North American FJ-1 Fury

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FJ-1 Fury
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US Navy FJ-1 Fury
Role Fighter aircraftTemplate:Short description
National origin United States
Manufacturer North American Aviation
First flight 27 November 1946Template:Sfn
Introduction March 1948Template:Sfn
Retired 1953[1]
Status Retired
Primary user United States Navy
Number built 33 (including 3 prototypes)
Developed into North American F-86 Sabre

The North American FJ-1 Fury is an early turbojet-powered carrier-capable fighter aircraft used by the United States Navy (USN). Developed by North American Aviation (NAA) starting in 1945,[1] it became the first jet aircraft in USN service to serve at sea under operational conditions.Template:Sfn This first version of the FJ was a straight-winged jet, briefly operational during the transition to more successful designs. An evolution of the FJ-1 would become the land-based XP-86 prototype of the United States Air Force's enormously influential F-86 Sabre, which in turn formed the basis for the Navy's carrier-based, swept-winged North American FJ-2/-3 Fury.

Design and development

In late 1944, the USN sought proposals for a follow-on aircraft to supplement its first jet fighter, the McDonnell XFD-1 Phantom; three competing proposals from NAA, McDonnell Aircraft Corporation and Vought were selected.Template:Sfn The NAA NA-134 was ordered on 1 January 1945 as the XFJ-1 and would be developed in parallel with the Vought F6U PirateTemplate:Sfn (the competing McDonnell proposal would eventually evolve into the McDonnell F2H BansheeTemplate:Sfn). The XFJ-1 was a straight-wing, tricycle gear fighter with a single General Electric J35 turbojet fed by an intake passing through the fuselage; to avoid bifurcating the intake and thus increasing drag, the cockpit was placed entirely above the intake duct, giving the aircraft a squat appearance.Template:Sfn It was armed with six .50 BMG machine guns mounted next to the air intake, making it the last aircraft ordered by the USN to use .50 BMG guns as its primary armament.Template:Sfn The wing, empennage, and canopy strongly resembled that of the piston-engined P-51D Mustang, North American Aviation's highly successful World War II fighter, enclosing a relocated cockpit accommodation further forward in relation to the Mustang's design, to ensure good forward pilot visibility for carrier operations.Template:Sfn

Operational history

File:North American FJ-1 Fury of VF-5A aboard USS Boxer (CV-21), 16 March 1948 (NNAM.1996.253.7224.010).jpg
An FJ-1 of VF-51 aboard USS Boxer in March 1948
File:FJ-1 Oakland NAR NAN3-51.jpg
An Oakland Naval Air Reserve FJ-1 over Oakland, California, in 1950
File:FJ-1 FJ-2 NAN5-52.jpg
FJ-1 and FJ-2 in 1952
File:Yanks Fury.JPG
FJ-1 Fury at Yanks Air Museum

The first flight of the prototype XFJ-1 was conducted on 27 November 1946, and the first of 30 deliveries of the improved NA-141, designated FJ-1, took place in March 1948.Template:Sfn Flown by Navy squadron VF-5A, the FJ-1 made the USN's first operational aircraft carrier landing with a jet fighter at sea[N 1] on 10 March 1948 aboard Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities"., pioneering US jet-powered carrier operations and underscoring the need for catapult-equipped carriers.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Fury was capable of launching without catapult assistance, but on a crowded flight deck the capability was of limited use. Taking off without a catapult launch limited the FJ-1 to a perilous, slow climb that was considered too risky for normal operations.Template:Sfn

As German research into swept wing aerodynamics was not yet available when the design was finalized, the FJ-1 used a straight wing. Folding wings were not used because dive brakes mounted in the wings made them unfeasible. To conserve carrier deck space, a "kneeling" nose gear strut along with a swiveling "jockey wheel" allowed the FJ-1 to be stacked tail-high, close to another FJ-1.[2]

Before the first production FJ-1 was even delivered, the initial order for 100 units was trimmed to only 30 because more promising naval fighter designs had entered development.Template:Sfn The production aircraft were initially used in testing at NAS North Island, California.[1] VF-5A, soon redesignated as VF-51, operated the type from Boxer in March 1948 and from USS Princeton in August 1948, but operations did not go well, and the aircraft proved to have weak landing gear.[1] One of the four FJ-1s to operate from Princeton was destroyed in a hard landing on arrival and went over the side; fortunately the pilot was rescued, but further accidents resulted in the cancellation of the operations after only two days.[1] Although VF-51 went to sea on Boxer one more time in May 1949, the FJ-1s were phased out afterwards in favor of the new F9F-2 Panther.[1][3]

Ending its service career in U.S. Naval Reserve units, the FJ-1 was eventually retired in 1953. The one highlight in its short service life was VF-51's win in the Bendix Trophy Race for jets in September 1948. The unit entered seven FJ-1s, flying from Long Beach, California to Cleveland, Ohio, with VF-51 aircraft taking the first four places, ahead of two California Air National Guard Lockheed F-80 Shooting Stars.[1]

Variants

XFJ-1
Prototype aircraft, powered by a 3,820 lbf (17 kN) General Electric J35-GE-2 turbojet engine, three built.Template:Sfn
FJ-1 Fury
Single-seat fighter aircraft, powered by a 4,000 lbf (17.8 kN) Allison J35-A-2 turbojet engine, armed with six 0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns, 30 built a further 70 were cancelled.Template:Sfn

Operators

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Aircraft on display

FJ-1

Specifications (FJ-1)

File:North American FJ-1 Fury 3-view.png
Line drawings for the FJ-1 Fury

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See also

File:Sabre familytree2.svg
Family tree of Sabre & Fury variants

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

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  1. The first all-jet aircraft to take off and land from an American carrier was a McDonnell XFD-1 Phantom on 21 July 1946 from Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities"., but the tests were not conducted under operational conditions.

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Citations

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  1. a b c d e f g "The FJ-1 Fury." Template:Webarchive f-86.tripod.com. Retrieved: 29 April 2008.
  2. "FJ Fury." Template:Webarchive boeing.com. Retrieved: 29 April 2008.
  3. "FJ Fury." globalsecurity.org. Retrieved: 29 April 2008.
  4. "FJ Fury/120349". Yanks Air Museum. Retrieved: 23 January 2020.
  5. "FJ-1 Fury/120351". Template:Webarchive NASM. Retrieved: 17 January 2011.

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Bibliography

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  • Taylor, John, W.R., ed. Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1965-1966. London: Jane's All the World's Aircraft, 1967. Template:ISBN.
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  • Wagner, Ray. The North American Sabre. London: Macdonald, 1963. No ISBN.
  • Winchester, Jim, ed. Military Aircraft of the Cold War (The Aviation Factfile). London: Grange Books plc, 2006. Template:ISBN.

External links

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