Grumman F6F Hellcat Pilot Instruction (1943)

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  • čas přidán 15. 01. 2010
  • The carrier-based fighter Grumman F6F Hellcat was designed from the beginning to take back the skies over the Pacific from the Japanese Zero.
    Successor to the Grumman Wildcat, the F6F Hellcat made history in 1942 when it decisively whipped the Japanese aircraft carrier based fighters opposing it in the Pacific
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  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 91

  • @wramsey2656
    @wramsey2656 Před 4 lety +10

    My dad flew the F6F on his 2nd tour of the Pacific in 1944 with VF-11 Sundowners on the USS Hornet CV-12. He shot down 2 more Zeros on this tour, destroyed several on the ground, and beached a sea plane tender ship. In his previous tour Jan thru July 43 he flew the F4 Wildcat at Guadalcanal Henderson Field with VF-11. His squadron fought with the Marine squadron to defend the island against daily Japanese attacks.

    • @aviator4662
      @aviator4662 Před 2 lety +4

      That is really cool. As someone fishing for information on what it was like to be a navy pilot in that time, this is not only very cool but very helpful. Your father was a brave man.

    • @wramsey2656
      @wramsey2656 Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you friend. If you google Commander John W Ramsey USN , there is a little info out there on him. There are a couple books on his squadron Sundowners VF-11 /VF-111, if your interested. Dad’s generation was extremely self sacrificing for our country.

    • @peterhoffman9553
      @peterhoffman9553 Před rokem +1

      My Father was in Management over the production @Grumman air in Bethpage Long Island ! Where they produced the Hellcat and Wildcat aircraft which enabled the winning of World War ll .
      The Pilots were superb. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @wramsey2656
      @wramsey2656 Před rokem

      Awesome Peter it took a team to make it all happen and your dad was awesome for his work to make it happen! Salute ! They were great planes.

  • @QuantumWrench
    @QuantumWrench Před 8 lety +13

    One of my favorite planes in the pacific war. Probably my favorite, wishing it were available early in the war.
    Good power, armament, and armor. It handled well and was able to take a beating without failing.

  • @passionworksbodyshop9738
    @passionworksbodyshop9738 Před 4 lety +11

    I am so glad I found this video! I bought one of these a few Christmases ago and just never bothered to fly it. This video is way easier to follow in the xerox instructions that came with it. Will see you on the runways.

  • @notaire2
    @notaire2 Před 5 lety +2

    Die US-amerikanioschen Flieger waren echt glücklich, dass sie durch solch einen verständlichen Erziehungsfilm trainiert wurden. Danke fürs wertvolle Hochladen!

  • @L33tP1ckL
    @L33tP1ckL Před 14 lety +5

    Another GREAT submission!

  • @hertzair1186
    @hertzair1186 Před rokem +1

    Always loved the Wildcat and Hellcat….great basic rugged aircraft . Always surprised the Hellcats weren’t used after the war like the Corsair in Korea etc

  • @patrickw8302
    @patrickw8302 Před 5 lety +1

    My favorite plane of all time ! Excellent video so nice to hear and see that, thanks

  • @CaptWindShear
    @CaptWindShear Před 12 lety +1

    Had a chuckle... I found myself watching this with a habitual level of attention, as if I was doing the conversion course to the F6F. Thanks for posting these videos. I would have been in some sort of heaven if they had been as easily available when I was a kid.

  • @patillery
    @patillery Před 11 lety +8

    Not only did you have to have your arms inside when the wings fold (as they comment in the video) but you had to have cockpit OPEN. The edge of the wing when folding or unfolding actually came in the cockpit.

  • @mikegionfriddo5907
    @mikegionfriddo5907 Před 11 lety +2

    the hellcat was buetiful and was an amazeing plane and the p47 was great too

  • @Craigers22763
    @Craigers22763 Před 11 lety +1

    Gonna build one for my 1/72 model collection.

  • @MartinLeMalin
    @MartinLeMalin Před 10 lety +1

    Nice machine ! ...

  • @MisterRedBlueBlur
    @MisterRedBlueBlur Před 12 lety +1

    She's still a true beauty!

  • @badweetabix
    @badweetabix Před 11 lety +2

    It may seem very difficult to remember all the procedures because in this day and age of computer automation there is very little that requires commitment to memory. But in the days before computers, it was very normal for people to have good memory and math sense. My grandparents could do 2 place multiplications and division in their head, and Grandpa could recite pages of books he read years and decades before. They truly were The Greatest Generation.

