Grumman G-44 Widgeon

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The Grumman G-44 Widgeon is a five-person, twin-engined, amphibious aircraft.[1] It was designated J4F by the United States Navy and Coast Guard and OA-14 by the United States Army Air Corps and United States Army Air Forces.

Design and development

The Widgeon was originally designed for the civil market. It is smaller, but otherwise similar to Grumman's earlier G-21 Goose, and was produced from 1941 to 1955. The aircraft was used during World War II as a small patrol and utility machine by the US Navy, US Coast Guard, and Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm.

The first prototype flew in 1940, and the first production aircraft went to the US Navy as an antisubmarine aircraft. In total, 276 were built by Grumman, including 176 for the military. During World War II, they served with the US Navy, Coast Guard, Civil Air Patrol, and Army Air Force, as well as with the British Royal Navy, which gave it the service name Gosling.

Operational history

United States Coast Guard

File:Grumman J4F-1 V212 USCG Pensacola NAS FL 15.12.02R edited-2.jpg
Grumman J4F-1 of the United States Coast Guard preserved at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at Pensacola, Florida in 2002

On August 1, 1942, a J4F-1 flown by US Coast Guard Patrol Squadron 212 based out of Houma, Louisiana, and flown by Chief Aviation Pilot Henry White, spotted and attacked a German U-boat off the coast of Louisiana. White reported the submarine sunk, and he was subsequently credited with sinking Template:GS and awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.

However, in June 2001 the wreck of U-166 was found sitting near the wreck of SS Robert E. Lee by an oil exploration team; and the sinking of U-166 on July 30 (i.e. two days before the Widgeon flight) is now credited to patrol craft PC-566 escorting the Robert E. Lee.[2]

White's Widgeon is now thought to have made an unsuccessful attack against Template:GS, a Type IXC U-boat identical to U-166 that reported an air attack coincident with White's attack. U-171 was undamaged by White's attack, but was sunk four months later in the Bay of Biscay.[3]

Civil Air Patrol

The sinking of a German U-boat by the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) was claimed by one of their larger aircraft on 11 July 1942. The Grumman G-44 Widgeon, armed with two depth charges and crewed by Captain Johnny Haggins and Major Wynant Farr, was scrambled when another CAP patrol radioed that they had encountered an enemy submarine, but were returning to base due to low fuel. After scanning the area, Farr spotted the U-boat cruising beneath the surface of the waves. Unable to accurately determine the depth of the vessel, Haggins and Ferr radioed the situation back to base and followed the enemy in hopes that it would rise to periscope depth. For three hours, the crew shadowed the submarine. Just as Haggins was about to return to base, the U-boat rose to periscope depth, and Haggins swung the aircraft around, aligned with the submarine and dove to Script error: No such module "convert".. Farr released one of the two depth charges, blowing the submarine's front out of the water. As it left an oil slick, Farr made a second pass and released the other charge. Debris appeared on the ocean's surface, confirming the U-boat's demise and the CAP's first kill.[4][5]

Postwar operations

File:Grumman G-44 Widgeon NC40011 at Garland Seaplane Base in 1947 (4).jpg
Grumman Widgeon at Garland's Seaplane Base on the Detroit River in 1947

After the war, Grumman redesigned the aircraft to make it more suitable for civilian operations. A new hull improved its water handling, and six seats were installed. In total, 76 of the new G-44As were built by Grumman, the last being delivered on January 13, 1949. Another 41 were produced under license by the Template:Ill (SCAN) in La Rochelle, France, as the SCAN 30. Most of these ended up in the United States.

McKinnon Enterprises at Sandy, Oregon, converted over 70 Widgeons to "Super Widgeons". The conversion features replacing the engines with Template:Cvt Avco Lycoming GO-480-B1D flat-six piston engines, and various other modifications, including modern avionics, three-bladed propellers, larger windows, improved soundproofing, emergency exits, and increased maximum takeoff weight. Retractable wingtip floats were optional.[6]

Variants

File:1945GrummanG44.jpg
1945 G-44
G-44
Main production variant, 200 built (serial nos. 1201–1400) including J4F series military variants listed below.
File:Grumman G-44A Widgeon.jpg
G-44A
G-44A
Improved postwar production variant with redesigned hull, 76 built (serial nos. 1401–1476.)
J4F-1
G-44 for the United States Coast Guard with three seats, 25 built.
J4F-2
United States Navy version of the J4F-1 with 5-seat interior, 131 built.
File:J4F-Grumman.jpg
OA-14
OA-14
Fifteen G-44s impressed into wartime service with the United States Army Air Forces.
OA-14A
One new aircraft for the Corps of Engineers.
Gosling I
Fifteen J4F-2s transferred to the Royal Navy, later renamed Widgeon I
B.S.6
(Template:Langx) Royal Thai Armed Forces designation for the J4F.[7]
File:GrummanG44A.jpg
French-built SCAN Type 30
SCAN 30
G-44A Licence-built in France using metric standards and not anodized as were original Grumman-built aircraft, 41 built (serial nos. 1–41.)
PACE Gannet

Pacific Aerospace Engineering Corporation conversions of S.C.A.N. 30s, powered by Script error: No such module "convert". Lycoming R-680-13 radial engines. Later known as the Gannet Super Widgeon

Operators

Military operators

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Brazilian Air Force operated 14 from 1942 to 1958[8]
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Cuban Navy received four in 1952[9]
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Portuguese Navy operated 12 from 1942 to 1968[11]
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Royal Thai Navy operated five in 1951[12]
Royal Thai Air Force operated five from 1951 to 1956[12]
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Uruguayan Navy operated one example from 1943 to 1979[13]

Civil operators

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Surviving aircraft

Brazil

Canada

Portugal

New Zealand

  • 1439 - G-44A - Registers in New Zealand as ZK-CFA operating from Bay of Islands Airport and on display[16] at Kaitaia Airport.

Thailand

United States

Specifications (G-44)

3-view line drawing of the Grumman J4F-1 Widgeon
3-view line drawing of the Grumman J4F-1 Widgeon

Template:Aircraft specs

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

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  1. FAA Type Certificate Number A-734; aircraft is designated a "5 PCL-Am-FbM" which means it is a five-place Cabin Landplane-Amphibian-Flying Boat Monoplane
  2. "U-166." uboat.net. Retrieved: 18 August 2010.
  3. "U-171." uboat.net. Retrieved: 18 August 2010.
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  6. Taylor 1976, p. 338.
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  8. World Air Forces – Historical Listings Brazil (BRZ) Template:Webarchive
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Bibliography

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  • Donald, David. The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997. Template:ISBN.
  • Green, William. War Planes of the Second World War: Volume Five; Flying Boats. London: Macdonald, 1968. Template:ISBN.
  • Taylor, John W. R. Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1976–77. London: Jane's Yearbooks, 1976. Template:ISBN.

External links

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