- FJ Fury
Infobox Aircraft
name= FJ-2 / FJ-3 Fury FJ-4 Fury
caption= The last flying FJ-4 in United States Navy colors
type=Fighter aircraft
national origin =United States
manufacturer=North American Aviation
designer=
first flight= 1951
introduced=
retired= late 1960s
status=
primary user=United States Navy
more users=United States Marine Corps
produced=
number built= 1,115
unit cost=
developed from = F-86E Sabre (FJ-2/3)
variants with their own articles =The North American FJ-2/-3/-4 Fury were a series of swept-wing carrier-capable fighters for the
United States Navy and Marine Corps. Based on theUnited States Air Force 'sF-86 Sabre , the FJ-series Fury aircraft featured folding wings and, eventually, a longer nose landing strut designed to both increase angle of attack upon launch and to absorb the shock of hard landings on an aircraft carrier deck. Although sharing a U.S. Navy designation with its distant predecessor, the straight-wingedFJ-1 Fury , the FJ Fury evolved into a wholly different aircraft.Design and development
FJ-2
By 1951, the Navy's existing straight-wing fighters were much inferior in performance to the
swept-wing Soviet MiG-15 then operating in theKorean War ; the swept-wing fighters in the Navy's development pipeline, including theF7U Cutlass and F9F Cougar were not yet ready for deployment. As an interim measure, Navy purchased three swept-wing F-86E Sabres with Navy-specific equipment and strengthened airframes. The three planes began flight testing in December 1951 under the designation XFJ-2. The design was eventually put into production as the FJ-2, but construction was slowed due to demand for the F-86 in Korea; the FJ-2 was not produced in large numbers until after that conflict had concluded. By then, because of a weak nose gear and arrestor hook on the FJ-2, the Navy preferred the F9F Cougar due to its superior slow-speed performance for carrier operations, and the 200 FJ-2 models built were delivered to theUnited States Marine Corps .FJ-3
The development of the FJ-3, which was to be powered by a license-built version of the new
Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire turbojet, resulted in its first flight in July 1953. Deliveries began in September 1954, and the FJ-3 joined the fleet in May 1955. An FJ-3 was the first fighter to land aboard the new supercarrier USS "Forrestal" in 1956. A total of 538 FJ-3s were built, including 194 FJ-3Ms with the ability to carryAIM-9 Sidewinder air-to-air missile s. Some FJ-3s were later modified to control Regulus and F9F-6K Cougar target drones. In 1955 the Navy added the new wing design that had been successful on the F-86F, providing space for additional fuel, and in 1956 retro-fitted all its FJ-3s with probe-and-drogueair refueling equipment.FJ-4
The final versions of the Fury were the FJ-4 and FJ-4B, which featured several improvements on previous versions. Internal fuel capacity was increased, necessitating a distinctive, taller "
razorback " rear deck. The tail was modified, as were the wings, to provide more positive control and stability during carrier landings, and the landing gear was widened. Delivery of FJ-4s began in February 1955, and except for one squadron which trained Navy FJ-4B pilots, FJ-4s were used exclusively by the Marine Corps. The FJ-4B was afighter-bomber version, capable of carrying double the underwing stores, includingnuclear weapon s on a single station. A total of 152 FJ-4s and 222 FJ-4Bs were produced.Redesignation
With the new designation system adopted in 1962, the FJ-4 became the F-1E and the FJ-4B the AF-1E. AF-1Es served with
United States Naval Reserve units until the late 1960s. The FJ Fury was the first aircraft of the VF-84 incarnation of the legendary Jolly Rogers Squadron. A total of 1,115 Furies were received by the Navy and Marine Corps over the course of its production life.Variants
;FJ-2 :;FJ-3 :;FJ-3 :;FJ-3M :;FJ-4 :;FJ-4B :;F-1E :;AF-1E :
Operators
;USA
*United States Navy
*United States Marine Corps pecifications (FJ-4)
aircraft specifications
plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=jet
ref=American Military AircraftHumphrey, Hal and Joe Baugher. | [http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/p86_24.html "North American FJ-4 Fury."] "American Military Aircraft: US Navy Fighter Aircraft", revised4 January 2008 . Retrieved:29 April 2008 .]
crew=1
span main=39 ft 1 in
span alt=11.9 m
length main=36 ft 4 in
length alt=11.1 m
height main=13 ft 11 in
height alt=4.2 m
area main=338.66 ft²
area alt=31.46 m²
empty weight main=13,210 lb
empty weight alt=5,992 kg
loaded weight main=20,130 lb
loaded weight alt=9,130 kg
max takeoff weight main=23,700 lb
max takeoff weight alt=10,750 kg
engine (jet)=Wright J65 -W-16A
type of jet=turbojet
number of jets=1
thrust main=7,700 lbf
thrust alt=34 kN
max speed main=680mph
max speed alt=1,090 km/h
max speed more=at 35,000 ft (10,670 m)
ceiling main=46,800 ft
ceiling alt=14,300 m
range main=2,020 mi
range alt=3,250 km
range more=with 2× 200-gallon (760 L) drop tanks and 2× AIM-9 missiles
climb rate main=7,660 ft/min
climb rate alt=38.9 m/s
loading main=69.9 lb/ft²
loading alt=341.7 kg/m²
thrust/weight=.325
guns=4× 20 mm (0.787 in) cannon
bombs=3,000 lb (1,400 kg) of underwing ordnance, including missiles
missiles=4×AIM-9 Sidewinder missilesee also
aircontent
related=
*FJ-1 Fury
*F-86 Sabre
*F-100 Super Sabre similar aircraft=
*Dassault Mystère
*F2H Banshee
*F9F Cougar
*F-84F Thunderstreak
*Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15
*Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-17
*Supermarine Swift lists=
*List of fighter aircraft
*List of military aircraft of the United States
*List of Sabre and Fury units in US military References
Notes
Bibliography
* Taylor, John, W.R., ed. "Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1965-1966". London: Jane's All the World's Aircraft, 1967. ISBN 0-71061-377-6.
* Wagner, Ray. "The North American Sabre". London: Macdonald, 1963. No ISBN.
* Winchester, Jim, ed. "North American FJ Fury." "Military Aircraft of the Cold War" (The Aviation Factfile). London: Grange Books plc, 2006. ISBN 1-84013-929-3.External links
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