McDonnell F2H Banshee Video - Amateur footage on aircraft carrier - Banshees on flight deck
More McDonnell F2H Banshee Videos 1 - McDonnell F2H Banshee Pictures
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Picture: A US Navy F2H-2 Banshee flying over Wonsan, North Korea, 1952 |
Role - Carrier-based fighter aircraft
National origin - United States
Manufacturer - McDonnell Aircraft
First flight - 11 January 1947
Introduced - August 1948
Retired - 1959 USN, USMC; 12 September 1962 RCN; 1964 USNR
Primary users - United States Navy, United States Marine Corps, Royal Canadian Navy
Number built - 895
Developed from - FH Phantom
The McDonnell F2H Banshee was a military carrier-based jet fighter aircraft, used by the United States Navy from 1948 to 1959 and by the Royal Canadian Navy from 1955 until 1962. The Banshee had unswept wings, a single seat, and two engines. Together with the F9F Panther, the Banshee was one of the USN's primary single-seat fighters during the Korean War. The aircraft's name is derived from the banshee or "fairy woman" of Celtic mythology.
Design and development
The Banshee was a development of the FH Phantom, although it was being planned before the Phantom went into production. The basic design was for an enlarged and more powerful Phantom, with a pair of Westinghouse turbojets raising power from 1,600 lbf (7 kN) to 3,000 lbf (13 kN) each, an increased fuel load, a move away from the World War II standard 0.5 in (12.7 mm) guns to 20 mm cannon, and additional capability to carry bombs, rockets or missiles as well.
A mock-up of the new fighter, designated XF2D-1, was completed in April 1945. The project survived the end of the war, but development work was slowed and the first of three prototypes was not built until late 1946. The aircraft made its maiden flight on the 11 January 1947 from Lambert Field, St. Louis, Missouri; test pilot was Woodward Burke. The Navy redesignated the aircraft as the XF2H-1 as the manufacturer's designator "D" was already assigned to the Douglas Aircraft Company. After some problems with the tailplane were resolved, an order for 56 craft was placed in May 1947.
The F2H-1 was first delivered in August 1948 for service evaluation by Navy pilots. Relative to the XF2D-1, the fuselage was extended 14 in (36 cm) forward of the wing to provide the capacity for an additional 351 gal (1,330 l) of fuel. The F2H-1 was retrofitted with 3,150 lbf (14 kN) thrust engines as they became available.
Despite the Navy's accepting the F2H-1, it was the more capable F2H-2 that was most widely used; 306 of this type were built. With newer 3,250 lbf (14.5 kN) thrust engines, it had improved performance. The wing was also modified to add provisions for weapons pylons and 200 gal (760 l) wingtip fuel tanks. Unlike the contemporary F9F Panther, the Banshee's wingtip tanks were detachable, although most historical photographs show the aircraft flying with the tanks in place.
The F2H-2 was the foundation for three minor variants of the Banshee. The F2H-2B had strengthened wings to allow it to carry a small nuclear weapon, a mission it never carried out. A total of 35 were produced. The F2H-2N was a night fighter variant outfitted with a 2 ft 10 in (0.86 m) longer nose to accommodate internal radar equipment; 14 were produced. The F2H-2P was a photo-reconnaissance version with six cameras housed in a 2 ft 5 in (0.74 m) longer nose; it was the first jet-powered reconnaissance aircraft used by the USN. 81 were built.
The F2H-3 was the last significant alteration. The fuselage was extended by 8 ft (2.4 m) to increase internal fuel load from 877 gal (3,320 l) to 1,102 gal (4,172 l), allowing the aircraft to complete many missions without the wing-tip tanks seen in most photographs of earlier variants. The horizontal stabilizer was moved from the vertical tail down to the fuselage and incorporated significant dihedral. The Banshee was also fitted with Westinghouse radar equipment, enabling the fighter to be used for all-weather missions, and the cannons were moved downwards and rearwards away from the nose to accommodate the radar. These changes resulted in an airplane that looked significantly different from its predecessors. 250 F2H-3s were built.