    • @spottydog4477
      @spottydog4477 Před 5 lety

      It's just a summary film..when flying you ALWAY follow the checklist found in the cockpits...even on modern jets pilots stil use checklists

    • @701CPD
      @701CPD Před 4 lety

      That's why it took a year to train military pilots back in WWII.

  • @soulflower666
    @soulflower666 Před 11 lety +1

    Right on! salute to the air force - from the 395th armoured brigade, 370th division, I got to "fly" my M-60A1's and A3's ...but no longer :(

  • @jezzmoto
    @jezzmoto Před 12 lety +9

    I'm surprised they managed to have a war at all! Where did they find the guys to remember all these intricate functions!?

    • @fabiolean
      @fabiolean Před 3 lety +2

      Pilot's fuckin' loooove checklists

  • @wrigleyx
    @wrigleyx Před 12 lety +3

    LOVE IT !!

  • @ahmetpekmez528
    @ahmetpekmez528 Před rokem

    Perfeçt .

  • @michaelgmoore5708
    @michaelgmoore5708 Před 4 lety

    The A. C. Gilbert company of American Flyer trains made the wing flap motors for the Gruman Hellcat plane. The trains used the same type motor!

  • @kenowens9021
    @kenowens9021 Před 4 lety

    One Japanese ace's technique was to have a Wildcat climb after him. Since the Zero can out climb the Wildcat, he would wait for the F4F to staff and fall to earth. The ace would just dive down and easily shoot him. Then one day, he saw a different type of plane, tried the same trick, confident he would get another kill. When he thought it was time he turned and dived, thinking he would find the plane falling. BUT, it wasn't, it was still climbing after him, shooting. That was the last thing the Japanese ace saw. The Hellcat shot him down.

  • @kyle6415
    @kyle6415 Před 2 lety

    Went from having no idea on how to fly a plane or read a plane's instrument panel to somewhat understanding how to read some of the gauges.

  • @mariamiller1770
    @mariamiller1770 Před 4 lety +1

    Really docile for a high performance aircraft. Almost general aviation-like in the cockpit.

  • @patillery
    @patillery Před 11 lety +9

    I did! Flight school at Corpus Christie. Air to ground training.I knew when I flew it that it was a priviledge

  • @KJOSCOT
    @KJOSCOT Před 11 lety

    It was originally designed for the newer fleet carrier operations. However, as the design developed, it was more practical to make it a land-based aircraft.

  • @darkegalahad
    @darkegalahad Před 11 lety +1

    that makes more sense, the prop changes pitch according to engine speed to a limit

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 Před 11 lety +1

    Wow...what a checklist.

  • @GTX1123
    @GTX1123 Před 3 lety +1

    Zero pilots got a rude awakening when the Hellcat showed up. No doubt, many of them thought Hellcats were Wildcats and that the pilots were green newbies who didn't know any better than to follow them up into a steep climb. But it didn't end well for the Zero pilots. Instead lining up an easy kill on a stalled Wildcat fluttering like a duck, the last thing they saw before they were vaporized was the flash of the Hellcat's 50 cal's.

  • @Treetop64
    @Treetop64 Před 11 lety

    ...not to mention that it was by far the biggest single-engine fighter of the war. But it was an awesome fighting instrument.

  • @jrcadet4
    @jrcadet4 Před 12 lety +1

    Nice of Grumman to move that shotgun-cartridge starter out of the cockpit in the Hellcat. Before that, the breech was below and between the pilot's legs. Backfires must've given some guys second thoughts about Naval Aviation.

    • @domcomfermi609
      @domcomfermi609 Před rokem

      Or a chastity belt might have cleared some anxieties.

  • @JIMJAMSC
    @JIMJAMSC Před 10 měsíci

    All of these warbirds are treasures today yet then were considered disposable with the fuel in the wings worth more than the aircraft.

  • @greenseaships
    @greenseaships Před 13 lety

    @imbok
    Not necessarily. Spitfires (at least those at the time of Battle of Britain) also had only one flap setting. Down or up. I'm guessing intermediate flap settings were for larger planes.

