Air Power Series>1:32 die-cast display model>F6F>HA0309
Grumman F6F-5 "Paper Doll" VF-27, USS Princeton (CVL-23), October 1944
General Background
The F6F Hellcat was basically designed as the "Zero Killer". It could fly about an average 55 mph faster than the Zero and it was heavier and more powerful than the Zero. The Hellcat also had the highest kill ratio of any American fighter plane during WWII (19 to1). US Navy pilots referred the Hellcat as the "Aluminum Tank".
The Aircraft
VF-27 F6F-5 Hellcat "Paper Doll" belonged to Lt. (jg) Robert Burnell but on October 24, 1944 during the Battle of Leyte Gulf was flown from the USS Princeton by Lt. Carl Brown Jr.. Brown and other aircraft intercepted Japanese aircraft heading for the U.S. Fleet and he managed to down 5 enemy aircraft. During the battle Brown and his aircraft were hit but he managed to land on the USS Essex since the USS Princeton was ablaze. "Paper Doll" was pushed in the sea to make room for all the extra aircraft that were recovering.
Specifications :
Total production : | F6F-3 (4,403), F6F-5 (7,870) |
Powerplant : | Single 2,000-horsepower 18-cylinder, Pratt and Whitney R-2800-10W air cooled radial engine |
Climb rate to 14,000 ft. : | 6 minutes 42 seconds |
Armament : | six .50-caliber M2 Browning machine guns a 2,000 lb. bomb load, or six 5-inch rockets |
Wingspan : | 42 ft. 10 in. (13.1 m) |
Length : | 33 ft., 7 in. (10.2 m) |
Height : | 13 ft., 1 in. (4.0 m) |
Weight : | 9,238 lb. empty |
Maximum speed : | 380 mph at 23,400 ft. |
Ceiling : | 37,300 ft. |
Range : | 945 miles |