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Nigel G Wilcox
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Aircraft of  - WWII
Maximum speed: 442.60 km/h (275.02 mph), Maiden flight: 07 Aug 1941, Length: 40.94 ft, Wingspan: 54.17 ft, Passengers: 3, Type: Torpedo bomber
Grumman TBF Avenger
The Grumman TBF Avenger is an American torpedo bomber developed initially for the United States Navy and Marine Corps, and eventually used by several air and naval aviation services around the world.
Role: Torpedo bomber
National origin: United States
Manufacturer: Grumman
                     General Motors
First flight: 7 August 1941
Introduction: 1942
Retired: 1960s
Status: Retired
Primary users: United States Navy
                       Royal Navy
                       Royal Canadian Navy
                       Royal New Zealand Air Force
Number built: 9,839
General characteristics (TBF Avenger)
Crew: 3
Length: 40 ft 11.5 in (12.48 m)
Wingspan: 54 ft 2 in (16.51 m)
Height: 15 ft 5 in (4.70 m)
Wing area: 490.02 ft² (45.52 m²)
Empty weight: 10,545 lb (4,783 kg)
Loaded weight: 17,893 lb (8,115 kg)
Powerplant: 1 × Wright R-2600-20 Twin Cyclone radial engine, 1,900 hp (1,420 kW)

Performance

Maximum speed: 275 mph (442 km/h)
Range: 1,000 mi (1,610 km)
Service ceiling: 30,100 ft (9,170 m)
Rate of climb: 2,060 ft/min (10.5 m/s)
Wing loading: 36.5 lbf/ft² (178 kg/m²)
Power/mass: 0.11 hp/lb (0.17 kW/kg)

Armament
Guns:
1 × 0.30 in (7.62 mm) nose-mounted M1919 Browning machine gun (on early models) or 2 × 0.50 in (12.7 mm) wing-mounted M2 Browning machine guns
1 × 0.50 in (12.7 mm) dorsal-mounted M2 Browning machine gun
1 × 0.30 in (7.62 mm) ventral-mounted M1919 Browning machine gun
Rockets:
up to eight 3.5-Inch Forward Firing Aircraft Rockets, 5-Inch Forward Firing Aircraft Rockets or High Velocity Aerial Rockets
Bombs:
Up to 2,000 lb (907 kg) of bombs or
1 × 2,000 lb (907 kg) Mark 13 torpedo
Operators
Canadian Avenger AS3M with long tubular magnetic anomaly detector (MAD) boom along the portside lower rear fuselage.
A No. 30 Squadron RNZAF TBF-1C on Espiritu Santo, 1944.
Japan Maritime Self-Defense ForceTBM-3W
Brazil  - Brazilian Navy operated three Avengers in the 1950s for deck crew training aboard the carrier Minas Gerais (A-11).
Canada - Royal Canadian Navy operated Avengers until replaced by the CS2F Tracker in 1960.
Cuba - Cuban Navy received 7 TBM-3S2 in 1956; however, they were out of service by 1960.
France - Aéronavale operated Avengers in the 1950s.
Japan - Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force operated Hunter-Killer Avengers groups in the 1950s and 1960s.
Netherlands - Royal Netherlands Navy - the Dutch Naval Aviation Service operated Avengers during the 1950s.
New Zealand - Royal New Zealand Air Force
No. 30 Squadron RNZAF
No. 31 Squadron RNZAF
No. 41 Squadron RNZAF
No. 42 Squadron RNZAF
Central Fighter Establishment
United Kingdom - Royal Navy - Fleet Air Arm
820 Naval Air Squadron
828 Naval Air Squadron
832 Naval Air Squadron
845 Naval Air Squadron
846 Naval Air Squadron
848 Naval Air Squadron
849 Naval Air Squadron
850 Naval Air Squadron
851 Naval Air Squadron
852 Naval Air Squadron
853 Naval Air Squadron
854 Naval Air Squadron
855 Naval Air Squadron
856 Naval Air Squadron
857 Naval Air Squadron
United States - United States Navy
United States Marine Corps
Uruguay - Uruguayan Navy operated Avengers in the 1950s.
The TBF Avenger was born from a 1939 US Navy requirement intending to replace the already outclassed Douglas TBD Devastator series of carrierborne torpedo dive bomber aircraft. Despite its rather advanced features when it was introduced in 1937 - these including a fully-enclosed cockpit, retractable undercarriage and stressed metal skin construction - global technology quickly superseded the Douglas design to the point that it was made obsolete at the time of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December of 1941. Thrust into war, the United States military feverishly attempted to stock its inventory with more adaptable and modern types, ultimately leaving the Devastator out of its plans. The aircraft was withdrawn from frontline duties as soon as 1942 and was officially retired from the USN inventory in 1944, with only 130 having been procured since inception.

