| First flown in May 1933, the Vought
XF3U-1 prototype was designed
and built to meet a US Navy requirement
for a two-seat fighter biplane, and
was powered by a 522kW
Pratt & Whitney R-1535-80 engine.
However, after completion of testing,
the company was requested to modify
this conventional aircraft into a scoutbomber
under the designation XSBU-1,
which differed from the XF3U-1 by having
strengthened wings of increased
area, greater internal fuel capacity and
provision to carry a 227kg
bomb beneath the fuselage. Following
further tests from June 1934, an order
was placed for 84 production SBU-1 aircraft, and deliveries began on 20
November 1935. Generally similar to
the prototype, these were followed by
the SBU-2 (40 built) which differed by
introducing the 559kW
R-1535-98 engine. The XSBU-1 prototype
was converted for use as an
engine testbed, and under the company
designation V-142A a small number
were built for export to Argentina.
The last biplane to be designed and
built by Vought for the US Navy, the
type was still in service with the US
Navy Reserve in 1941.
MODEL | SBU-1 |
DIMENSIONS |
Wingspan | 10.13 m | 33 ft 3 in |
PERFORMANCE |
Max. speed | 330 km/h | 205 mph |
ARMAMENT | 2 x 7.62mm machine-guns, 227kg of bombs |
Leo Rankin, e-mail, 14.09.2010 12:35 Was flown by VS-3 from the USS Saratoga in 1939 A scouting squadron also performed dive Bombing later replaced by SBC-3 Curtiss Dive Bomber with split flaps only problem the split dive flaps had to be cranked open and closed by a hand crank and it took longer for you to get away from ground fire. ! reply |
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