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#JLP1419-BL - Blue F6F Hell Cat Fighter

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Original price was: $59.95.Current price is: $39.95.

SKU: JLP1419-BL Category: Tag:

History: After early US Navy experience in the Pacific in the early months of WWII, and after consultation with Allied air forces in the European theater, Grumman began to develop a successor to their Wildcat fighter, to be called the Hellcat. Major design changes from the Wildcat included a low-mounted wing, wider landing gear which retracted into the wings, more powerful engine, improved cockpit armor plating, and increased ammunition capacity. The Navy ordered four prototypes of the new airplane, each with a different engine for test and evaluation purposes. Less than a year later, on 26 June 1942, the first prototype (the XF6F-1, with a Wright R-2600 Cyclone engine) flew for the first time. Before much meaningful evaluation of the various engines could be made, however, the Navy decided to press the Hellcat into production by fitting the XF6F-1 prototype with the most powerful engine available, the Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp. (This turned it into an XF6F-3. The XF6F-2 and XF6F-4 were never evaluated.) The first production model, the F6F-3, first flew in October 1942, and deliveries began four months later with squadron VF-9 on the USS Essex in the Pacific. Extremely robust, powerful and maneuverable, the Hellcat was a potent force against the Japanese, and was credited with over three-quarters of the US Navy’s air-to-air kills in the war. The UK’s Fleet Air Arm received 252 F6F-3s (designated Gannet Mk I) beginning in 1943. Meanwhile, in the US, over 200 Hellcats were modified as radar-equipped night fighters. During the F6F-3 production run, which lasted until April 1944, Grumman had developed an improved Hellcat, the F6F-5, which utilized a redesigned engine cowl, new ailerons, a strengthened tail, and a water-injection system for the engine, which added 10% to the takeoff performance and increased its armament-carrying capabilities. The F6F-5 was first flown on 4 April 1944, and production continued through November 1945. Over 900 more “Dash-5” Hellcats were delivered to the UK under the Lend-Lease program under the designation Hellcat Mk II.

Additional information

Weight 3.5 lbs
Dimensions 16 × 20 × 10 in

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Shipping charges are added for this item, It well ship with FedEx, UPS or USPS, the web site well give you a price quote and it well be added to the final price. In a effort to keep the price down, I may occasionally take the item out of the factory box and or combine multiple items in a smaller box.

International Shipping

Any address outside the lower 48 US is considered International and we do ship worldwide to most countries, in a effort to control the price, we may repack the item out of the factory box into a smaller box or multiple items into one box, if you do not want this, contact me and let me know, but your shipping might be higher.