Looking to take advantage of the latest in available engines from top manufacturers such as Pratt & Whitney and Wright, the USN fleshed out their latest requirement and the need was responded to by aircraft concerns Vought and Grumman. Vought delivered their XTBU-1 prototype which the US Navy purchased in two evaluation examples. Similarly, two of the XTBF-1 Grumman prototype were ordered and this became the company's first foray into the world of carrier-based torpedo bombers. The Grumman offering consisted of a conventional monoplane design featuring multiple crew and all-metal construction, designed in a mere five weeks under the direction of Grumman engineer Bob Hall. R. Koch contributed the addition of an internal weapons bay to aid in aerodynamics while keeping a ventral machine gun position in place for defense. Oscar Olsen, having worked for General Electric prior, developed an electrically-powered dorsal turret with "Amplidyne" control where the turret's motor could react to the violent changes in loads during flight maneuvers resulting in excellent reaction time for the gunner. The ungainly design earned the aircraft the in-house nicknames of "Turkey" and "Pregnant Beast" for obvious reasons. Primary armament included a fixed, forward-firing 7.62mm gun along the right side of the nose (to be operated by the pilot), a 7.62mm machine gun in a rear-facing ventral position (for the bombardier) and a 12.7mm heavy machine gun in the dorsal powered turret for a dedicated machine gunner.

The US Navy selected the Grumman design as the winner of the competition and placed an order for 286 aircraft on April 8th, 1940 - this before the prototype had even flown. It was not until August 1st, 1941 that the XTBF-1 achieved first flight with chief engineer Bob Hall at the controls and the aircraft powered by a single Wright R-2600-8 14-cylinder Cyclone radial piston engine of 1,700 horsepower. So promising was the design and so dire a need for viable military aircraft for the USN that the initial procurement order was eventually edited to become "open-ended" in nature.

The Grumman program hit a slight speed bump on November 28th, 1941 when one of the XTBF-1 prototypes was lost to accident with the crew - Bob Hall and Gordon Israel - parachuting to safety. The cause was determined to be electrical in nature with a fire spawning from the bomb bay area. Nevertheless, the USN interest still drove the program further towards completion and the XTBF-1 prototype was used to finalize the design. During the opening ceremony of Grumman's new production facility intended to manufacture the new XTBF-1, word came down that the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor. From that moment on, the TBF would become known as the "Avenger".

The first production-quality TBF-1 Avenger was flown on January 3rd, 1942 to the delight of the eagerly waiting USN. Early operational service found the aircraft to be truly satisfactory, requiring little in the way of changes to the finalized design - a rarity in aircraft engineering. By July of 1942, Grumman factories had delivered over 100 more aircraft to the USN. Some were completed with the then-national USN aircraft insignias consisting of a white, five-pointed star within a blue circle. In June of 1943, this gave way a similar insignia though now modified with white stripes surrounded by a red border.

USN group VT-8 ("Torpedo Eight") became the first recipient of the Avenger as first deliveries commenced in January of 1942. As their Pacific steamer - the carrier USS Hornet - had already departed, these freshly-minted TBF-1 Avengers were forced to fly from the east coast of the United States and over the vast expanse of the Pacific to Midway Island. 1942 also would see the introduction of USN radar that would play a profound role in the Avenger lineage - as well as that of US naval warships.

As production continued, thought was eventually given to increase the forward-facing armament of the aircraft from the single 7.62mm machine gun to the side of the nose to 2 x 12.7mm heavy machine guns in the wings (one per wing) with 1,200 rounds of ammunition (2 x 600). Revised Avengers fitting this armament were modified along the assembly lines (as TBF-1C) already outputting Avenger TBF-1s so as the pace for USN needs needed to be kept up. The TBF-1 production model took on the "TBF-1B" designation for aircraft intended as Lend-Lease with the British Fleet Air Arm. These variants were designated in the British inventory initially as "Tarpon Mk I" and differed only by the inclusion of British-required equipment. The British eventually dropped the Tarpon name, electing for the simpler "Avenger Mk I" instead.

Design of the Grumman TBF Avenger was conventional and followed the lessons learned with previous Grumman aircraft attempts including the wide-area wings. The fuselage was stout, oval in general shape and constructed with a semi-monocoque approach which was covered over in metal skin. The forward compartment housed the powerful radial piston engine rotating a three-bladed propeller assembly. The cockpit was held high atop the deep fuselage with typical "greenhouse" framing for the crew compartment running over much of the fuselage length. The cockpit housed positions for the three crew (seated inline) to include the pilot, the bombardier and the rear gunner. The pilot took the forward-most position with the bombardier in the middle (with special access to the lower section of the fuselage) and the tail gunner at the rear. Vision out of the forward seat was excellent as it was high up on in the design and situated ahead of the wing leading edges. The bombardier was given a folding seat in the lower fuselage from which he could manage the bombing functions of the torpedo to the front section or manage a defensive machine gun to the rear, this just under the tail section. The tail gunner was seated under a rounded framed enclosure mounting a single defensive machine gun (as dive bombers were traditionally bombers first and fighters a distant second, the rear quadrant of the aircraft was its most vulnerable position, particularly during an attack run and, thusly, the machine guns were needed for point defense against engaging enemy aircraft). The lower-rear portion of the fuselage exhibited various vision ports for observation by the bombardier and housed various mission-related equipment and survival gear (the latter to include a lifeboat and flares should the aircraft be downed over water). Entry to the fuselage was via a starboard side hinged door. The empennage was rather distinct in appearance - extending as a boom straight to the rear with the tail section added to its top. The tail was of conventional layout with a single vertical tail fin and a pair of horizontal tailplanes. All of these tail surfaces were clipped at their edges. The main wing assemblies were low-to-mid mounted appendages and straight, showcasing some dihedral in their design outboard of the landing gear wells. The wings were power-folding and could set flat up against the sides of the fuselage for improved stowage aboard the space-strapped carriers of the day. The undercarriage consisted of two main landing gear legs (retracting under each wing away from the fuselage centerline) and a retractable tail wheel. The undercarriage was reinforced enough that they could double as an airbrakes in the dive bombing role. An electrically-powered arrestor hook was lowered when landing on carrier, this used to latch only cables strewn across the flight deck and shorten an aircraft's landing distance. Later production versions introduced an external hook.

Standard armament of nearly all production Avengers included 2 x 12.7mm M2 Browning heavy machine guns in the wings and 1 x 12.7mm M2 Browning machine gun in the powered dorsal turret as well as 1 x 7.62mm M1919 Browning machine gun in a trainable ventral fuselage position. Despite the large-scale use of hydraulics throughout the design of the Avenger, the turret was electrically-powered and developed by Grumman engineers in-house. The forward-facing machine guns were offensive in nature and could be used to strafe targets of opportunity as needed while the rear machine guns were utilized to defend the critical rear facings of the aircraft. Expert Avenger pilots could push their mounts to the point that she could be handled as an adequate fighter platform - much to the surprise of trailing enemy fighter pilots.

However, the true heart and soul of Avenger armament was its ordnance delivery which consisted of the internal bomb bay and provisions for external stores. One Mk XIII-2 torpedo could be housed in the bomb bay to which the aircraft would approach a surface target at low or medium altitudes, open the hydraulically-powered bay doors and drop the torpedo into the water. The torpedo would then stream just under the waterline towards its intended target, presumably detonating by timed fuse or on contact. For medium-altitude level bombing, the bombardier handled the torpedo responsibility though, for low-level runs, the pilot utilized an illuminated sight in the cockpit and took over the bombardier's role. In lieu of a torpedo, the Avenger could stock up to 2,000lb (4 x 500lb or 12 x 100lb) of conventional drop bombs for use against surface targets. Support for 5" air-launched, unguided, high-explosive rockets were added later and this allowed Avenger crews the capability to strike at surface targets with devastating results to the enemy (both physically and psychologically). Operational ranges could be extended by the use of 3 x 335 US gallon external fuel drop tanks.

Avengers were primarily completed with the Wright R-2600 Cyclone 14-cylinder radial piston engine series outputting 1,700 to 1,900 horsepower with many forms including a supercharger. Top speed was in the vicinity of 275 miles per hour with an operational range out to 1,000 miles. The aircraft could hit service ceilings of 30,000 feet with a 2,000 feet per minute rate-of-climb.

Initial combat actions for the TBF Avenger were recorded during the famous "Battle of Midway" occurring on June 4th, 1942. Of the six aircraft launched into battle with VT-8, only one returned home and this with a wounded bombardier, dead tail gunner and little flight support for the airframe - a rather troubling start for the aircraft line. Nevertheless, production ramped to help swell the required USN numbers. Avengers delivered torpedoes and (primarily) drop ordnance against both naval and surface targets across the Pacific and over the Japanese mainland throughout the course of the war. Additionally, the deep belly of the Avenger could serve as a basic cargo transport and many were used to airdrop supplies to cut-off Marine and Army units in the Pacific Campaign. Water, food and ammunition was dropped via Avengers to the 1st Marine Regiment at Shuri Castle on Okinawa. Avengers were also used to attack the Japanese mainland directly once air superiority was firmly in the hands of the Allies in the theater.

Overall, total production of the TBF Avenger series ranged between 9,836 and 9,839 aircraft (sources vary on the exact count). Up to 921 Avengers were delivered to the Royal Navy via Lend-Lease and, in all, 33 British Navy squadrons equipped the type and operated them from various naval warships and land bases across the Empire. New Zealand received 63 Avengers. Post-war operators included Brazil, France, Japan, Netherlands and Uruguay.

Variants abounded along the production line and went beyond the XTBF-1 prototypes. The TBF-1 was the initial production model based on the second XTBF-1 prototype and 1,526 examples were produced. The TBF-1C added 12.7mm heavy machine guns to the wings and improved operational ranges with a larger internal fuel tank. 765 of the model were produced. The TBF-1B became the British Tarpon Mk I/Avenger Mk I Lend-Lease mounts. The TBF-1D added the RT-5/APS-4 search radar in a pod under their starboard side wings. Similarly, the TBF-1D were based on the C-models with the RT-5/APS-4 search radar added. The TBF-1E featured additional equipment while the TBF-1J was designed for poor weather. The TBF-1L mounted a powerful searchlight in its bomb bay while TBF-P and TBF-CP were dedicated photo-reconnaissance platforms converted from existing TBF-1 and TBF-1C mounts respectively. The XTFB-2 was a prototype fitting the Wright XR-2600-10 series radial piston engine of 1,900 horsepower. Similarly, the XTBF-3 was fitted with a Wright R-2600-20 series radial piston engine of 1,900 horsepower. The XTBF-3 would have become the canceled TBF-3 production model. Total TBF-1 production was 2,290.

As the US Navy required more and more viable military weapons in the Pacific, General Motors was tabbed to help with production of the Grumman aircraft. Five of their factories along the East coast sat under-worked and were, therefore, formed into a collective powerhouse known as "Eastern Aircraft Division" for the new US government task of outputting TBF Avengers (as well as F4F Wildcats as the "FM Wildcat") in number. These facilities essentially manufactured Avenger platforms under the "TBM" designation.

The initial GM version was the base TBF-1 as the TBM-1 of which 550 were produced. This was followed by the TBM-1C of which 2,336 were produced. Added radar produced the TBM-1D. The TBM-E was completed with additional electrical equipment while the TBM-1J was the all-weather version. The TBM-1L was the GM version housing the bomb bay search light while the TBM-1P and TBM-1CP were the photo-reconnaissance variants. The TBM-2 featured the Wright XR-2600-10 series engine of 1,900 horsepower while the XTBM-3 housed the Wright 2600-20 series engine of 1,900 horsepower. Four of the latter were produced. The TBM-3 sported double cooling intakes, a more powerful engine and external arrestor hook. 4,011 of the type were completed. The TBM-3D saw radar fitted under the starboard side wing. The TBM-3E dropped the ventral machine gun and added search radar in a reinforced airframe. 646 of the type were delivered. The TBM-3H was fitted with specialized surface search radar while the TBM-3J was finished for all-weather operation. The TBM-3L fitted a searchlight in the bomb bay. The TBM-3M was modified to fire missiles while the TBM-3N was modified as a night attack platform. The TBM-3P was a photo-reconnaissance variant. An electric countermeasures version existed under the TBM-3Q designation and identified by its large radome along the belly. A passenger transport was developed as the TBM-3R. An anti-submarine warfare mount became the TBM-3S while the TBM-3U was a multi-role platform and target tow vehicle. The TBM-3W was fitted with APS-20 radar in a belly radome for anti-submarine work. The XTBM-4 was a prototype form based on the TBM-3E of which three were produced to prove a revised wing folding concept and strengthened structure. The TBM-4 designation would have covered XTBM-4 prototypes on production lines but these were canceled.

British Avengers included the initial TBF-1s as the Avenger Mk I of which 400 were delivered. This was followed by the Avenger Mk II (TBM-1/TBM-1C) of which 334 were received. The Avenger Mk III was based on the TBM-3 and appeared in 222 examples. The Avenger Mk IV was born from the TBM-3S and the 70 on order were cancelled. 98 Avenger AS3s were used as anti-submarine warfare platforms. The Avenger AS3M were outfitted with a magnetic anomaly detector in a boom protruding from the fuselage at the rear. 100 Avenger AS4 models based on the TBM-3S were later delivered after the war.

In the latter part of the war - and in the years beyond - the TBF Avenger was evolved into a myriad of other useful roles including that of dedicated reconnaissance platform, target towing, airborne early warning (AEW), anti-submarine warfare (ASW) and light carrier-based transport. The TBM-3W "Project Cadillac" was used in 1946 to install and test the APS-20 surveillance radar. Most Avengers were out of military circulation by the early part of the 1960s.

Destined never to win beauty contests, the Grumman TBF Avenger series of aircraft would go down as one of the most potent torpedo bombers of World War 2. Its design was characterized by its portly fuselage, three-man crew and multi-faceted capabilities than endeared her to many-an-airmen throughout the war. The success of the Avenger stemmed beyond its use by the United States Navy for the aircraft saw extensive service with British and Commonwealth forces as well as becoming a staple of aircraft inventories around the world in the Cold War years. Amazingly, Avengers managed a frontline existence well into the 1950s despite the arrival of the jet age and newer, more modern mounts becoming available - such were the inherent strengths of the mighty Pearl Harbor "Avenger".

Retained by the US Navy after the war, the Avenger was adapted to several uses including electronic countermeasures, carrier onboard delivery, ship-to-shore communications, anti-submarine warfare, and airborne radar platform. In many cases, it remained in these roles into the 1950s when purpose-built aircraft began to arrive. Another key postwar user of the aircraft was the Royal Canadian Navy which used Avengers in various roles until 1960. A docile, easy to fly aircraft, Avengers also found widespread use in the civilian sector.

While some were used in crop dusting roles, many Avengers found a second life as water bombers. Flown by both Canadian and American agencies, the aircraft was adapted for use in fighting forest fires. A few remain in use in this role.
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