WWII War Birds - pics and video

Early Mustangs at the factory, getting prepped for delivery:

Jo57e1I.jpg
 
Of course they did. Remember that video of a Corsair landing with a 4" rocket that failed to fire and it bouncing down the deck on landing? I think it was Viet Nam era.
 
Amazingly heavy exhaust staining off those Db engines. Looks like this was pressed into service or for appraisal ,perhaps out of Boscombe Down.
edit: Pressed into service with 260 Sqn RAF after capture in Italy
 
Last edited:
Seems like this He111 was captured in Libya after the Battle of El Alamein. Used by 460 Squadron to ferry supplies from Alexandria to various bases.

Roundels or not, I wouldn't fancy taking this up in Allied airspace.

No 1426 (Enemy Aircraft) Flight carried out the evaluations of captured enemy aircraft originally out of Duxford....nicknamed "The Rafwaffe"....
 
After the war, Corsairs really got around. French Navy:

5456.jpg


El Salvador:

fg1-92460-1.jpg


622-2-1410292136.jpg


Honduras:

99205.jpg


Note the kill markings - this specific F4U-5N was the victor in the final propeller-driven dogfight in history, 1969. This month's Smithsonian Air and Space magazine has a writeup on it.

Who did Honduras go to war with? That country fascinates me I almost bought a beach house there cheap but chickened out the wife won't go there it's to dangerous.
 
At risk of offending the hardworking engineers at Fairey Aircraft Ltd, that is one of the uglier things I've ever seen.

Maybe it's a thing with carrier-based bombers. Here's the Douglas XTB2D Skypirate:

6047298226_22ab9f8169_b.jpg


Jesus, that's awful. Looks like a kid threw that together between naptime and snacktime. And it was the successor to the profoundly unlovely Douglas XSB2D Destroyer:

Douglas_XSB2D_Destroyer_in_flight.jpg


At least these two ugly sisters led to the AD Skyraider, which, while a lumpy old girl, at least had the potential to look nice:

Douglas_XBT2D-1_Skyraider_prototype_NACA.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom