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The Corsair was the first American fighter to top 400 miles an hour and the first to house a 2,000 horsepower engine. The gull wing Corsairs were the toughest foe faced by enemy pilots. Interrogation of high Japanese brass at the end of the war disclosed the fact that they considered the Corsair the top fighter in use by any opposing service in the Pacific. From Guadalcanal, spearheading the drive toward Tokyo, Corsairs took part in nearly every major campaign in the Pacific. Known to the Japanese as ‘whistling death' and to its Marine pilots as the “Sweetheart of Okinawa,” the Corsair also made aerial history in areas other than the Pacific. Among them: the Indian Ocean and the North Sea.
In the course of shooting down 2,140 enemy aircraft, only 189 Corsairs were lost in combat - a ratio of better than 11 to one. From February 13, 1942, when a handful of Corsairs first engaged the Japanese at Guadalcanal, until V-J Day Corsairs carried out a total of 64,051 action sorties. Of this total, 54, 470 were flown from land bases and 9,58l from the decks of aircraft carriers. The end of WWII and the advent of jets spelled the finish of most Propeller driven fighters. Not so for the Corsair. From 1946 until 1950, Corsairs were the top fighters in the two big U. S. Fleets, the Sixth and Seventh. When the jets finally “came aboard” the Navy didn’t eliminate the versatile Corsairs, they just assigned them another equally important role, that of low altitude attack aircraft. Meanwhile, by way of pointing up the fact that the old girl still had plenty of life left in her, Corsairs placed one-two in the grueling Thompson Trophy event at the Cleveland Air Races in 1947. Cook Cleland, the winner, broke the closed course record with an average speed of 396.13 miles an hour. Again, in 1949, Corsairs triumphed, placing one, two, three.
In 1952 the last of the Corsair line, designated the F4U-7, was delivered to the French under terms of the Mutual Defense Assistance Program making it the last piston powered fighter aircraft to be produced in the United States. Even though Corsair production finally reached a halt with the delivery of these 94 F4U-7s, Corsairs continued to see service for many years thereafter. F4U: Operation Summary - WWII
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