F6F Hellcat
Country | United States |
Manufacturer | Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation |
Primary Role | Fighter |
Maiden Flight | 26 June 1942 |
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
ww2dbaseThe F6F Hellcat design started development as a upgraded version of the F4F Wildcat design, but by the time a final design was completed it had became a completely different breed altogether, not even sharing any parts with her predecessor. F6F Hellcat fighters were designed to be produced efficiently, and additional features such as heavy armor and self-sealing fuel tanks were installed to provide additional safety to the pilots. The first of these carrier fighters took flight on 26 Jun 1942 and the first combat-ready squadron was deployed aboard USS Essex in Mar 1943. They first saw action against the Japanese six months later when F6F Hellcat fighters of USS Independence attacked and shot down a Japanese seaplane. On 23 Nov 1943, F6F Hellcat fighters engaged Japanese Zero fighters over Tarawa in the Gilbert Islands and scored 30 kills at the loss of only one. Repeated overwhelming victories hinted that the United States had finally produced a fighter design that not only matched but exceeded that capabilities of the feared Zero. By the end of the war, they participated in nearly every engagement in the Pacific since their introduction in 1943 and achieved a kill:loss ratio of 19:1.
ww2dbaseUS Navy Ensign George Orner, a F6F Hellcat fighter pilot aboard USS Franklin, recalled his liking for his fighter.
ww2dbaseUS Navy Ensign Byron Robinson, an aircraft maintenance officer also of USS Franklin, also shared similar fond memories of F6F Hellcat fighters. "I dearly loved the F6F", he said, "I could keep almost ninety percent of those aircraft in the air. It was very simple airplane to maintain because there was little [in the] way of a hydraulic system." The simplicity in design was a reflection of Roy Grumman's motto "build it strong, keep it simple, and make it work."
ww2dbase1,264 F6F Hellcat fighters were also sent to the British Fleet Air Arm under the Lend-Lease Act. The British initially called them Gannet fighters, but by early 1944 the designation of Hellcat was unified across Allied command. Under British command, the F6F Hellcat fighters saw action off Norway, in the Mediterranean, and in the Indian Ocean. The British F6F Hellcat fighters did not achieve as great a kill:loss ratio as their American cousins, but they were still considered great carrier fighters by British pilots.
ww2dbaseIn addition to the F6F Hellcat standard fighter variants, a night fighter variant and a photo reconnaissance variant were also produced. The 12,272th and last F6F Hellcat fighter was completed in Nov 1945. The stunningly high number of aircraft built was also attributed to the purposeful simplicity in the design.
ww2dbaseSources: Inferno, Wikipedia.
Last Major Revision: Oct 2007
F6F Hellcat Timeline
26 Jun 1942 | The Grumman XF6F-3 Hellcat prototype made its maiden flight. It went on to be, arguably, the most significant Allied carrier fighter of the war. |
31 Aug 1943 | The first combat mission of the US Navy's latest fighter aircraft occurred when F6F-3 Hellcat fighters of VF-5 operating from the carrier USS Yorktown (Essex-class) assisted in an attack on Japanese installations on Marcus Island. This was a mere eighteen months after the prototype's first flight. Altogether some 2,545 examples of the F6F-3 aircraft were delivered during 1943. |
5 Oct 1943 | Ensign Robert W. Duncan of US Navy Squadron VF-5 became the first F6F Hellcat fighter pilot to shoot down two Japanese Zero fighters in a single engagement. |
15 Aug 1944 | Operation Dragoon, the invasion of southern France, began. On the same day, Saint-Tropez, Var, France was captured by the 15th Infantry Regiment of 3rd US Infantry Division. This also marked the first operational use of the F6F Hellcat fighter by the US Navy in the European Theater flying from carriers USS Tulagi and USS Kasaan Bay. |
