6Us were trucked to Ardmore, reassembled and flown there. The F7Us was first flown at Carswell AFB and later from Ardmore. The Pirate was the first airplane to use the new Metalite skin, invented by Vought for greater strength and lightness. It was a core of balsa wood sandwiched between skins of aluminum. The F6U never reached Navy fleet squadron use. The Navy put the emphasis on the Cutlass and the Pirates ended up at Naval air stations and training centers for mechanic training.

Suddenly, in 1948, Chance Vought astounded industry by announcing that it was moving to Texas, and taking with it millions of pounds of equipment and 1500 of its key employees, many of whom had been born and raised in New England. Toward the end of the move, when the F6U-1 program was nearing completion in Stratford, the trucks were constantly busy hauling subassemblies, and even complete airplanes. The first truck in the caravan arrived in Dallas the first week in January 1949 with a center section wing and a front section fuselage and, thereafter, additional shipments arrived in Dallas at the rate of one plane a week. Canvas-wrapped, without wing tips or tail surfaces; these airplanes were 24 feet wide, taking up two lanes of a highway, and were 48 feet long and 13 feet high. Special permits had to be obtained from each state through which the Pirate traveled. Each state and county provided police escorts for the valuable and bulky cargo. The Pirate traveled in a convoy with a car driving in advance to notify highway police of the next county of its approach and a truck filled with fuselage sections followed to guard the plane from the rear. That is how the first F6Us arrived at Vought s new Texas plant in Grand Prairie. The plane in the photo is believed to be F6U number 2.

Vought F6U-1, USN Serial number 122479 was the 2nd production airplane. It was a flight test aircraft which ended its career in the desert of Socorro, New Mexico as a ground subject for explosive charge cutting development. The shattered airframe then found its way to the Connecticut Air Museum where some restoration on the vertical tail was accomplished. Number 479 was donated to the Vought Aircraft Heritage Foundation in early 2002 and arrived at VAHF in October of that year It is the only known survivor of a batch of 30 that were fabricated from 1948 to 1949. Note of Interest The Vought test pilot on the F6U program was Paul Thayer. Toward the end of the restoration of Pirate number 2, Paul Thayer looked at it, touched it, glared at it, smiled and was heard to say You tried to kill me twice. Paul Thayer was 90 years young.

The following Vought retirees restored the F6U-1 Pirate: Wade Anderson Huey Barrilleaux Cathie Barrington Don Branton Bobby Brown Harvey Brown Stan Bullard Ray Dickey Joe Engle Bob Essler Jerry Fischer Kelly Fling Jim Gathings Earl Hastings Jim Hill John Huffman Jim Kaufmann Carl Klapprott Frank Laubenthal Chuck Lindly Harold Lindsey Hank Merbler Ab Miller Dave Morse Billy Newberry Burt Noble Ted Phelps Bob Rainey Richard Roberson Richard Sheaner Dillon Smith Charles Stalcup Bob Szabados Bob Turney Wayne Vaughn Phillip Wacaster Wat Watkins Harold Widmann Richard Win Photographs by: Billy Newberry Roger Stites Book by: Roger Stites John Jipp

The remaining parts of the aircraft were set up so work could begin.

Work began in 2002. The first parts finished were the vertical and horizontal tail assembly and some skin panels. After a coating of primer paint, more skin was repaired and the two parts of the fuselage were put back together.. Other features including the canopy, gun ports and other missing parts fabrication was started.

The plane came with only one wing, in as bad a shape as the fuselage, and no wing box or landing gear. This being the only known F6U to still exist, these missing parts also had to be fabricated by the retirees.

After nine years of dedicated work, just two days a week, the plane was restored to its original shape. It got another coat of primer paint and a final sanding and inspection. Then it received its signature Vought blue paint job and decals. Another group of retirees worked on the cockpit as the rest of the plane was being restored. Work was finished 2011.

The F6U-1 number 2 was finished Nov./2011. The restoration was completed by the retirees of the Vought Aircraft Heritage Foundation, a part of the Vought Aircraft Industries Retirees Club. www.vought.com/heritage This beautiful museum piece was moved during February 2012 to the National Museum of Naval Aviation in Pensacola Florida. www.navalaviationmuseum.org