fbpx
Wikipedia

Brewster F2A Buffalo

The Brewster F2A Buffalo[1] is an American fighter aircraft which saw service early in World War II. Designed and built by the Brewster Aeronautical Corporation, it was one of the first U.S. monoplanes with an arrestor hook and other modifications for aircraft carriers. The Buffalo won a competition against the Grumman F4F Wildcat in 1939 to become the U.S. Navy's first monoplane fighter aircraft. Although superior to the Grumman F3F biplane it replaced, and the early F4Fs,[2] the Buffalo was largely obsolete when the United States entered the war, being unstable and overweight, especially when compared to the Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Zero.[3]

F2A Buffalo
Role Fighter aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Brewster Aeronautical Corporation
First flight 2 December 1937
Introduction April 1939
Retired 1948 (Finland)
Primary users United States Navy
Royal Air Force
Royal Netherlands East Indies Army Air Force
Finnish Air Force
Produced 1938–1941
Number built 509
Developed into VL Humu

Several nations, including Finland, Belgium, Britain and the Netherlands, ordered the Buffalo. The Finns were the most successful with their Buffalos, flying them in combat against early Soviet fighters with excellent results.[4] During the Continuation War of 1941–1944, the B-239s (de-navalized F2A-1s) operated by the Finnish Air Force proved capable of engaging and destroying most types of Soviet fighter aircraft operating against Finland at that time, and claimed in the first phase of that conflict 32 Soviet aircraft shot down for every B-239 lost,[5] producing 36 Buffalo "aces".[6]

In December 1941, Buffalos operated by both British Commonwealth (B-339E) and Dutch (B-339C/D) air forces in South East Asia suffered severe losses in combat against the Japanese Navy's A6M Zero and the Japanese Army's Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar". The British attempted to lighten their Buffalos by removing ammunition and fuel and installing lighter guns to improve performance, but it made little difference.[7] After the first few engagements, the Dutch halved the fuel and ammunition load in the wings, which allowed their Buffalos (and their Hurricanes) to stay with the Oscars in turns.[8]

The Buffalo was built in three variants for the U.S. Navy: the F2A-1, F2A-2 and F2A-3. (In foreign service, with lower horsepower engines, these types were designated B-239, B-339, and B-339-23 respectively.) The F2A-3 variant saw action with United States Marine Corps (USMC) squadrons at the Battle of Midway. Shown by the experience of Midway to be no match for the Zero,[2] the F2A-3 was derided by USMC pilots as a "flying coffin".[9] Indeed, the F2A-3s performance was substantially inferior[10] to the F2A-2 variant used by the Navy before the outbreak of the war despite detail improvements.

Design and development edit

United States Navy edit

In 1935, the U.S. Navy issued a requirement for a carrier-based fighter intended to replace the Grumman F3F biplane. The Brewster XF2A-1 monoplane, designed by a team led by Dayton T. Brown, was one of two aircraft designs that were initially considered.[11] The XF4F-1 with a double-row radial engine was a "classic" biplane. The U.S. Navy competition was re-opened to allow another competitor, the XFNF-1, a navalized Seversky P-35 eliminated early on when the prototype could not reach more than 267 mph (430 km/h).[12] The XF2A-1 first flew on 2 December 1937 and early test results showed it was far in advance of the Grumman biplane entry. While the XF4F-1 did not enter production, it later re-emerged as a monoplane, the Wildcat.

The Buffalo was manufactured at the Brewster Building in Long Island City, New York.

