Wednesday, June 3, 2015
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A blog by a "sucker" and a "loser" who served her country in the Navy.
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8 comments:
Well, the F2A was the Brewster Buffalo, and the F2F was a Grumman biplane, so it's entirely possible the F2O is something equally implausible. Could it possibly be a typo and the F-20 Tigershark? I know the aggressor squadrons used F-5's, but I don't know if they flew any Tigersharka.
Assuming that's an Oh not a zero, possibly something from Lockheed -- but the Navy, for whatever reason, grouped as many as six or seven manufacturers under one letter. Dunno.
The FO was known in the Army as the P-38, if that's any help.
Deadstick, Lockheed is correct. Did a little looking and the O was solely designated to Lockheed. However, the manufacturer designator was not required by the Navy, so...
On that note, the Navy didn't use O as a type/role designator either.
And no, it doesn't help much yet...but that's the game.
Perhaps the F-35 "Turkey" or the P-58 "Chain Lightning"? After that, I'm outta ideas.
I'm actually gonna guess the F-35 too. I can't think of any other naval fighters that Lockheed made besides the P-38 and that, so it would logically be the second in the series.
Centerpuke and bmq: Correct!
An argument could be made that it would have been the F2V, as the R6O and the R7O had their manufacturer's codes changed to "V" (and the C-130 was designated the R8V).
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