Vought F7U-3 Cutlass (Non-Afterburning Early Variant) - Off to a Tragic Start

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Vought F7U-3 Cutlass (Early)

   Hello, I’d like to suggest the Vought F7U-3 Cutlass (Early) with non-afterburning turbojet engines for US aviation in War Thunder. The F7U-3 was a carrier-based fighter designed and produced by Chance Vought for the US Navy. The F7U was the Navy’s first tailless production fighter jet equipped with swept wings. Entered service in 1954, it was the most dangerous naval aircraft to fly simply due to frequent hydraulic systems and landing gear problems. “Ensign Eliminator” was one of the nicknames for the F7U, known for causing a high rate of accidents. Despite numerous fixes, the F7U was withdrawn from the 10-year service during the late 1950s.


Key Characteristics

  • Naval Jet Fighter
  • Tailless airframe with swept wings and no flaps
  • Very long nose landing gear for high AoA takeoffs
  • Non-afterburning Allison J35-A-29 turbojet engines (Similar to the F-84G’s)
  • 4 x 20-mm Colt Mk.12 cannons

History

Background

The initial F7U Cutlass was developed in response to a competition organized by the US Navy for a new carrier-capable day fighter, which was announced on June 1, 1945. The requirement for the new fighter included the ability to fly at speeds of up to 600 miles per hour and altitudes of up to 40,000 feet.

Chance Vought proposed a radical aircraft design with an unconventional tailless configuration. The aircraft featured broad-chord, low-aspect-ratio, swept wings, with a wing-mounted tail fin on both sides of a short fuselage, assembling a semi-tailless twin-engine jet. In addition, the cockpit was located as far forward as possible for pilot visibility. This design was designated company type number V-346A, which later became the official name of F7U, and it was the last design overseen by Vought’s Rex Beisel, who designed the legendary F4U Corsair and other aircraft since 1922. Sources indicated this design was inspired or/and influenced by Messerschmitt and Arado aerodynamic engineers, although Vought officially denied this association.

Bids were to be submitted by April of 1946. By the deadline, twelve different designs were submitted by six companies: Vought, McDonnell, North American, Curtiss Wright, Martin, and Douglas. The Vought V-346A design was chosen as the winner on June 25, 1946, and designated XF7U-1.

The Navy ordered three XF7U-1 prototypes in that month of 1946. They were powered by a pair of infamous Westinghouse J34 turbojet engines. In September 1948, the prototype rolled out and performed its maiden flight in Maryland. Several issues were immediately encountered during this initial flight, but it had attained a maximum speed of 625 mph. The Navy named the aircraft Cutlass after the initial flight and awarded a contract for the production of 14 F7U-1s with the same powerplant. Over the two years of XF7U-1 flight testing, all three prototypes were lost in accidents.

None of the 14 F7U-1s built between 1950 and 1952 were accepted for service, noting the dissatisfaction with the underpowered J34 engines and poor visibility. The Navy terminated the F7U-1 production and wanted to modify and improve the F7U aircraft, so it awarded Vought a contract to produce 88 F7U-2 Cutlasses on September 23, 1949. It was later canceled by the Navy because of engine development issues. After serious consideration of canceling the entire Cutlass production in 1951, the Navy decided to fund the F7U-3 program. The lack of alternatives for the replacement and introduction of more powerful steam catapults for the aircraft carriers prompted the Navy to continue the F7U-3 program considerably.

F7U-3 Development

The F7U-3 was a new Cutlass design to address the shortcomings of the F7U-1. As a result, the aircraft incorporated many changes that improved its performance, visibility, armament, range, airframe, and maintenance. It had a roll rate of 570 degrees a second, three times that of most production jets. Its fully steerable nose gear was extremely tall and placed the pilot 14 feet in the air. Although these changes were positive, the cockpit and radar nose design did not provide adequate carrier landing visibility.

The first 16 F7U-3s were powered by non-afterburning Allison J-35 engines rated at 5,600 pounds maximum thrust. As built, these 16 F7U-3s had a single-wheel nose gear similar to the F7U-1’s. These were later retrofitted to the dual nose wheels. They were armed with four 20-mm cannons, which were mounted in the fairing above the engine duct and fired through ports in the duct lip. The stainless steel vents were installed to prevent the engine flameout caused by the exhaust gasses of gunfires.

The following Bureau Numbers of the 16 early F7U-3s are 128451 - 128466.

The remaining F7U-3s after the 16th aircraft were powered by Westinghouse J46-WE-8B afterburning turbojets, and they had dual nose wheels instead of single wheels. The cockpit was raised to provide slightly better visibility, and the radar nose was slanted downward for more visibility at the bottom. These aircraft became the definitive production standard. A total of 288 aircraft were equipped with 13 US Navy squadrons. The F7U-3 was the last major Cutlass variant, and the further development of the Cutlass ended shortly after flight testing of the more capable Vought F8U Crusader commenced.

One way to visually differ between early and standard F7U-3 is the shape of the radar nose. Early -3 had a bulb-shaped radar nose, while the standard -3 had the radar nose slanted downward.