The last variant was the F2H-4. It had a Hughes radar in place of the earlier Westinghouse set, and also had slightly more powerful 3,600 lbf (16 kN) thrust engines. The F2H-4 was externally identical to the F2H-3. 150 were built.
A proposed F2H-3P photo-reconnaissance variant was canceled before reaching production. Unlike most other early jet fighters, no two-seat version was ever produced.
Production ended in September 1953 after a total of 895 aircraft were delivered. The F2H-3 and F2H-4 were given the new designations F-2C and F-2D respectively under the 1962 unified designation system. The designations F-2A and F-2B presumably referred to the F2H-1 and F2H-2, but these variants had already been withdrawn from service. No Banshees ever flew under the new designations; the last ones in USNR service were placed in storage before the new designations went into effect.
Operational history
United States Navy and Marine Corps
The F2H-2 served during the Korean War with the U.S. Navy Task Force 77 and the Marine Corps. Pilots spoke of F2H as the "banjo".[1] Due to its good performance at high altitude, it initially proved its worth as an escort for long-range USAF bomber formations. As the war progressed, USN and USMC fighters were primarily assigned to ground attack missions, including close air support of ground troops and destruction of the North Korean army's supply lines.[2] The North Korean air forces had been almost completely annihilated during the opening weeks of the war by the combined US and UK Far East Air Force (FEAF), mostly due to the far superior training and World War II combat experience of the US and Commonwealth pilots. From that point onwards, the combined North Korean, Chinese, and Soviet forces were unable to open new airstrips near the combat zones in South Korea because of constant FEAF airstrikes, forcing them to operate out of air bases in China. The Banshee and other USN fighters had limited exposure to hostile enemy aircraft because they operated far out of the range of enemy fighters operating from China.[2] Air-to-air combat missions, such as patrols in the Yalu River area, were primarily assigned to F-86 Sabres.[2] Consequently, the Banshee would score no victories nor suffer any losses in air-to-air combat, although three F2H-2s were lost to anti-aircraft gunfire.
The F2H-2P also made a great contribution to the Korean War, particularly in USMC service. At the time of the war, accurate surface-to-air missiles had not yet been developed, the vast majority of enemy aircraft did not have onboard radar, and the speed of newer jets was rapidly making AAA guns obsolete. Air defense tactics still largely depended on being able to see the enemy, and US commanders soon discovered that a lone high-flying F2H-2P was almost impossible for ground forces to spot, much less shoot down. The airplane was soon in very high demand for the invaluable battlefield photography it could provide. F2H-2Ps even received USAF fighter escorts when operating in areas frequented by enemy fighters. Despite being deployed constantly throughout the war, only two F2H-2Ps were lost to radar-directed AAA gunfire, with no air-to-air losses.
In the late 1940s, the USN had resisted the novel swept wing design concept, fearing that the tricky low-speed handling displayed by early swept wing airplanes would make it unsafe to operate them from aircraft carriers. Unfortunately, the USN failed to fully appreciate how much this would hamper the performance of its new jets. As a consequence of its unswept wings, the Banshee was almost 100 mph (160 km/h) slower than new Soviet jet fighters such as the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15, a serious handicap in air-to-air combat. As further testing proved that swept wing aircraft could be flown safely at low speeds, development of new swept wing USN fighters began. The USN deployed the new radar-equipped F2H-3 and F2H-4 for all-weather fleet defense after the conclusion of the Korean War, but only as a stopgap measure until the much faster F9F Cougar, F3H Demon, and F4D Skyray could be deployed in significant numbers. Later variants of the Banshee only served for a few years on the front lines and saw no action. Similarly, the F2H-2P was superseded by the F9F-8P (later RF-9J) variant of the F9F Cougar and the F8U-1P (later RF-8A) variant of the F8U Crusader as these faster aircraft became available.
Surviving examples are located on display in private collections and at several naval air stations and marine corps air stations in the United
States, to include two examples on display at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida.[3]
Royal Canadian Navy
In 1951, the RCN expressed interest in replacing their obsolescent Hawker Sea Furies with Banshees, drafting a $40 million deal for 60 new aircraft. Unfortunately, due to fiscal wrangling in the Canadian Cabinet, the purchase was not approved until after Banshee production had been shut down in 1953. The RCN was forced to acquire second-hand USN aircraft, 39 at a cost of $25 million. The aircraft were delivered from 1955 to 1958, and flew from HMCS Bonaventure (CVL 22) or as NORAD interceptors from shore bases.
