What's The Best Allied Aircraft That Didn't Go To War?
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Sydney
Age: 45
Posts: 243
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
What's The Best Allied Aircraft That Didn't Go To War?
After seeing too many documentaries about advanced late Second World War German aircraft that always tried give the impression that they were way ahead of allied designs, I don't believe this myself so I thought I would ask the learned gentlemen from this forum; Which was the best Allied aircraft that either entered service post war or never entered service at all?
I'd put my money on the de Havilland Hornet / Sea Hornet.
I'd put my money on the de Havilland Hornet / Sea Hornet.
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Temporarily missing from the Joe Louis Arena
Posts: 2,131
Received 27 Likes
on
16 Posts
I'd say the de Havilland Hornet is a good shout.
The Hawker Sea Fury could quite possibly be in there too.
The Hawker Sea Fury could quite possibly be in there too.
Last edited by The Helpful Stacker; 2nd Oct 2012 at 12:51.
Ecce Homo! Loquitur...
Vampire - entered service but never saw combat. Served as a front line fighter until 1953 and a trainer until 1966, which was a long service life in those days.
I don't own this space under my name. I should have leased it while I still could
dat, maybe you should narrow the criteria, either a a first flew before the war ended or first entered service before the war ended.
One contender would by the Lincoln with a considerably higher ceiling than the Lancaster albeit not in the same class at the B29.
How about the Lockeed Neptune in service for almost 40 years.
One contender would by the Lincoln with a considerably higher ceiling than the Lancaster albeit not in the same class at the B29.
How about the Lockeed Neptune in service for almost 40 years.
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Temporarily missing from the Joe Louis Arena
Posts: 2,131
Received 27 Likes
on
16 Posts
"taxi!!"
Join Date: May 2001
Location: UK
Posts: 764
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
One of the Best
English Electric Lightning, all Mks.
World Class Performance in the 1960s, still going well in the 1970s, obsolete by the 1980s but still doing its best to defend UK plc until 1987.
But was the "Cold War" a real war? It was in many respects a real event which produced a steady stream of losses every year as training and ops took there toll.
OK thread creep sorry
World Class Performance in the 1960s, still going well in the 1970s, obsolete by the 1980s but still doing its best to defend UK plc until 1987.
But was the "Cold War" a real war? It was in many respects a real event which produced a steady stream of losses every year as training and ops took there toll.
OK thread creep sorry
Which was the best Allied aircraft that either entered service post war or never entered service at all?
Murdered by Earl Mountbottom and also by the Communists of the 1965 Labour government.....
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Sydney
Age: 45
Posts: 243
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Ok and designed during the Second World War!
BEagle
The RAF got their revenge with the cancelation of CVA 01 but that argument is a whole thread all by itself!
BEagle
The RAF got their revenge with the cancelation of CVA 01 but that argument is a whole thread all by itself!
Hmm, "after the war" is rather broad, but keeping it those that were flying in 1945 there are several good fighter/fighter bomber contenders that almost made it into the war:
Sea/Hornet, Vampire and Sea Fury as mentioned
Bearcat- on it's way to Japan on VJ day
P-80 Shooting Star made it to Italy and England, but did not see combat
Arguments could be made for all of the above. "Best" is subjective.
Sea/Hornet, Vampire and Sea Fury as mentioned
Bearcat- on it's way to Japan on VJ day
P-80 Shooting Star made it to Italy and England, but did not see combat
Arguments could be made for all of the above. "Best" is subjective.
This:
Red On, Green On
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Between the woods and the water
Age: 24
Posts: 6,487
Likes: 0
Received 2 Likes
on
2 Posts
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Somewhere flat
Age: 68
Posts: 5,568
Likes: 0
Received 46 Likes
on
31 Posts
One contender would by the Lincoln
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: london
Posts: 379
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
OP intended discussion of types funded by VJ Day. He's so right that there were as remarkable a range as in the Luftwaffe Secret Projects books. So, in US, B-36 was underway, B-32 Dominator was in a get-well phase, both to be targeted by Republic XF-12 Rainbow, and supported by transport gargantuans Mars, Constitution, C-99.
UK programmes, additional to those noted already, included Spiteful/Seafang, Wyvern, Sturgeon, Spearfish, Firebrand, Shetland, SR/A.1, Windsor.
My A to OP Q: Bearcat +(Sea) Hornet; Lincoln + (in European/Mediterranean Theatres: ) B-29. That lot, even without Fat Man, would have concentrated German minds.
UK programmes, additional to those noted already, included Spiteful/Seafang, Wyvern, Sturgeon, Spearfish, Firebrand, Shetland, SR/A.1, Windsor.
My A to OP Q: Bearcat +(Sea) Hornet; Lincoln + (in European/Mediterranean Theatres: ) B-29. That lot, even without Fat Man, would have concentrated German minds.
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Barnsley
Age: 64
Posts: 62
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Best Allied Aircraft Flown but no WW2 Service
Douglas A1 Skyraider, Designed and built and flown during WW2 but just too late to see combat, but sure did fight in almost every outing from then until the 1970s, and served on until the early 80s in some air arms.
Ordered by the US Navy in 1944, first flight in March 1945, in service 1946.
Douglas A-1 Skyraider - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ordered by the US Navy in 1944, first flight in March 1945, in service 1946.
Douglas A-1 Skyraider - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red On, Green On
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Between the woods and the water
Age: 24
Posts: 6,487
Likes: 0
Received 2 Likes
on
2 Posts
I am surprised this thread has got to ten posts without mention of the Wiggins Aerodyne...