jamieooh
05-05-2012, 11:01 AM
During World War II, “F-Planes” Weren’t Fighters
P-38J and F-5B
Written by: Robert F. Dorr on April 9, 2012
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/P-38-and-F-5.jpg
F-5B with a P-38J flying wing position. The F-5B was a reconnaissance aircraft based on the P-38. Library of Congress photo
The terms F-15 and F-16 are familiar to military people today and recognized by many in the public. They’re the official terms for well-known fighters, using the nomenclature of the Pentagon’s military designation system (MDS), and of course they’re a familiar sight at many airbases.
During World War II, American fighters were called pursuit aircraft and the Army Air Forces (AAF), predecessor of today’s Air Force, named them using the letter “P” – hence, the equally familiar P-47 and P-51.
Not so well known, however, are the war era’s aircraft identified with the letter “F”. All were photographic reconnaissance planes. The letter was used because it was available, and possibly because “foto” was shorthand for “photo.”
Northrop F-15A Black Widow
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Northrop-F15A.jpg
A Northrop F-15A Black Widow photo reconnaissance plane in flight. Photo courtesy of the Robert F. Dorr Collection)
There was no F-16 in this wartime series because the AAF purchased just 15 types of aircraft before the “F-plane” terminology ended in 1948. The original F-15, no relation to today’s, was the Northrop Reporter, a twin-engined, twin-boom, propeller-driven reconnaissance craft based on the P-61 Black Widow fighter. The Air Force had a squadron of F-15 Reporters in Japan as late as 1948.
There were hundreds of “F-planes,” the most numerous being the F-4 and F-5 Lightning, both based on the P-38 Lightning fighter. Though their job was to take pictures, many “F-planes” were fully armed. Exact numbers of airplanes in the “F” series are impossible to determine. Factory records and serial number lists often show the planes under their more familiar names, because most were modified for photo duty, and then re-named, only after entering service.
In Europe, Lt. Col. Clyde East became one of the very few air aces in a reconnaissance unit. He was credited with shooting down 12 German aircraft while flying an F-6.
In Luzon, Philippines, on Jan. 11, 1945, pilot Maj. William Shomo shot down seven Japanese aircraft in a single action, also while at the controls of an F-6.
On Oct. 29, 1944, Capt. Ralph D. Steakley flew the first combat mission over the Japanese capital, Tokyo, since the famous Doolittle raid of 28 months earlier, piloting an F-13
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Boeing-F9C-Flying-Fortress.jpg
(Above picture A familiar sight with a different name: at Albrook Field, Canal Zone, in 1945, this Boeing F-9C Flying Fortress was the photographic reconnaissance version of the B-17G heavy bomber. Photo courtesy of Winton W. Marshall)
The F-6s flown by East and Shomo, and the F-13 piloted by Steakley might seem more familiar if we remember that they were photographic reconnaissance versions of the P-51 Mustang and B-29 Superfortress respectively. Shomo received the Medal of Honor for his action. Steakley’s was one of the most important missions of the war, producing photography in rare good weather over the Japanese capital that was used for intelligence purposes for months afterward,
F-4 and F-5 Lightnings took photos of Rommel’s Afrika Korps in North Africa and fought in Europe. F-7 Liberators flew long-range photo-gathering missions in Burma and the South Pacific.
The first two planes in the series were based on cargo transports. Of the 15 planes in the series, just two were entirely new designs (F-11, F-12). All others were derivatives of fighters and bombers in service during the war years.
The following is a list of the “foto” planes, each followed by the more familiar name of the aircraft from which it was derived:
F-1: Fairchild C-8.