  • @Anlushac11
    @Anlushac11 Před 11 lety +1

    If I recall correctly F6F has a constant speed prop. You can change engine RPM and the prop automatically changes pitch to keep optimum prop blade angle for rpm and power. Pilot can manually set this too. IIRC is set by hydraulic pressure. Setting manifold pressure has to do with the engine being supercharged so pilot is setting blower pressure. Pilot can also set the fuel ratio to set engine to run lean or rich. Normally it adjusts automatically.

  • @soulflower666
    @soulflower666 Před 11 lety

    Wow, you really had to watch your head.
    Do you still get a chance to fly them?

  • @Barium5
    @Barium5 Před 13 lety +1

    @72troyboy These planes were almost always on carriers, the wings would already be locked out and ready to go. A pilot going into combat wouldn't just have met the plane the day before, he would have been trained until everything was a "habit" and would be automatic. Just like learning to play a game, it takes a while to learn everything, but once it's learned you don't have to keep going back to the manual to see what to do.

  • @kenttowne2611
    @kenttowne2611 Před 5 lety

    Noticed that they are getting more than 30" with neutral blower. Isn't that more than any normally aspirated engine can get for manifold pressure? Atmosphere is in the neighborhood of 30". Is neutral blower position still creating pressure?

  • @bushpilotfred1738
    @bushpilotfred1738 Před 3 lety

    .. the landing is the hardest but also the best part

  • @jezzmoto
    @jezzmoto Před 11 lety

    The last fighter plane I saw was in Topgun.

  • @underwaterpowerarmor8700

    you have those pilots and then you have the one who did a air to air melee combat with his landing gear

  • @redbaroniii
    @redbaroniii Před 11 lety +1

    My Uncle, Lt.. Clarence Harms, flew these during the battle of Okinawa, until the war ended. He was flying one of these when, acting as a spotter, he witnessed the last ship to ship combat, a US -v- Japanese destroyer shootout 50 miles from Yokosuka, .

  • @jimcoblentz1732
    @jimcoblentz1732 Před 6 lety +4

    By the way it's F6F, not f6f.

  • @bababazuka5122
    @bababazuka5122 Před 11 lety

    naah who needs safety straps with this beauty

  • @surearrow
    @surearrow Před 11 lety +1

    Keep your gyro retractile at 3.987644 PSI during combat. NEVER exceed operational PSI for it could damage your rear sprocket calibration axle tabs. If this happens, loosen your rear lock knob behind your seat, rotate it counter-clockwise while pushing in at a 37.987 degree angle, turn no faster than 0.6873 RPMs. You will need to turn off the fourth transducer switch, located under the left rear control panel after you've made your adjustment. Follow the procedures in your R-T8746/4-PH4y handout.

    • @richardneu9020
      @richardneu9020 Před 5 lety +1

      turn no faster than 0.6873 RPMs ???? Is this a joke … makes no sense at all.

  • @patriley9449
    @patriley9449 Před 2 lety

    There is a lot going on here. I guess that the pilots practiced this until it became routine to them. I can't imagine having to pay attention to all of this stuff when engaged in combat. I guess that's why young people did this. At 70 years of age, my memory is not so good and I would make serious mistakes. Kudos to all of those who flew these warbirds. We all owe you a debt of gratitude.

    • @drpoundsign
      @drpoundsign Před 2 lety

      I'm in my early Sixties myself. I had a relative who fought on the ground in Italy, and translated at the Nuremberg trials. A German Jew, whose family got out in the nick of time-1939.

  • @imbok
    @imbok Před 13 lety

    No intermediate positions for the flaps? That is a surprise - must be because it is a carrier airplane.

  • @panzerofthelake506
    @panzerofthelake506 Před 2 lety

    Much better plane than the flying brick known as the p40

  • @adaorlando
    @adaorlando Před 12 lety

    yes is probably the best warbird of the US in the WWII... powerfull, grate armament and sexy desing :P

  • @Treetop64
    @Treetop64 Před 11 lety

    I *was* talking about the P-47...

  • @dancolley4208
    @dancolley4208 Před rokem

    500 feet for gear up??? How about positive rate on the rate of climb gauge? Never having flown the F6F, I don't know why 500 feet was set as gear up altitude requirement.

  • @pollopacheco
    @pollopacheco Před 12 lety

    That airport must be Green Ville In Texas.

  • @cbwelch4
    @cbwelch4 Před 12 lety +1

    I don't think so. Kill ratios didn't lie. The F6F's was the best in the war and it shot down more planes than any other American plane. The F4U had an 11:1 and the F6F had 19:1. The F4U would flame easier due to oil coolers in the wing roots. The F6F absorbed more damage. These planes both had the same competition.
    The F4U rolled better and was faster. The F6F turned tighter and was far more forgiving and easier to fly. The F4U had a nasty unpredictable stall characteristic.

