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Douglas F4D Skyray

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Douglas F4D Skyray

The Douglas F4D Skyray (later redesignated F-6 Skyray) was an American carrier-based fighter/interceptor built by the Douglas Aircraft Company. Although it was in service for a relatively short time and never entered combat, it was notable for being the first carrier-launched aircraft to hold the world's absolute speed record, at 752.943mph,[1] and was the first United States Navy and United States Marine Corps fighter that could exceed Mach 1 in level flight. It was the last fighter produced by the Douglas Aircraft Company before it merged with McDonnell Aircraft and became McDonnell Douglas. The F5D Skylancer was an advanced development of the F4D Skyray that did not go into service.


The Skyray was designed to meet a Navy requirement issued in 1947 for a fighter aircraft that could intercept and destroy an enemy aircraft at an altitude of 50,000 ft (15,240 m) within five minutes of the alarm being sounded.[2] The Navy also wanted an aircraft that followed the designs and research of the German aerodynamicist Alexander Lippisch, who moved to the U.S. after World War II.

The F4D Skyray was a wide delta wing design with long, sharply swept, rounded wings. The design was named for its resemblance to the Manta ray fish.[3] The thick wing roots contained the air intakes feeding a single turbojet engine. Fuel was contained both in the wings and the deep fuselage. Leading edge slats were fitted for increased lift during takeoff and landing, while the trailing edges were mostly elevon control surfaces. Additional pitch trimmers were fitted inboard near the jet exhaust, and were locked upward on takeoff and landing.

The Westinghouse J40 turbojet was the intended power plant, but Douglas took a conservative view and designed in contingency options for other power plants. The J40 proved troublesome and was eventually cancelled, with the Skyray was fitted instead with the Pratt & Whitney J57, a more powerful but larger engine.

Production aircraft were not delivered until early 1956, while the U.S. Marine Corps received their first in 1957. In total, 419 F4D-1 (later designated F-6 in the unified designation system) aircraft were produced.

Its unique design also played a part in making the Skyray one of the best-known early jet fighters. Affectionately known as the "Ford" (after the "Four" and "D" of its designation).[4] In 1953, Edward H. Heinemann was awarded the Collier Trophy in recognition of his design work on the F4D.[5]
[edit] Operational history
APQ-50A radar of an F4D-1

In April 1956, VC-3 was the first squadron operational with the F4D-1.[1] This unit was later redesignated VFAW-3 and assigned to NORAD, as the only U.S. Navy fighter squadron in what was predominantly a U.S. Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force organization. VFAW-3 was permanently based at NAS North Island in San Diego, California.

The U.S. Marine Corps also flew the Skyray. When the Department of Defense adopted a uniform aircraft designation system patterned on the USAF aircraft designation system in September 1962, the F4D was redesignated as the F-6A Skyray. In addition to multiple Navy and Marine Corps squadrons, Naval Air Reserve and Marine Air Reserve squadrons VF-881, VF-882 and VMF-215 also flew the Skyray. The last operational squadron was VMF(AW)-542, which flew the Skyray until February 1964.

The Skyray was designed exclusively for the high-altitude interception role with a spectacular rate and angle of climb. The Skyray set a new time to altitude record flying from a standing start to 49,221 ft (15,000 m) in 2 minutes and 36 seconds, all while flying at a 70° pitch angle.[1] As a dedicated interceptor, the F4D was unsuited to the multi-mission capabilities soon in demand, so it had a short career in Navy and Marine Corps service, the last aircraft being withdrawn from service in 1964. Four aircraft were used by NACA (soon to be NASA) until 1969.[6]

Under the new 1962 United States Tri-Service aircraft designation system, the F4D-1 was redesignated the F-6A. The F4D (old designation) should not be confused with the F-4D (new designation) - the latter being the "D" variant of the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II operated by the U.S. Air Force.
[edit] F5D Skylancer
Main article: F5D Skylancer

The F5D Skylancer was derived from the F4D and intended to be a Mach 2 capable successor to the Skyray. Although four prototypes were built and flown, the project was cancelled as being too similar in mission parameters to the Vought F8U Crusader and also to reduce dependence upon Douglas Aircraft, which was also producing several other aircraft for the U.S. Navy.[6]
[edit] Variants
F4D-1 Skyray

XF4D-1
Prototypes, redesignated YF-6A in 1962, two built

F4D-1
Single-seat fighter aircraft, production model redesignated F-6A in 1962, 420 built.

