Close
Boeing Images
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Linked assets
FJ Fury
Conceptually similar
FJ-1 Fury
Four FJ-4 Furies over Fury Flight Line
Four Marine FJ-2 Furies Flying in a Diamond Formation
FJ-3 Fury Assembly Line
FJ-2 Fury on Deck of USS Coral Sea
FJ-1 Fury in Flight
FJ-1 Fury on Aircraft Carrier Elevator
FJ-3 Fury on Taxiway with Dandelions
Flight of Four FJ-3 Furies over USS Forrestal
FJ-3 Fury Carrier Launch
Navy FJ-2 Fury in Flight
FJ-4F Fury Rocket Motor Test
FJ-1 Fury Naval Demonstration Landing
FJ-1 Fury in Flight over Wooded Hills
FJ-1 Fury in Flight
FJ-4F Fury Rocket Motor Test
FJ-1 Fury on Carrier Deck
FJ-1 Fury Production
Four Marine FJ-2 Furies Flying in Formation in Front of Mt. Fuji
XFJ-1 Fury on Tarmac
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
FJ-2 Fury Cutaway Poster
The North American Fury fighter was a short, squat airplane looking much like a high-flying bomb. The FJ-1 was the first American jet fighter to employ a single, straight ram duct with its entrance in the nose. Later versions, the -2, -3 and -4 models, were designed with swept wings for operation at higher altitudes and faster speed over a greater range than earlier Fury jets. Extra fuel was stored in wingtip tanks. A special feature was the bending nose gear, so the fighter could kneel down on the crowded deck of an aircraft carrier. Built for carrier and land operations, the FJ-1 could take off from a landing field or a carrier flight deck with normal jet power. The Fury was the first jet fighter to complete an operational tour at sea. A total of 33 straight-wing Furies were built at first, but the later swept-wing versions filled the Navy's demand for an aircraft similar to the F-86.
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Unique identifier
BI25828
Boeing ID
h181-00-6
Type
Image
Size
5100px × 3850px 18MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
airplanes
copy space
cutaway views
exteriors
fighters
full body views
grid patterns
historic production status
illustrations
jets
left front views
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
POINT OF VIEW
scanned from film negative
text
viewed from above
Restrictions