EZFlap wrote:And the idea of using the 4360 to propel a six foot thick, tree-stump-blunt Corsair wing in a 450 mph dive to chase Kamikazes was just laughable then, and is still laughable in the unlimited race today. A thinner, sharper wing would have made it damn near trans-sonic in a dive with the stock 2800 engine.
Which is exactly why they only made 5 of them before discontinuing the project (along with some other flight characteristic problems). However, it was not the dive speed that they were after...it was the climb and level flight speed that they were after. The R-4360 power to weight ratio became (arguably) an exercise in diminishing returns which is why it never made it as a fighter engine.
Keep in mind though that there is more to an aircraft than just pure speed, although the Corsair is no slouch in this area either. My buddy flies both the P-51 (Excalibur) and the F4U-5 (WR) in aerobatic demonstrations fairly routinely and although he likes the Mustang, the Corsair is his hands down "pilot’s airplane" favorite between them. It is a two finger aircraft whereas the Mustang takes both hands on the stick to pull out of a dive or the backside of a loop…that says a lot when you are in combat. Another comparison to keep in mind is that he P-51 has a MGTOW only 2,000 lbs more than the Empty Weight of an F4U…it is a much larger aircraft AND has folding wings which require a bit more bulk in the airfoil. A Corsair is a big bird…as big as a King Air and capable of speed and MGTOW far exceeding it. Put enough horsepower on a grand piano and it will fly.
Both aircraft are legends in their own right and arguably the best fighters of all time. I have been blessed to have buddies that let me “tag along” with their warbird adventures and share in the history & operation of these flying history lessons. I wouldn’t kick either one out of the hangar…then again, I cannot even afford a hangar with a door tall enough to clear the prop.
