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F4D Skyray Flight Line
Douglas F4D Skyray (1951-1958): A beautiful delta-wing, single engine jet interceptor, the F4D Skyray was one of the fastest fighters of the 1950s. Named Skyray because of its manta ray like design, the F4D made its first flight on January 21, 1951. The plane was on the leading edge of aircraft design and performance of its day. The U.S. Navy had requested an airplane that could climb to 40,000 feet in five minutes; the Skyray could do it in two. In 1953 it set a new world’s absolute speed record of 753 mph, and earned Douglas a share of the 1954 Collier Trophy. In 1957 it became the first Navy airplane assigned to the Air Force’s Air Defense Command. Called the “Ford” by its pilots, the F4D was not an easy airplane to fly. It had several unforgiving qualities with some unusual controls to overcome them. Up until 1969 the Navy used the F4D to teach its pilots how to handle an unstable aircraft. Total Skyray production was 421.
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Unique identifier
BI222
Boeing ID
estc567
Type
Image
Size
5998px × 4664px 80MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
abundance
adults
airfields
airplanes
All Weather Fighter Squadron 3 (VFAW-3)
blue
blue skies
buildings
canopies
clear skies
copy space
day
exteriors
fighters
flight lines
full body views
gray
ground crews
ground shots
historic production status
jets
maintenance
male
mechanics
military
military facilities
military livery
monoplanes
occupations and work
perspective lines
photos
refueling
repetition
right side views
structural systems
sunshine
tarmac
text
three-quarter length views
trucks
two people
viewed from above
white
yellow
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