F-2: Beech C-45 Expeditor
F-3: Douglas A-20 Havoc
F-4: Lockheed P-38 Lightning
F-5: Lockheed P-38 Lightning
F-6: North American P-51 Mustang
F-7: Consolidated B-24 Liberator
F-8: De Havilland Mosquito
F-9: Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress
F-10: North American B-25 Mitchell
F-11: New design by Hughes (XF-11)
F-12: New design by Republic (XR-12 Rainbow)
F-13: Boeing B-29 Superfortress
F-14: Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star
F-15: Northrop P-61 Black Widow
The Hughes XF-11 (its “X” prefix making it experimental) crashed in Beverly Hills, Calif., on its first flight on July 7, 1946, nearly killing test pilot and industry pioneer Howard Hughes. A second example of the Hughes plane was flown successfully. The sleek, four-engined Republic F-12 was once slated for the postwar Strategic Air Command, but after two XF-12s were built, production was cancelled.
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/F-3-foto-plane.jpg
(Above picture The F-3 photo reconnaissance aircraft was based on the Douglas A-20 Havoc attack bomber. Robert F. Dorr Collection)
In July 1948, the Air Force (which had become an independent service branch on September 18, 1947) revamped its system for naming aircraft. Among other changes, the letter “F” was adopted for fighters. Familiar planes like the P-47 and P-51 now became the F-47 and F-51.
Rather than continuing a separate series for photo-reconnaissance aircraft, the Air Force decided to apply an “R” (for reconnaissance) prefix to the types that were already familiar. The F-6, F-13, F-14, and F-15 were still in service in 1948 and were re-named the RF-51, RB-29, RF-80, and RF-61 respectively, although the service continued to use the F-15 terminology for a time. One of the first combat missions of the Korean War in 1950 was flown by an RF-80, formerly an F-14.
The two planes in the series that had no familiar counterpart, the F-11 and F-12, were redesignated R-11 and R-12, and were retired soon afterward.
Officials at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio, and the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D. C., say that no “F-Plane” is preserved and displayed today in its reconnaissance configuration. The National Museum of the United States Air Force Museum has an F-10 Mitchell, but it has been painted and restored to represent a B-25B bomber used in the April 1942 raid on Japan by Lt. Col. (later, Gen.) James Doolittle
http://www.defensemedianetwork.com/stories/during-world-war-ii-f-planes-werent-fighters/
P-38J and F-5B
Written by: Robert F. Dorr on April 9, 2012
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/P-38-and-F-5.jpg
F-5B with a P-38J flying wing position. The F-5B was a reconnaissance aircraft based on the P-38. Library of Congress photo
The terms F-15 and F-16 are familiar to military people today and recognized by many in the public. They’re the official terms for well-known fighters, using the nomenclature of the Pentagon’s military designation system (MDS), and of course they’re a familiar sight at many airbases.
During World War II, American fighters were called pursuit aircraft and the Army Air Forces (AAF), predecessor of today’s Air Force, named them using the letter “P” – hence, the equally familiar P-47 and P-51.
Not so well known, however, are the war era’s aircraft identified with the letter “F”. All were photographic reconnaissance planes. The letter was used because it was available, and possibly because “foto” was shorthand for “photo.”
Northrop F-15A Black Widow
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Northrop-F15A.jpg
A Northrop F-15A Black Widow photo reconnaissance plane in flight. Photo courtesy of the Robert F. Dorr Collection)
There was no F-16 in this wartime series because the AAF purchased just 15 types of aircraft before the “F-plane” terminology ended in 1948. The original F-15, no relation to today’s, was the Northrop Reporter, a twin-engined, twin-boom, propeller-driven reconnaissance craft based on the P-61 Black Widow fighter. The Air Force had a squadron of F-15 Reporters in Japan as late as 1948.
There were hundreds of “F-planes,” the most numerous being the F-4 and F-5 Lightning, both based on the P-38 Lightning fighter. Though their job was to take pictures, many “F-planes” were fully armed. Exact numbers of airplanes in the “F” series are impossible to determine. Factory records and serial number lists often show the planes under their more familiar names, because most were modified for photo duty, and then re-named, only after entering service.
In Europe, Lt. Col. Clyde East became one of the very few air aces in a reconnaissance unit. He was credited with shooting down 12 German aircraft while flying an F-6.
