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WWII Corsair Cockpit Interior
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10-30-2015 11:07 PM
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Contributing Member
Way cool, what a spartan seat, love the intentional spins forbidden sign and the view over the nose, really great pics I mean if you blew a fuse there ain't no auto pilot for the plane to carry on while you change it or a reflector sight bulb. Appreciated
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I'm happy I had a place to finally display them to people who can appreciate them. I saw a few other photo collections of CAF items I've taken while looking for these photos I might show soon that I've never shown anywhere else before. I was the editor of the Dallas newsletter for 8 years and I was always taking photos for future use, but never had the room in the newsletter to use a lot of them.... With our format here on Milsurps.com it's easy to display them for folks.
The seat bucket is a typical WWII American fighter seat. Parachutes were hung under the pilot's rear end so it fit under them as a cushion in that bucket. The CAF Corsair pilots actually wear WWII style parachutes while doing demo flights at air shows.
Regards,
~ Harlan
PS, Cinders.... The warning sign that really cracked me up was the sign saying not to fold up the wings in flight! The military can come up with some pretty silly warning signs even today!
Last edited by Harlan (Deceased); 10-31-2015 at 06:01 AM.
Reason: PS
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Does the red "rising sun" sticker on the instrument panel indicate a "kill" to the name of the pilot/aircraft or does it signify something else? British
practice was to put such motifs on the engine cowlings of single engine fighters etc and on the forward fuselage area of larger multi engine aircraft, often just forward of the cockpit. With bomber aircraft a Swastika indicated a downed enemy aircraft and a black bomb motif a successful bombing op.. A larger red bomb motif indicated a successful raid on Berlin, the most heavily defended city in continental Europe, and, slightly amusingly, an ice cream cone a successful raid on an Italian
target. I believe that from the second half of the war, after victory in North Africa, the RAF often flew on to a North African airfield to refuel and rearm after a raid on an Italian target.
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Contributing Member
Yes I saw that as well and a bit of mirth crept in imagining the sun being blotted out as the wings folded up whilst happily flying along "Pappy" Boyington is another good read in "Baa Baa Black Sheep" from memory I think he survived being strafed in the water after being shot down I think a round hit his ankle, he then survived bein a prisoner of the Japanese
. I think also he did end up in Japan as a prisoner after some terrible times on the islands a good read. I have Preddy's P-51 Top Ace book to go into next having just brought a copy author signed memorial foundation one.
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What switch
FA-18 cockpit for comparison "What switch was that one you said not to press?"
Last edited by CINDERS; 10-31-2015 at 09:32 AM.
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When you see surviving vehicles, tanks and aircraft it makes you wonder what chance of fate looked kindly on that particular item to survive the gas axe. For instance, who exactly, personally signed-off that the last liberty ship should be preserved for the nation? And which particular person did the same for the top-scoring (but not quite as it later transpires) Lancaster that survives in London? Or that particular Corsair.......... Or ........
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Cool! I'd love to take a peek in the local one.
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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Originally Posted by
Harlan
The warning sign that really cracked me up was the sign saying not to fold up the wings in flight!
Image some poor pilot returning at night, shot up, maybe a loss of blood, with a plane on the edge of extinction. It's awful easy, in battle conditions, to get mixed up with all the knobs and levers, especially in a Corsair that was very difficult to land on a carrier deck because the cockpit was located so far aft of the nose. I'll bet the sign was affixed because one or more pilots, perhaps in the state of shock, pulled the wrong lever.
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Moderator
(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)
Here's the local one, by the way:

Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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