Two workers attaching a Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp onto a F4U Corsair at the Chance-Vought factory in Stratford, Connecticut.
Date: March 1943
NARA: 179036630
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Lt Kenneth J Miller in his P-51D Mustang, 355th Fighter Group, 357th Fighter Squadron.
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The unmistakable Corsair.
Photo Credit: Brad Hurley
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Vought F4-U Corsair. WWII Aircraft Recognition Manual. ID Silhouette
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U.S. Ace of Aces Major Richard Bong. P-38 Lightning Pilot. Medal of Honor, DSC, Silver Star with 1 OLC (Oak Leaf Cluster), Distinguished Flying Cross (British) DFC with 6 OLCs, Air Medal with 14 OLCs. VIDEO ➤➤ https://youtu.be/0DUd-sNBcWY
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This is freaking cool! Is being carrier planes the only common thread? They weren't made by the same company, so I guess so. USN Aviation baby!! 🤘
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Corsairs
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F4U Corsair
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Hawker Hurricane
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Pilotes soviétiques devant un chasseur Polikarpov I-16 – 1930s-1940s
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During the Blitz, Sir Douglas Bader flew his own plane into combat.
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Vought F4U-1A Corsair VMF-214 Black Sheep
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P-51 Mustang
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