FlyPast 06.2018

(Barry) #1
June 2018 FLYPAST 61

D


ouglas chief engineer Ed
Heinemann was gifted with
incredible foresight. Proof,
if it were needed, came from his
choice of the 18-cylinder, 2,800hp
(2,088kW) Wright R-3350 to
power the XBT2D Dauntless II
attack bomber for the US Navy.
He had created one of the largest
single-seat airframes to enter
production, and to operate
from the decks of carriers as a
dive-bomber it required great
reserves of power.
The prototype flew for

the first time on March 18, 1945,
too late for the Skyraider to take part
in World War Two. Re-designated
AD-1 and renamed Skyraider, despite
appearing anachronistic in the
expanding ‘jet era’, it proved itself
to be one of the most important
and adaptable Cold War warriors
during its 30-year service life.
Notwithstanding its notable
bulk, that big radial bestowed
great performance and surprising
manoeuvrability. Heinemann
designed in robustness and the ability
to take an exceptional payload:
8,000lb (3,629kg) on seven under-
wing hard points. Production ran
from 1945 to 1957, and 3,180 were
built.
The ‘Spad’ – derived from its AD
designation – became a
workhorse of the
US Navy,

serving in
Korea and into the early
phases of the Vietnam War. It also
crossed a divide achieved by only a few
types, joining the USAF for extensive
combat flying in South East Asia from


  1. (For notes on AD designations
    and its nicknames, see page 64.)


GUPPY
Based in Dallas, Texas, the
Cavanaugh Flight Museum glories in
a pair of airworthy Skyraiders. The
two provide a useful comparison, the
single-seat A-1H 139606 (N39606)
with the wide-fuselage EA-1E
135152 (N65164).
Built to give the US Navy an
airborne early warning capability
(AEW), the AD-5W was a major
redesign of the Skyraider, featuring a
widened, deepened and lengthened
fuselage with an APS-20 search radar
under the centre section. The portly
AD-5W – nicknamed Guppy – had
a crew of three, and 218 were built.
Cavanaugh’s 135152 was delivered
to the US Navy in 1955 and between
November 1956 and December
1960 served AEW squadron VAW-
12 ‘Bats’ and from May 1961 to
November 1962 with
VAW-11.
In 1962
the

SPADS


PAIR OF


Luigino Caliaro profiles the Cavanaugh Flight Museum’s Skyraiders and explains how the big
attack bomber became a fighter

Left
The Cavanaugh Flight
Museum’s Skyraiders.
EA-1E 135152 (far left) with
single-seat A-1H 139606.
Free download pdf