Curtiss F9C-2 Sparrowhawk

Curtiss F9C-2 Sparrowhawk

LandNorge , Norge
TypeBiplan jagerfly
Første flytur12 February 1931
Bygget7+

The Curtiss F9C Sparrowhawk is a light 1930s biplane fighter aircraft that was carried by the United States Navy airships USS Akron and Macon. It is an example of a parasite fighter, a small airplane designed to be deployed from a larger aircraft such as an airship or bomber.

Kilde: Curtiss F9C-2 Sparrowhawk på Wiki

Curtiss F9C Sparrowhawk Gå Rundt
FotografVladimir Yakubov
LokaliseringNational Air & Space Museum – Udvar-Hazy Center, Chantilly
Bilder46
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Info
RolleParasitt fighter
ProdusentenCurtiss fly- og motorselskap
Første flytur12 February 1931
Introduksjon1931
Pensjonert1937
Antall bygget7 (?)
Curtiss F9C Sparrowhawk Gå Rundt
FotografGi Moulton
LokaliseringUnknow
Bilder53

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Les også:

Andre verdenskrig: Den definitive visuelle historien fra Blitzkrieg til atombomben (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon verdenskrig kart etter kart (DK historie kart etter kart) - Amazon


The Sky-Borne Defender

Den Curtiss F9C-2 Sparrowhawk remains one of the most unique aviation experiments in history. It was a “parasite” fighter, designed not to operate from land or sea, but from a “flying aircraft carrier”—the massive helium-filled airships USS Akron Og USS Macon. The Sparrowhawk provided these vulnerable giants with a defensive screen and significantly extended their scouting range. Small, agile, and remarkably compact, it spent its operational life living inside a hangar in the belly of a dirigible, launching and recovering via a mechanical “trapeze” while thousands of feet in the air.

Attribute Technical Specification (F9C-2)
Rolle Parasite Scout / Fighter
Mannskapet 1 (Pilot)
Vingespenn 25 ft 6 in (7.77 m)
Kraftverk 1 × Wright R-975-E3 Whirlwind radial
Horsepower 438 hp
Maximum Speed 176 mph (283 km/h)
Endurance Approx. 3 hours
Bevæpning 2 × .30 cal Browning machine guns (fixed in cowl)

Design Engineering: The Skyhook and the “Hangar”

  • The “Skyhook”: Mounted above the top wing was a sturdy metal frame and a hook. To recover, the pilot had to match the airship’s speed (around 60 mph) and precisely fly the hook onto a horizontal bar on the airship’s trapeze. Once hooked, the plane was hoisted into the internal hangar.
  • Compact Biplane Layout: The F9C was purposefully small. Its wingspan and height were kept to a minimum so it could fit through the narrow “T” shaped opening in the bottom of the Akron and Macon’s hulls.
  • Removal of Landing Gear: During scouting missions, pilots often removed the wheel fairings (and sometimes the wheels themselves) and replaced them with an extra fuel tank. Since the planes launched and landed in the air, wheels were only necessary for transit on the ground.
  • Staggered Wings: The biplane wings were “staggered” (the top wing further forward than the bottom) to provide the pilot with better visibility—critical when trying to spot a moving trapeze bar directly overhead.

Operational History: A Short-Lived Marvel

  • The Airship Era: The Sparrowhawks served only from 1932 to 1935. They were the stars of the Navy’s “lighter-than-air” program, proving that airships could act as long-range maritime scouts if they carried their own protection.
  • The Tragedy of the Akron and Macon: Most F9C-2s were lost when their mother ships crashed—the Akron in 1933 and the Macon in 1935. These disasters effectively ended the US Navy’s rigid airship program and the career of the Sparrowhawk.
  • Mastery of the Trapeze: Landing on the trapeze was considered one of the most difficult feats in naval aviation. Pilots had to contend with the airship’s turbulence and the fact that a missed hook could mean a fatal collision with the hull.
  • The Lone Survivor: Today, only one original Sparrowhawk remains (A-9056). It is preserved at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, still wearing the distinctive markings of the USS Macon’s scouting squadron.

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2 tanker om "Curtiss F9C-2 Sparrowhawk - Bilder og video"

  1. Just stumbled on tour excellent site! Been a modeller and airplane guy over 50 years. How about some multi-view shots of cockpits and wheel wells!

    GOT YOU BOOKMARKED!

    Larry

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