  • @TroyLuchterhand
    @TroyLuchterhand Před 13 lety

    How the hell can they remember all this. I can't see a quick takeoff if under attack. Were all these WW2 fighters this difficult?

  • @wilburfinnigan2142
    @wilburfinnigan2142 Před 11 lety

    jezzmoto::::: On the FARMS..........

  • @PingHorror
    @PingHorror Před 11 lety

    The engine on this beast had 800 more HP than any of the Engines on a B17. Had the B17 been given 4 of these engines it would of had 3200 more HP than it already did. Creating a much different bird.

  • @ncsr111
    @ncsr111 Před 11 lety

    The Shinden was German technology loaned to the Nipponese.

  • @pholmes241
    @pholmes241 Před 12 lety +2

    Nice bird but f4u has it beat. Gramps had training with the f6f but loved the f4u.

    • @horsemumbler1
      @horsemumbler1 Před 4 lety

      Beat how? It had a slightly better climb rate above 10,000 feet, and rolled more quickly, could carry a heavier bomb load, but it wasn't as good in a turn, had inferior rearward visibility, a higher stall speed an much more abrupt and violent stall characteristics.
      The F6G was affectionately known as the Kitten, and Ace Maker due to it's very stable and forgiving nature, while the F4U was called things like Hog, Bent Wing Bastard, and Ensign Eliminator because of how difficult it was to control, especially at low speeds and altitudes where such temperamentality was most dangerous.
      F4U sure had F6F beat in fatal accidents, but not in combat record and popularity.

    • @bradganz6787
      @bradganz6787 Před 3 lety

      Hellcat had way more kills than the Corsair.corsair killed a lot of are boys was hard to fly.and was terrible on carrier landings.

  • @cbwelch4
    @cbwelch4 Před 12 lety

    They didn't call the F4U 'the Ace Maker'. That's the F6F.

    • @bradganz6787
      @bradganz6787 Před 3 lety

      Right the F4u was the widow maker lol

  • @badweetabix
    @badweetabix Před 11 lety

    Because by the time the first prototype took off, Japan had no carriers left; we had sank them all.

  • @gwalker173
    @gwalker173 Před 12 lety

    @TheFunkhouser it came in 1942

  • @ursenay
    @ursenay Před 12 lety

    The F6F didn't make its combat debut until 1943...

  • @RahRahRaharu
    @RahRahRaharu Před 11 lety

    Great info that goes straight out the window in a dog fight.

  • @TroyLuchterhand
    @TroyLuchterhand Před 13 lety

    Your right. They would have trained until it was habit. The pilots could probably go through that list in their sleep.

  • @MrKaddyman61
    @MrKaddyman61 Před 12 lety

    Airboyd: Any way I can get you to put this on CD and mail it to me I will pay you of course!

  • @jezzmoto
    @jezzmoto Před 12 lety

    I'm not gonna get it off the ground boys.

  • @darkegalahad
    @darkegalahad Před 11 lety +1

    that don't make sense, that would have been a helluva transmission, are you sure you know what you're talking about?

  • @agwhitaker
    @agwhitaker Před 11 lety

    Um, no.
    See - Republic P 47 Thunderbolt.

  • @1har2vey3
    @1har2vey3 Před 3 lety

    That's a lot of info, maybe I don't want to be a pilot afterall.

  • @lolinternetslol
    @lolinternetslol Před 11 lety

    It only seems difficult because you aren't actually trying to memorize it, and have no real incentive. Most of the old folks who I've taught how to computer primarily complain about "how much there is to remember".

    • @spottydog4477
      @spottydog4477 Před 5 lety

      That's why you ALWAYS read from the checklist and not rely on memory - EVER!!

  • @maikiboy2319
    @maikiboy2319 Před 12 lety +1

    in german pleas but i love it

  • @tjf114
    @tjf114 Před měsícem

    Easy…the WW2 pilots had it easy with this video on their iPads.

  • @GymChess
    @GymChess Před 12 lety

    P-47 was both faster and had a more powerful engine. So the answer is most likely no.

  • @danielburgess7785
    @danielburgess7785 Před 4 lety

    Built to fly off of escort carriers.