In order to improve the Banshee's capabilities as a long-range interceptor, the RCN equipped the aircraft with the AIM-9 Sidewinder missile. The RCN conducted sea trials of the Sidewinder in November 1959, during which several remotely-piloted drone aircraft were shot down.[4] After the retirement of the F2H-3, the Canadian military would not deploy another aircraft armed with the Sidewinder missile until the introduction of the CF-18 Hornet in 1982.[citation needed]
The Banshee, although initially well-liked by its Canadian pilots for its flying qualities, began to suffer from problems in RCN service. A Banshee and its pilot were lost after an in-flight structural failure of the folding wing mechanism, and another Banshee suffered an apparent brake failure aboard Bonaventure and rolled off the carrier's deck, falling into the ocean and drowning its pilot.[5] The RCN would eventually lose 12 of its original 39 Banshees to accidents, a loss rate of over 30%.[4]
Utilization of the Banshees fell as the RCN shifted its primary focus to anti-submarine warfare (ASW). Bonaventure was too small to accommodate many Banshees while carrying a sufficient number of CS2F Trackers to conduct around-the-clock ASW patrols, so the carrier frequently left port with no Banshees aboard.[5] Furthermore, the Canadian military was coming under increasing political pressure to cut its budget, and the increasingly obsolescent Banshees were becoming expensive to maintain as years of punishing carrier service and the harsh North Atlantic climate took their toll. The last RCN Banshees were retired without replacement in September 1962. They were the only jet-powered carrier-based fighters ever deployed by the RCN.
Banshees were the primary aircraft of the short-lived RCN Grey Ghosts aerobatic team. The team's name was a play on the Banshee name and the RCN color scheme. The RCN's Banshee fleet was too small to maintain a special contingent of aircraft for airshow service, so the team simply flew whichever active-duty Banshees were available at the time of each show.
Three of the former RCN Banshees survive today:
- 126464 at the Canada Aviation Museum in Ottawa, Ontario
- 126402 at the Shearwater Aviation Museum at CFB Shearwater in the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia
- 126334 at the Naval Museum of Alberta in Calgary, Alberta
The remaining RCN Banshees were cut up for scrap or destroyed as practice targets.[4]
Variants
XF2D-1
Original designation of the XF2H-1 prototypes.
XF2H-1
Prototype aircraft, three built.
F2H-1 Banshee
Single-seat fighter version, powered by two 3,000 lbf (1,400 kgf) Westinghouse J34-GE-22 turbojet engines. Initial production version, 56 built.
F2H-2 Banshee
Improved version, with slightly lengthened fuselage with increased fuel capacity, fitted with wingtip fuel tanks, powered by two 3,250 lbf (1,475
kgf) Westinghouse J34-WE-34 turbojet engines. Second production version, 308 built.
F2H-2B Banshee
Single-seat fighter-bomber version, fitted with two underwing racks to carry two 500 lb (230 kg) bombs, 25 built.
F2H-2N Banshee
Single-seat night fighter version, fitted with an AI radar housed in a slightly lengthened nose, 14 built.
F2H-2P Banshee
Single-seat photo-reconnaissance version, fitted with a lengthened nose housing six cameras, 89 built.
F2H-3 Banshee
Single-seat all-weather fighter version, with a lengthened fuselage and increased fuel capacity, fitted with two underwing bomb racks, an APQ-41
radar in the nose, 250 built.
F2H-3P Banshee
Proposed photo-reconnaissance version of the F2H-3: not built.
F2H-4 Banshee
Improved all-weather fighter version, powered by two 3,600 lbf (1,630 kg) thrust Westinghouse J34-WE-38 turbojet engine, fitted with an APG-37
radar. Final production version, 150 built.
F-2C Banshee
1962 re-designation of the F2H-3.
F-2D Banshee
1962 re-designation of the F2H-4.
