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The Vought F4U Corsair is an American fighter
aircraft that saw service primarily in World War II and the Korean War. Demand
for the aircraft soon overwhelmed Vought's manufacturing capability, resulting
in production by Goodyear and Brewster: Goodyear-built Corsairs were designated
FG and Brewster-built aircraft F3A. From the first prototype
delivery to the U.S. Navy in 1940, to final delivery in 1953 to the French,
12,571 F4U Corsairs were manufactured,
in 16 separate models, in the longest production run of any piston-engined
fighter in U.S. history (1942–53).
The Corsair was designed as a carrier-based
aircraft but its difficult carrier landing performance rendered it unsuitable
for Navy use until the carrier landing issues were overcome by the British Fleet
Air Arm. The Corsair thus came to and retained prominence in its area of
greatest deployment: land based use by the U.S.
Marines.[6]
The role of the dominant U.S. carrier based fighter in the second part of the
war was thus filled by the Grumman F6F Hellcat, powered by the same Double Wasp
engine first flown on the Corsair's first prototype in 1940.[7]
The Corsair served to a lesser degree in the U.S. Navy. As well as the U.S. and
British use the Corsair was also used by the Royal New Zealand Air Force, the French
Navy Aéronavale and other, smaller, air forces until the 1960s. Some
Japanese pilots regarded it as the most formidable American fighter of World
War II,[8] and the U.S. Navy counted an 11:1 kill
ratio with the F4U Corsair.[9]
After the carrier landing issues had been
tackled, it quickly became the most capable carrier-based fighter-bomber of
World War II.[10] The Corsair served almost exclusively
as a fighter-bomber throughout the Korean War and during the French colonial
wars in Indochina and Algeria.[11]
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