19 Aug 1944 | F6F-5 Hellcat fighters flying from USS Tulagi became the first US Navy Hellcats to score aerial victories in the European Theater when fighters from Squadron VOF-1 shot down three Heinkel He-111 medium bombers south of Lyon in southern France. |
SPECIFICATIONS
F6F-3
Machinery | Pratt & Whitney R-2800-10W Double Wasp 18-cylinder two-row radial engine rated at 2,000hp |
Armament | 6x0.5in Browning M2 machine guns, optional six rockets under wings, optional 2,000lb of bombs |
Crew | 1 |
Span | 13.06 m |
Length | 10.24 m |
Height | 3.99 m |
Wing Area | 31.00 m² |
Weight, Empty | 4,101 kg |
Weight, Loaded | 5,528 kg |
Weight, Maximum | 6,000 kg |
Speed, Maximum | 605 km/h |
Speed, Cruising | 270 km/h |
Rate of Climb | 17.80 m/s |
Service Ceiling | 11,430 m |
Range, Normal | 1,755 km |
F6F-5
Machinery | One Pratt & Whitney R-2800-10W Double Wasp 18cyl air-cooled radial piston engine with two-speed two-stage supercharge and water injection, rated at 2,200hp |
Armament | 6x12.7mm M2 Browning machine guns or 2x20mm AN/M2 cannon, 4x12.7mm M2 Browning machine guns, optional 6x127mm HVAR or 2x298mm Tiny Tim rockets, optional 910kg bomb or 1x Mk.13-3 torpedo on centerline rack, optional smaller bombs under wing |
Crew | 1 |
Span | 13.06 m |
Length | 10.24 m |
Height | 3.99 m |
Wing Area | 31.00 m² |
Weight, Empty | 4,190 kg |
Weight, Loaded | 5,714 kg |
Weight, Maximum | 6,992 kg |
Speed, Maximum | 629 km/h |
Rate of Climb | 13.00 m/s |
Service Ceiling | 11,370 m |
Range, Normal | 1,521 km |
Range, Maximum | 2,460 km |
Photographs
Videos
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Visitor Submitted Comments
22 May 2009 04:46:33 PM
at least to me, it seems like as the war progressed, the Germans had the best tanks, the British had the best tank destroyers, and we had the best planes.
Course, the Soviets and the Japanese held those titles in the early days of the war.
22 Jul 2010 11:05:05 AM
Information about Hellcat file photo:
Fine wartime photo of a F6F-3 as it appeared in 1943. Grumman buit 12,000 Hellcats between 1942 to 1945.
"The Zero Killer"
The US Navy used the Leader and Wingman team a pair of Hellcats would use this tactic in
fighting the Zero.
By 1944 the Zero was obsolete, but in the
hands of a skilled and veteran pilot it was
still a dangerous fighter.
The replacement pilots were undertrained and
were no match against the highly trained
Americans.
The Hellcat was armed w/ six fifty caliber
machine guns, and a two second burst from
those six .50's fired 130 rounds,the lightly
built japanese aircraft could not absorb that
firepower.
The Hellcat was also a nightfighter armed
w/ six fifty caliber machine guns, or four
20mm cannons and carried onboard radar it
was in service by 1944 and over 200 were
supplied.
During the Pacific War, the Hellcat ran up
a 19 to 1 kill ratio destroying 5,000 enemy
aircraft.
To keep up demands for pilots, the US Navy
was training 10,000 pilots a year, and Japan could never keep up with training replacement
pilots.
After World War II the Navy continued to use
the Hellcat for training however, it was phased out of service and served with Naval
reserve units into the 1950's
Japan could never hope to win against the
industrial might of the United States.
In 1943 the Japanese produced 7.8 million tons of military equipment.
The United States produced 90 million tons
of military equipment. One complete escort
carrier was built every 70 days!
By 1944 the US Navy had more aircraft,pilots
and carriers,than the Japanese could scrape
together. The Japanese were short of planes,
pilots and the carriers.
27 Jul 2010 01:07:15 PM
The Grumman F6F Hellcat destroyed Japanese
airpower, both the Navy and Marine fighter
squadrons shot down 5,200 Japanese aircraft.
306 fighter pilots became aces flying the Hellcat.
Did you know...