In Luzon, Philippines, on Jan. 11, 1945, pilot Maj. William Shomo shot down seven Japanese aircraft in a single action, also while at the controls of an F-6.
On Oct. 29, 1944, Capt. Ralph D. Steakley flew the first combat mission over the Japanese capital, Tokyo, since the famous Doolittle raid of 28 months earlier, piloting an F-13
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Boeing-F9C-Flying-Fortress.jpg
(Above picture A familiar sight with a different name: at Albrook Field, Canal Zone, in 1945, this Boeing F-9C Flying Fortress was the photographic reconnaissance version of the B-17G heavy bomber. Photo courtesy of Winton W. Marshall)
The F-6s flown by East and Shomo, and the F-13 piloted by Steakley might seem more familiar if we remember that they were photographic reconnaissance versions of the P-51 Mustang and B-29 Superfortress respectively. Shomo received the Medal of Honor for his action. Steakley’s was one of the most important missions of the war, producing photography in rare good weather over the Japanese capital that was used for intelligence purposes for months afterward,
F-4 and F-5 Lightnings took photos of Rommel’s Afrika Korps in North Africa and fought in Europe. F-7 Liberators flew long-range photo-gathering missions in Burma and the South Pacific.
The first two planes in the series were based on cargo transports. Of the 15 planes in the series, just two were entirely new designs (F-11, F-12). All others were derivatives of fighters and bombers in service during the war years.
The following is a list of the “foto” planes, each followed by the more familiar name of the aircraft from which it was derived:
F-1: Fairchild C-8.
F-2: Beech C-45 Expeditor
F-3: Douglas A-20 Havoc
F-4: Lockheed P-38 Lightning
F-5: Lockheed P-38 Lightning
F-6: North American P-51 Mustang
F-7: Consolidated B-24 Liberator
F-8: De Havilland Mosquito
F-9: Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress
F-10: North American B-25 Mitchell
F-11: New design by Hughes (XF-11)
F-12: New design by Republic (XR-12 Rainbow)
F-13: Boeing B-29 Superfortress
F-14: Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star
F-15: Northrop P-61 Black Widow
The Hughes XF-11 (its “X” prefix making it experimental) crashed in Beverly Hills, Calif., on its first flight on July 7, 1946, nearly killing test pilot and industry pioneer Howard Hughes. A second example of the Hughes plane was flown successfully. The sleek, four-engined Republic F-12 was once slated for the postwar Strategic Air Command, but after two XF-12s were built, production was cancelled.
http://dmn.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/F-3-foto-plane.jpg
(Above picture The F-3 photo reconnaissance aircraft was based on the Douglas A-20 Havoc attack bomber. Robert F. Dorr Collection)
In July 1948, the Air Force (which had become an independent service branch on September 18, 1947) revamped its system for naming aircraft. Among other changes, the letter “F” was adopted for fighters. Familiar planes like the P-47 and P-51 now became the F-47 and F-51.
Rather than continuing a separate series for photo-reconnaissance aircraft, the Air Force decided to apply an “R” (for reconnaissance) prefix to the types that were already familiar. The F-6, F-13, F-14, and F-15 were still in service in 1948 and were re-named the RF-51, RB-29, RF-80, and RF-61 respectively, although the service continued to use the F-15 terminology for a time. One of the first combat missions of the Korean War in 1950 was flown by an RF-80, formerly an F-14.
The two planes in the series that had no familiar counterpart, the F-11 and F-12, were redesignated R-11 and R-12, and were retired soon afterward.
Officials at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio, and the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D. C., say that no “F-Plane” is preserved and displayed today in its reconnaissance configuration. The National Museum of the United States Air Force Museum has an F-10 Mitchell, but it has been painted and restored to represent a B-25B bomber used in the April 1942 raid on Japan by Lt. Col. (later, Gen.) James Doolittle
http://www.defensemedianetwork.com/stories/during-world-war-ii-f-planes-werent-fighters/