F4D-2
Re-engined F4D-1 with the J57-F-14, 100 on order cancelled.

F4D-2N
F4D-2 version with extended nose housing twin radar scanners, project only evolved into the F5D Skylancer.

YF-6A
XF4D-1 prototypes redesignated in 1962.

F-6A
F4D-1 redesignated in 1962.

[edit] Operators
Formation of two VF-102 F4D-1 Skyrays
F4D-1 of VF-141
F4D-1 of VMF-542

United States

US Navy

VFAW-3
VF-13
VF-23
VF-51
VF-74
VF-101
VF-102
VF-141
VF-162
VF-213
VF-881
VF-882

US Marines

VMF-113
VMF-114
VMF-115
VMF-215
VMF-314
VMF-513
VMFA-531
VMF(AW)-542

NACA /NASA

[edit] Survivors
USMC F4D-1 BuNo 139177 from the Flying Leatherneck Aviation Museum

The sole-surviving XF4D-1 (BuNo 124587) is on loan from the National Museum of Naval Aviation and is display at the U.S. Naval Museum of Armament and Technology at NAWS China Lake, California.
An F4D-1 (BuNo 134806) is part of the collection preserved at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola, Florida[7]
F4D-1 (BuNo 134748) is on loan from the National Museum of Naval Aviation and is on display at the Pima Air and Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona.[8]
F4D-1 (BuNo 134936) is part of the collection at the Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum [9]
F4D-1 (BuNo 134836) is on outdoor display at the New England Air Museum in Windsor Locks, Connecticut.
F4D-1 (BuNo 139177) is on loan from the National Museum of Naval Aviation and on display at the Flying Leatherneck Aviation Museum at MCAS Miramar in
San Diego, California.[10]
F4D-1 (BuNo 134950) is on loan from the National Museum of Naval Aviation and is on display at Aviation Heritage Park at NAS Oceana in Virginia Beach, Virginia.[11]
F4D-1 (BuNo 134764) is on outdoor display at Naval Air Station Patuxent River in St. Mary's County, Maryland.[12]

[edit] Specifications (F4D-1)
Skyray Wiki.jpg

Data from The American Fighter [1]

General characteristics

Crew: 1
Length: 45 ft 3 in (13.8 m)
Wingspan: 33 ft 6 in (10.21 m)
Height: 13 ft 0 in (3.96 m)
Wing area: 557 ft² (52 m²)
Empty weight: 16,024 lb (7,268 kg)
Loaded weight: 22,648 lb (10,273 kg)
Max takeoff weight: 27,116 lb (12,300 kg)
Powerplant: 1 × Pratt & Whitney J57-P-8, -8A or -8B turbojet
Dry thrust: 10,200 lbf (45 kN)
Thrust with afterburner: 16,000 lbf (71 kN)

Performance

Maximum speed: 722 mph (627 kn, 1,200 km/h)
Range: 700 mi (610 nmi, 1,100 km) combat
Ferry range: 1,200 mi (1,040 nmi, 1,900 km)
Service ceiling: 55,000 ft (17,000 m)
Rate of climb: 18,300 ft/min (93.3 m/s)
Wing loading: 41 lb/ft² (198 kg/m²)
Thrust/weight: 0.71

Armament

Guns: 4 × 20 mm (0.79 in) Mk 12-0 cannons, two (2) each just aft of wing leading edge, mid-wing, underside, with 65 rounds/gun
Rockets:
6 pods of 7 × 2.75 in (70 mm) unguided rockets or
4 pods of 19 × 2.75 in (70 mm) unguided rockets
Missiles: 2 × AIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missiles
Bombs: 2 × 2,000 lb (907 kg) bombs

Avionics

APQ-50A radar
Aero 13F fire-control radar
Image size
1205x1773px 97.82 KB
Comments7
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Rocketmodels's avatar

My Dad, now 80-something, was in the US Navy during the Cold War and long ago told of doing a live-fire beach landing exercise with the Marines & while they were on the beach sand a couple F4D came in low firing those unguided rockets from pods on underwing hardpoints. He though the Skyrays were neat looking aircraft.