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Vought F-8 Crusader: Last of the Gunfighters

Dabbs forgot to mention a few things.

The F-8 Crusader has a sleek fuselage that's also very long (as per the profile pics) in comparison to its wingspan. While the higher angle of attack of the wing helped provide more lift for take-off and landing it was also necessary to address the long fuselage length.

The angle of attack refers to the wing, not the fuselage. The reason the wing was raised was to level the fuselage at approach speed so the tailpipe wouldn’t hit the deck when the F-8 landed. Having the fuselage as level as possible makes landing much better.

Also, accident rates were high for all aircraft of that era due to the early tech.

This sentence... The wingtips also folded for storage aboard ship. should have been the lead-in for the paragraph below the John Glenn picture.

The Mk 12 20mm cannon were prone to jamming during high-G maneuvers.

The Brits figured out how to better land the F4U than the US since they used the F4 U on carriers earlier, and the Corsair had to make some changes to it's landing gear. And if was so difficult to land why was the F4U regularly operated on very small escort carrier during Korea.

And with the same the F8 Crusader was operated more, and lastly, on the small improved Essex-Class carriers.

And the designers of the F-8 did not design it to rectify issues with the F4U Corsair. Two different designs.

Some additional information on the French operating the F8 Crusader would have fleshed out the article better.

My .02
 
The French F-8 was a different/new model, the F-8E(FN), based on the F-8E with substantial modifications, & the Philippines F-8s were left over USN/USMC F-8Hs which were remanufactured F-8Ds.






 
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The story of the F-8 Crusader "wings folded" flight


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BTW - It happened to an F-4 Phantom too.

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And an Israeli F-15 flew with half of its wing.

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Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Vought F-8 Crusader: Last of the Gunfighters” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/vought-f-8-crusader/.

The F-8 was subject of my fourth book, written when Photo Crusaders remained in the fleet. The community had stratospheric morale partly based on a perverse pride in the accident rate. There was sort of a rivalry between Crusaders and RA-5 Vigilantes for the worst safety record among carrier aircraft though both performed their missions splendidly. Among the "Dogfights" episodes I was in (roughly half of them in the two-year run) the F-8 segment remains my favorite because it focused attention on the Navy's "other fighter" with excellent descriptions by the four aviators I recommended. Dick "Brown Bear" Schaffert provided a detailed account of his classic 1-v-4 with MiG-17s plus a "drive by" courtesy of two MiG-21s.
 
The F-8 was subject of my fourth book, written when Photo Crusaders remained in the fleet. The community had stratospheric morale partly based on a perverse pride in the accident rate. There was sort of a rivalry between Crusaders and RA-5 Vigilantes for the worst safety record among carrier aircraft though both performed their missions splendidly. Among the "Dogfights" episodes I was in (roughly half of them in the two-year run) the F-8 segment remains my favorite because it focused attention on the Navy's "other fighter" with excellent descriptions by the four aviators I recommended. Dick "Brown Bear" Schaffert provided a detailed account of his classic 1-v-4 with MiG-17s plus a "drive by" courtesy of two MiG-21s.
What's the books' name.?
 
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