F7U-3 in Operational Service

The first fleet squadron to receive the early F7U-3s was Fighter Squadron 81 (VF-81) in April 1954. The pilots across squadrons disliked the F7U-3’s performance due to a lack of sufficient engine thrust. The carrier’s landing and take-off performance was still severely poor because of it. In addition, the J35 engines were known to flame out in rain during flight, which was a serious blunder of the design.

When the Westinghouse J-46-WE-8 turbojet engines with afterburning capability became available, the early F7U-3s in service were replaced with new and standard F7U-3. Their air intakes had to be enlarged to provide more air for the engines. Although the new engines promised to improve the flight performance, the Cutlass aircraft could not generate more than 6,100 pounds of thrust, falling shorter than the expected 10,000 pounds in the afterburner. Thus, it would be the most complicated in-service aircraft for the US Navy pilots to maintain and fly.

Ultimately, between June 1954 and December 1956, 13 fleet squadrons received Cutlasses. At 55,000 hours of cumulative flight time, there were 78 accidents related to the Cutlass aircraft and one quarter of airframes lost. These accidents were attributed to hydraulic failures, landing gear failures, and underpowered engines, which had fatally claimed four test pilots and 21 other US Navy pilots. In addition, the pilots suffered spinal injuries after nose gear failure during a high-stress landing. Most squadrons that equipped the Cutlass aircraft took every Cutlass from the aircraft carrier and “beached” or emergency grounded them ashore because of these defects.

Plagued by accidents and deficiencies, the Cutlass aircraft was retired on March 2, 1959, after only serving for around ten years. The accidents and losses marked the highest accident rate of all Navy swept-wing fighters in the era, which had forever tarnished Cutlass’ reputation.


Specifications

Vought F7U-3 Cutlass (Early)

General Characteristics

  • Crew: 1 (Pilot)
  • Length: 43 ft 9.5 in (13.35 m)
  • Height: 14 ft 1 in (4.29 m)
  • Span: 39 ft 8.6 in (12.1 m)
  • Wing area: 535 sq ft (49.7 sq m)
  • Powerplant: 2 x Allison J35-A-29 turbojet engines
    → 5,560 lbf (24.7 kN) thrust each
  • Internal Fuel: 1,291 US gal. (4,887 L)
  • Oil Tankage: 9.3 US gal. (35.2 L)
  • Empty Weight: (?)
  • Design Gross Weight: 29,397.7 lb (13,334.6 kg)
  • Maximum Takeoff Weight: 32,500 lbs (14,741.7 kg)

Performance

  • Thrust-to-Weight Ratio: 0.38
  • Low-Altitude Max. IAS: 604 mph (972 km/h) @ sea level
  • High-Altitude Max. IAS: 345 mph (555 km/h) @ 40,000 ft (12,192 m)
  • Wing Loading: 54.95 lb/sq ft (268.29 kg/sq m)
  • Rate of Climb: (?)
  • Time to Altitude: (?)
  • Service Ceiling: 40,000 ft (12,192 m)

(?) Figures are unknown. Supplemental performance data for this aircraft can be found in the sequential AN 01-45HFC-1A “Operating Data for Navy Model F7U-3 Airplane.” I am unable to find and acquire this source on the Internet as of now.

Armament

  • Guns:
    • 4 x 20-mm Colt Mk.12 cannons (180 rpg; 720 rounds)
  • Bombs:
    • 2 x 2,000-lb bombs
    • 2 x 1,000-lb bombs
  • Electronics:
    • AN/APG-30 Ranging Radar

Diagrams


Cockpit


Images


Conclusion | Why it should be in War Thunder

   The F7U-3 (Early) was a most futuristic-looking and radical jet fighter designed for the US Navy despite its deficiencies, and it was only in operational service for a short time. I am suggesting this non-afterburning Cutlass variant, along with the F7U-3M with afterburner and missile capabilities for War Thunder, like Swift F.1 and F.7. While the engines are underpowered, the F7U-3’s top speed is higher than the F9F-2. However, the MiG-15Bis and MiG-17 would be F7U-3’s most dangerous opponents since the F7U-3 has a slower acceleration and is less maneuverable than them. At best, the F7U-3 (Early) would serve as a support fighter, the same fate shared by the F9F Panthers in-game.


See Also

I made a suggestion for the late F7U-3M variant with afterburning engines and missile capability. Check it out if you are interested.


Sources


Thank you for taking the time to read my suggestion! 😃

2 Likes

it looks verry maneuvrable :)

1 Like

+1, looks funny. Plus the nose reminds me of the F4D-1 ingame, and I love flying that thing, so just for that reason a lil extra bit of yes from me :P

The Cutlass is such a beautiful aircraft - one of my personal favorites, in fact. I’d love to be able to fly it in all its forms. +1

1 Like

Should be! It has a roll rate of 570 degrees a second. 😉

I agree, that nose shape makes it a best-looking F7U-3.

2 Likes

I don’t know F7U-3 located before or after F9F group and not sure battle rating