Its a myth that the Hellcat was designed to
combat the Zero in fact,the Navy and Grumman
new nothing about the Zero,when the Hellcat was on the drawing boards in 1941.
The prototype didn't fly until after the
Battle of Midway, June 1942. The Navy and
Grumman did receive information about the
Zero found in the Aleutians and added this into its flight testing program.
The Hellcat was armed with six fifty caliber
machine guns, same as the F4F Wildcat, but had more range,was faster was able to carry bombs and rockets for close air support.
New Navy pilots with 300 hours flying time
found the Hellcat easy to fly. The fighter was also used as a nightfighter and photo- recon aircraft. 12,000 Hellcats were buit from one factory, the Grumman Iron Works at
Long Island.
After World War II, the Navy continued to use
the Hellcat However, it was phased out of
front line service, and passed on to Naval
reserve squadrons where it served until the
early 1950's.
Many F6F Hellcats survive today in museums
or in private aircraft collections, many have
been restored to flying condition.
The F6F Hellcat was also used by the French,
and British.
In British service the Hellcat proved to be
a match for the Bf 109 and Fw 190.
Uruguay used the Hellcat until the 1960's it
was the last Military operator.
The F6F Hellcat ended its service life, as a
target-drone.
16 Aug 2012 04:47:55 PM
After WW2 many F6F's were donated to towns for use as a memorial. Our local airport had one until the airport manager dug a hole and buried it. I believe it is still there.
12 May 2013 09:54:14 AM
TWILIGHT OF THE CAT:
After WWII F6F Hellcats served for a few years with carrier groups. Later they were passed on to Naval Reserve Units, others were kept in storage or issued to operational training units, used as instructional airframes or converted into target drones. Survivors were passed on to friendly countries in South America.
The last US Navy Hellcat flown by a military pilot was in 1961 and retired from active service
others were still used as target drones.
Today surviving F6F Hellcats are in museums or in private collections.
21 Jan 2014 02:57:29 PM
Hi I was wondering if Armand could contact me
19 Nov 2016 12:03:01 AM
equinetwo@icloud.com and memory of my father Captain Frank W Stone World War II hellcat pilot!
10 Oct 2020 01:58:20 PM
I have a picture on the battle field of a hellcat I think with tail number 226124 and the planes name is Dry Run Id like to sent it to the proper museum ,can anyone help me thanks
11 Oct 2020 11:01:48 AM
eme baker (above):
The tail number you provided is too long to be a Navy BuNo from a Hellcat but Army Air Force tail number 226124 is from a P-47 Thunderbolt named ‘Dry Run’ so this is almost certainly the plane in your photo (the Hellcat and the Thunderbolt had a roughly similar appearance). The answer to your question about where to donate the photo is a little hard to pin down. Any air museum local to you may be a good place to start. If they don’t want it themselves, they may be better able to direct you.
P-47 42-26124 ‘Dry Run’ is a fairly well-known aircraft and images of it abound on the internet and in various books. The aircraft bore side markings of C4-Z and flew with the 388th Fighter Squadron, 365th Fighter Group, 9th Air Force from Azeville Field in France. The plane was lost 18 Jul 1944 near Vire, France in Normandy in a massive dogfight between at least 15 German Me-109s, 4 US P-51 Mustangs, and at least 4 US P-47 Thunderbolts (including Dry Run). Dry Run’s pilot, 2Lt James L Dyar, was killed.
1 Nov 2022 08:41:16 AM
I think the figures for the -3 and -5 are reversed. The -5 had the 2200 hp P&W.
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.
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Captain Henry P. Jim Crowe, Guadalcanal, 13 Jan 1943
28 Oct 2007 01:09:57 AM
In total 1,177 Hellcats reached the Royal Navy. These were 252 F6F-3s(known as Hellcat Mk.1) 849 F6F-5s and 76 F6F-5Ns (known as Hellcat Mk.11). Some of the latter were modified by Blackburn Aircraft and a limited air-to-ground capability, whilst others had cameras fitted for the photo-reconnaissance role.