Operators
Canada
- Royal Canadian Navy
- VF-870 (F2H-3)
- VF-871 (F2H-3)
- VX-10 (Test Squadron) (F2H-3)
United States
- United States Navy
- VX-3 (Evaluation) (F2H-1)
- VF-171 (F2H-1, then F2H-2)
- VF-11 (F2H-2)
- VF-12 (F2H-2)
- VF-22 (F2H-2)
- VF-62 (F2H-2)
- VF-172 (F2H-2)
- VC-61 (F2H-2P)
- VC-62 (F2H-2P)
- VC-4 (F2H-3)
- United States Marine Corps[6]
- VMF-114
- VMF-122 (F2H-2)
- VMF-214 (F2H-4)
- VMF(N)-533 (F2H-A4)
- VMJ-1 (F2H-2P)
- VMJ-2 (F2H-2P)
Specifications (F2H-3)
General characteristics
- Crew: 1
- Length: 48 ft 2 in (14.68 m)
- Wingspan: 41 ft 8.8 in (12.72 m)
- Height: 13 ft 11 in (4.24 m)
- Wing area: 294 ft² (27.31 m²)
- Empty weight: 13,183 lb (5,980 kg)
- Max takeoff weight: 28,500 lb (12,930 kg)
- Powerplant: 2× Westinghouse J34-WE-34 turbojets, 3,250 lbf (14.5 kN) each
Performance
- Maximum speed: 527 mph (458 kn, 848 km/h) at 10,000 ft (3,100 m)
- Range: 1,716 mi (1,491 nmi, 2,672 km)
- Service ceiling: 46,500 ft (14,175 m)
- Rate of climb: 5,900 ft/min (30 m/s) from sea level
Armament
- Guns: 4 × 20 mm (0.79 in) Colt Mk 16 cannon, 150 rounds/gun
- Rockets:
- 8 × 60 lb High Explosive rockets or
- 6 × 500 lb bombs and 2 × 60 lb H.E. rockets
- Missiles: 2 × AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles (in RCN service)
Popular culture
The aircraft played a central role in the 1953 James A. Michener novel The Bridges at Toko-Ri. The subsequent 1955 movie of the same name used F9F Panthers in place of Banshees for all flight sequences, although parked Banshees are visible in the background of several scenes.
Related development
- FH Phantom
Comparable aircraft
- F9F Panther
- FJ-1 Fury
- Hawker Sea Hawk
References
Notes
1.O'Rourke, G.G, CAPT USN. "Of Hosenoses, Stoofs, and Lefthanded Spads". United States Naval Institute Proceedings, July 1968.
2.a b c Jackson, Robert. Air War Korea 1950-1953. Shrewsbury, UK: Airlife Publishing Ltd., 1998. ISBN 1-85310-880-4.
3."F2H Banshee." Jet Warbird Registry, 2009. Retrieved: 1 March 2009.
4.a b c Cook, D. Glenn. "McDonnell F2H-3 Banshee 126464". Canada Aviation Museum. Aircraft on display, 2009. Retrieved: 1 March 2009.
5.a b Snowie, J. Allan. The Bonnie: HMCS Bonaventure. Erin, Ontario: The Boston Mills Press, 1987. ISBN 0-919783-40-6.
6."McDonnell F2H-2 'Banshee'". Flying Leatherneck Historical Foundation and Aviation Museum, 2008. Retrieved: 1 March 2009.
Bibliography
- Baugher, Joe. "McDonnell F2H-2 Banshee." Joe Baugher's Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft, 3 September 2000. Retrieved: 1
March 2009.
- Baugher, Joe. "McDonnell F2H-3 Banshee." Joe Baugher's Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft, 24 December 1999. Retrieved: 1 March
2009.
- "McDonnell Banshee Serial Number 1263334." Naval Museum of Alberta, 2009. Retrieved: 1 March 2009.
- "McDonnell Banshee." Shearwater Aviation Museum Aircraft History, 2009. Retrieved: 1 March 2009.
- Mills, Carl. Banshees in the Royal Canadian Navy. Willowdale, Ontario: Banshee Publication, 1991. ISBN 0-96952-000-X.
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