IN 1948 THE USAF, MARINE CORPS AND US NAVY WERE CONCENTRATING ON
CONVERTING OVER TO AN ALL-JET FORCE.
When the Korean War started in June 1950, the USAF had built up a
sizable jet force in the Far East, while the US Navy was in the early
stages of getting F9F Panthers operational as replacements for its
piston-engined F8F Bearcats. At about this time, the Marine Corps had
also begun using the Panthers in limited numbers. Operating from
aircraft carriers off the Korean coast, F9Fs helped stop the North
Korean invasion within two weeks of the communists crossing the 38th
Parallel. The Panthers, escorting carrier-based AD Skyraiders and F4U
Corsairs, penetrated as far north as Pyongyang, where they bombed and
strafed targets that the North Koreans thought were out of range. The
Panthers also took the battle all the way to the Yalu River, long
before the MiG-15s became a threat. The F9F's basic tasking was aerial
supremacy and combat air patrols, but they also excelled in bombing
and strafing attacks.
This illustrated volume charts the Panther's solid performance as a
fighter-bomber in Korea, which accelerated the development of
swept-wing carrier fighters during the remainder of the 1950s and well
into the Cold War with the Soviet Union.
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From Beowulf to St. George
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781782003519
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter