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The Vought OS2U Kingfisher is an American catapult-launched observation floatplane. It was a compact mid-wing monoplane, with a large central float and small stabilizing floats. Performance was modest because of its low-powered engine. The OS2U could also operate on fixed, wheeled, taildragger landing gear.

The OS2U was the main shipboard observation seaplane used by the United States Navy during World War II, and 1,519 of the aircraft were built.Template:Citation needed It served on battleships and cruisers of the U.S. Navy, with the United States Marine Corps in Marine Scouting Squadron Three (VMS-3), with the United States Coast Guard at coastal air stations; at sea with the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy; with the Soviet Navy; and with the Royal Australian Air Force.

The Naval Aircraft Factory OS2N was the designation of the OS2U-3 aircraft built by the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The OS2U first flew on 1 March 1938.Template:Citation needed

Design and developmentEdit

In the late 1930s, Vought engineer Rex Beisel was tasked with designing an observation monoplane aircraft for the U.S. Navy suitable for many tasks, including directing battleship fire. In replacing the standard biplane observation aircraft with a more modern monoplane design, Beisel incorporated innovations making it the first production type to be assembled with spot welding, a process Vought and the Naval Aircraft Factory jointly developed to create a smooth fuselage that resisted buckling and generated less drag. Beisel also introduced high-lift devices and spoilers. In a unique arrangement, deflector plate flaps and drooping ailerons were located on the trailing edge of the wing to increase the camber of the wing and thus create additional lift.<ref name="Noles"/> Beisel's first prototype flew in 1938, powered by an air-cooled, Template:Cvt Pratt & Whitney R-985-4 Wasp Junior radial engine.<ref name="Noles">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

For combat missions, the pilot had a Template:Cvt Browning M1919 machine gun, the receiver mounted low in the right front cockpit, firing between the engine cylinder heads, while the radio operator/gunner manned another Template:Cvt machine gun (or a pair) on a flexible Scarff ring mount. The aircraft could also carry two Template:Cvt bombs or two Template:Cvt depth charges.<ref name="Noles"/><ref name="CGAH">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Additionally, the "Kingfisher", as it was designated, served as a trainer in both its floatplane and landplane configurations.<ref>Hickman 2010, p. 59.</ref>

Operational historyEdit

File:Aviation cadet on OS2U at NAS Corpus Christi 1942.jpg
Aviation cadet in OS2U Kingfisher at the Naval Air Base, Corpus Christi, Texas
File:Vought OS2U Kingfisher with rescued airmen off Truk on 1 May 1944 (80-G-227991).jpg
Downed American airmen near Truk await rescue from USS Tang on the wings of an OS2U Kingfisher, 1 May 1944

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The first 54 Kingfishers were delivered to the U.S. Navy beginning in August 1940, and 6 had been assigned to the Pearl Harbor–based Battle Force before the end of the same year. Many of the following 158 OS2U-2s were attached to flight training at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, but 53 were assigned to equip the newly established Inshore Patrol Squadrons, based at Naval Air Station Jacksonville, Florida. In 1942, nine more Inshore Patrol Squadrons were established, all exclusively equipped with OS2N-1s built by the Naval Aircraft Factory.<ref>Bowers 1990, p. 447.</ref>

The Kingfisher was widely used as a shipboard, catapult-launched scout plane on U.S. Navy battleships, heavy cruisers, and light cruisers during World War II and played a major role in support of shore bombardments and air-sea rescue. Two examples showing the plane's rescue capabilities include the recovery of World War I ace Eddie Rickenbacker and his crew from the Pacific in November 1942<ref>Doll and Jackson 1975, pp. 122–123</ref> and Lieutenant John A. Burns' unique use of the aircraft on 30 April 1944 to taxi airmen rescued from Truk Lagoon to the submarine Template:USS, which was serving rescue duty near the atoll. In all, Burns rescued ten survivors on two trips<ref>Doll and Jackson 1975, pp.123, 127.</ref> and was awarded the Navy Cross for his efforts.

The United States Coast Guard received 76 OS2U-3 Kingfishers starting in 1942 and employed them in anti-submarine warfare, reconnaissance, and search and rescue roles. No Coast Guard Kingfisher is credited with sinking any enemy submarines; however, they were successful in rescuing sailors from ships sunk by enemy torpedoes. The Coast Guard operated Kingfishers until October 1944.<ref name="CGAH"/>

Australia received 18 Kingfishers from a batch of aircraft ordered by the Dutch East Indies that was diverted to Australia in 1942. They were initially used as training aircraft for pilots destined for flying boats, but in 1943 they were used to equip No. 107 Squadron RAAF, which carried out convoy escort duties until disbanded in October 1945.<ref name="Vincent p54-9">Vincent 1998, pp. 54–59.</ref> One Kingfisher was used in support of the Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition in 1947–48.<ref name="Vincent p61-2">Vincent 1998, pp. 61–62.</ref>

Throughout its U.S. Navy service, the OS2U and even its predecessor, the Curtiss SOC Seagull, served much longer than planned, as the planned successor, the Curtiss SO3C Seamew, suffered from an insufficiently powerful engine which was a complete failure.<ref>Bowers 1990, p. 164.</ref> The OS2U was only slowly replaced in the latter stages of World War II with the introduction of the Curtiss SC Seahawk, the first examples reaching the U.S. Navy in October 1944.<ref>Bowers 1990, p. 169.</ref>

VariantsEdit

XOS2U-1
Prototype Vought Model VS.310 powered by a Template:Cvt Pratt & Whitney R-985-4 engine, one built.
OS2U-1
Initial production variant as the prototype but powered by a Template:Cvt Pratt & Whitney R-985-48, 54 built.
OS2U-2
Production variant with minor equipment changes and powered by a Template:Cvt Pratt & Whitney R-985-50, 158 built.
OS2U-3
Based on the OS2U-2 with self-sealing fuel tanks, armour protection, two Template:Cvt guns (dorsal and nose mounted), and able to carry Template:Cvt of depth charges or Template:Cvt bombs, powered by a Template:Cvt Pratt & Whitney R-985-AN2 engine, 1006 built.
OS2U-4
Two aircraft converted with narrow-chord and high-aspect ratio wings, also fitted with full-span flaps. Not developed.
OS2N-1
Naval Aircraft Factory built OS2U-3 with a Template:Cvt Pratt & Whitney R-985-AN-2 or -AN-8 engine, 300 built.
Kingfisher I
British designation for the OS2U-3, 100 delivered to the Royal Navy.

OperatorsEdit

File:OS2U 107 Sqn RAAF in flight.jpg
An OS2U of 107 Sqn RAAF.
File:OS2U is hoisted aboard USS Missouri (BB-53) in 1944.jpg
US Navy OS2U hoisted aboard the USS Missouri (BB-53), 1944
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Template:CHI
15 aircraft, operated 1942–1957.
Template:CUB
Operated four aircraft between 1942 and 1959.
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(Three aircraft)
Template:MEX
Six aircraft, 201 Squadron.
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24 aircraft, not delivered in time for hostilities.
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2 aircraft on the ship USS Milwaukee (Murmansk)
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Received 100 aircraft.
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Received six OS2U-3s in 1942 to 1959 under Lend Lease.<ref>Steinemann Air International February 1992, p. 73.</ref>

Aircraft on displayEdit

File:La Havane-Musée de la Révolution-Avion.jpg
Cuban Vought-Sikorsky Kingfisher.

At least eight Kingfishers survive in collections of historic aircraft around the world.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AustraliaEdit

OS2U-3
  • 5985 – Whale World, Albany, Western Australia. It is waiting to be restored. Originally built for the Netherlands Navy in the Dutch East Indies, it was transferred to the RAAF in 1942, serving with Seaplane Training Flight (later 3 OTU) and 107 Sqn before being sold as war surplus in 1945.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Now with Pioneer Aero Ardmore New Zealand for restoration, see below.

ChileEdit

OS2U-3

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CubaEdit

OS2U-3
  • 09650 (marked #50) – Museum of the Revolution (Museo de la Revolución), Havana, Cuba. It is fitted with fixed landing gear rather than a float.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

New ZealandEdit

OS2U-3
  • 5985 – Pioneer Aero, Auckland, New Zealand. Currently undergoing restoration. Originally built for Netherlands Navy in Dutch East Indies, it was transferred to the RAAF in 1942, serving with Seaplane Training Flight (later 3 OTU) and 107 Sqn before being sold as war surplus in 1945.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • 5982- Pioneer Aero, Auckland, New Zealand. Currently in Storage for future restoration.

United StatesEdit

On display
OS2U-3
  • 1368 (marked #60, painted as 0951) – Obtained from Mexico, the aircraft was previously displayed aboard the battleship Template:USS and is now displayed inside the aircraft pavilion adjacent to the battleship in Mobile, Alabama. The building and the aircraft sustained some damage from Hurricane Katrina in 2005.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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File:USMC-101112-M-4752B-025.jpg
Kingfisher donated by Lynn Garrison to North Carolina Battleship Commission
  • 5926 – National Naval Aviation Museum at NAS Pensacola, Florida. It was one of six OS2U-3 Kingfishers that were transferred by Lend-Lease to the National Navy of Uruguay during World War II. This aircraft operated as a seaplane until 1958 and was obtained in 1971.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

File:Lynn Garrison salvaged Vought Kingfisher from Calvert Island, British Columbia, February, 1965.jpg
Lynn Garrison salvaged Vought Kingfisher from Calvert Island, British Columbia, February, 1965

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> and sent to the battleship in 1971. The 2018 restoration of the Kingfisher was managed by a Wilmington resident and the Carolina Chapter of the Flight Deck Veterans Group.Template:Citation needed

In storage
OS2U-3

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Specifications (OS2U-3)Edit

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See alsoEdit

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NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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