
Have a search and it can be got for very little money;)
Oh.. and welcome to the Lions Den Bazzar. What weren't you surprised about? The fact that the Helldiver is one of the few aircraft rejected by the RN or because that made me snigger

ATB
DaveB

Moderators: Guru's, The Ministry
Some clarification is needed I think.blanston12 wrote:Glad they are doing a Helldiver but would rather have a Dauntless.
Interesting that they are planning a March release, I would have though there VC10 was further along and it would be release before.
The initial Vought F4u Corsair was also rejected until the RN boffins got to work on the landing gear, IIRC.SkippyBing wrote:Possibly the only aircaft the FAA ever rejected as being unsuitable for carrier ops. 1820 NAS did briely operate them but by the time they'd crossed the Atlantic the Admiralty had given up on the idea.
I've read that Vought was already aware of the gear modifications the F4U Corsair needed for carrier ops, rather than it being something we discovered. However, the USN was equipping it's carriers with the Hellcat, and sending the Corsair to land-based USMC squadrons, so it wasn't quite as urgent an issue for them as it was for us. That's what I've read anyway.Motormouse wrote:The initial Vought F4u Corsair was also rejected until the RN boffins got to work on the landing gear, IIRC.SkippyBing wrote:Possibly the only aircaft the FAA ever rejected as being unsuitable for carrier ops. 1820 NAS did briely operate them but by the time they'd crossed the Atlantic the Admiralty had given up on the idea.
Ttfn
Pete
Quite, we did a few other mods to the Corsair as well such as locking the top two cooling flaps shut to avoid oil fouling the windscreen. It's just with the Helldiver no one saw the point in bothering.Motormouse wrote:The initial Vought F4u Corsair was also rejected until the RN boffins got to work on the landing gear, IIRC.SkippyBing wrote:Possibly the only aircaft the FAA ever rejected as being unsuitable for carrier ops. 1820 NAS did briely operate them but by the time they'd crossed the Atlantic the Admiralty had given up on the idea.
Ttfn
Pete