The Aviation Historian — January 2018

(lu) #1

Issue No 22 THE AVIATION HISTORIAN 83


end of Panama Canal, were purchased from the
US Foreign Liquidation Commission at Balboa
for US$3,500 each. By the end of 1946 the CNA
in the USA, headed by Capt Corb Vicente Baroja,
had inspected 23 J2F-5s and seven J2F-6s stored
at various locations including Memphis, Norfolk,
Atlantic City, Seattle and even Guantanamo Bay.
The J2F-5s and J2F-6s were initially allocated the
AN codes 2-O-13 to 2-O-42 and were taken on
strength on December 19, 1947.


ANTARCTIC ADVENTURES


Of the many and varied operations undertaken
by the AN amphibious fleet during this period,
one in particular stands out: the use of Walruses
to explore uncharted areas within Argentina’s
claimed Antarctic territory. The first such
operation, the Primera Gran Expedición Antártica
(also known as the Sixth Argentinian Naval
Antarctic Campaign), ran from January 4 to April
23, 1947, under the command of Tte Frag Luis M.
Garcia. His objectives were to conduct surveys
of Deception Island, Hope Bay, Dallmann Bay,
Graham Land and adjacent islands, as well as
establish a permament meteorological station and
begin hydrographic surveys and buoy markings
of places of interest for navigation, oceanographic
meteorology, survey and scientific study.
Seven ships took part in the expedition:
transports ARA Patagonia and ARA Chaco; whaler
Don Samuel; minesweeper ARA Granville; tanker
ARA Ministro Ezcurra and patrol vessels ARA King
and ARA Murature. Walrus 2-O-24 was assigned
as the expedition’s support aircraft, along with
Tte Frag Oscar Edgardo Tachella and mechanic
and radio operator Cabo Roberto Jorge Román.
The expedition’s flagship was ARA Patagonia,
which was modified with a deployment system
and recovery crane for the Walrus on the aft deck,
together with new radio equipment to improve
ship-to-aircraft communications. The amphibian
was loaded aboard the vessel on January 3,

Powerplant 1 x 750 h.p. nine-cylinder single-row
Bristol Pegasus VI air-cooled radial piston engine
Dimensions
Span 45ft 10in (13·97m)
(wings folded) 17ft 6in (5·33m)
Length (on chassis) 37ft 7in (11·45m)
Height (on chassis) 15ft 3in (4·65m)
Undercarriage track 7ft 7in (2·32m)
Propeller diameter 10ft 0in (3·0m)
Wing area 610ft² (56·67m²)
Weights
Empty 4,900lb (2,233kg)
Loaded 7,200lb (3,266kg)
Performance
Maximum speed 135 m.p.h. (217km/h)
Cruising speed 95 m.p.h. (153km/h)
Alighting speed 57 m.p.h. (92km/h)
Initial climb 1,050ft/min (320m/min)
Service ceiling 18,500ft (5,600m)
Range 600 miles (965km
at 92 m.p.h. at 148km/h)
Armament 2 x 0·303in Vickers K machine-guns,
one in bow and one amidships; 4 x 112lb (51kg)
anti-submarine bombs aimed through Wimperis
course-setting bombsight and dropped by observer

SUPERMARINE WALRUS I DATA


ABOVE In 1943 Argentina defined its Antarctic territory
as between 25°W and 74°W, south of 60°S, which
included Deception Island, the safest natural harbour
in Antarctica, located at 60°W, 63°S — and thus much
disputed by the various nations that had visited. Here
M-O-4 is seen on the shore of the island’ s volcano
caldera during the 1947–48 Argentinian expedition.

JUAN C. CICALESI VIA AUTHOR
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