 
Brewster XF2A-1 prototype

The new Brewster fighter had a modern look with a stubby fuselage, mid-set monoplane wings and a host of advanced features. It was all-metal, with flush-riveted, stressed aluminum construction, although control surfaces were still fabric-covered. The XF2A-1 also featured split flaps, a hydraulically operated retractable main undercarriage (and partially retractable tailwheel), and a streamlined framed canopy. However (as was still common at this time), the aircraft lacked self-sealing fuel tanks and pilot armor. Fuel capacity was only 160 US gal (610 L), stored in the fuselage. Powered by a 950 hp (710 kW) single-row Wright R-1820-22 Cyclone radial engine, it had a good initial climb rate of 2,750 ft/min (840 m/min) and a top speed of 277.5 mph (446.6 km/h). The aircraft was then tested in 1938 in the Langley Research Center full-scale wind tunnel, where it was determined that certain factors were contributing to parasitic drag. Based on the tests, improvements were made to the cowling streamlining and carburetor and oil cooler intakes, and the Buffalo's speed rose to 304 mph (489 km/h) at 16,000 ft (4,900 m) without any increase in power.[13][14][15] Other manufacturers took notice of this 10% increase in speed and efficiency, and wind tunnel tests became standard procedure in the US.[16] With only a single-stage supercharger, high-altitude performance fell off rapidly.[10] Fuselage armament was one fixed .50 in (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine gun with 200 rounds and one fixed .30 in (7.62 mm) AN Browning machine gun with 600 rounds, both in the nose.[N 1] The Navy awarded Brewster Aeronautical Corporation a production contract for 54 aircraft, the F2A-1s.

Service testing of the XF2A-1 prototype began in January 1938 and in June, production started on the F2A-1. They were powered by 940 hp (700 kW) Wright R-1820-34 engines and had larger fins. The added weight of two additional .50 in (12.7 mm) Browning wing guns and other equipment specified by the Navy for combat operations reduced the initial rate of climb to 2,600 ft/min (790 m/min). Plagued by production difficulties, Brewster delivered only 11 F2A-1 aircraft to the Navy; the remainder of the order was later diverted to the Finnish Air Force in modified form under the export designation Model 239.

 
LT John S. Thach tipped this F2A-1 onto its nose on Saratoga, March 1940
 
F2A-3s serving as U.S. Navy training aircraft at NAS Miami, 1942–1943

A later variant, the F2A-2, of which 43 were ordered by the U.S. Navy, included a more powerful R-1820-40 engine, a better propeller, and integral flotation gear, while still lacking pilot armor and self-sealing tanks. The increase in engine power was welcomed, but to some extent offset by the increased loaded weight (5,942 lb (2,695 kg)) of the aircraft; while top speed was increased to a respectable 323 mph (520 km/h) at 16,500 ft (5,000 m), initial climb rates dropped to 2,500 ft/min (760 m/min). Both the F2A-1 and the F2A-2 variants of the Brewster were liked by early Navy and Marine pilots, including Pappy Boyington, who praised the good turning and maneuvering abilities of the aircraft:[17] "the early models, before they weighed it all down with armor plate, radios, and other [equipment] ... were pretty sweet little ships. Not real fast, but the [early F2As] ... could turn and roll in a phone booth".[18] This might reasonably have been expected with the low wing loading in earlier variants, which was comparable with the Mitsubishi A6M Zero's lb/sq ft.[19]

The F2A-3 was the last version of the Buffalo to enter service with the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. A total of 108 examples were ordered in January 1941. By this time, the Navy had become disenchanted with the Buffalo, and had become especially annoyed at Brewster Aeronautical Corporation's frequent production delays and its frequent management difficulties. This order was seen more as a way of keeping Brewster's production lines running; they would eventually build Corsair fighters for the Navy as well as Buccaneer/Bermuda dive bombers.

The F2A-3s were conceived as long range reconnaissance fighters with new wet wings with self-sealing features and larger fuselage tanks which provided increased fuel capacity and protection, but this also increased the aircraft weight by more than 500 lb (230 kg).[10] The wing and enlarged fuselage tank carried an additional 80 U.S. gal (300 L) of fuel; at 6 lb/U.S. gal (0.72 kg/L), the fuel alone weighed nearly 500 lb (230 kg). The addition of armor plating for the pilot and increased ammunition capacity further increased the aircraft's weight, resulting in a reduced top speed and rate of climb, while substantially degrading the Brewster's turning and maneuvering capability.[10] The Navy found that the added weight of the F2A-3 also aggravated the problem of landing gear failure during carrier landings. However, the −40 two-speed[20] supercharged Cyclone engine in the F2A-3 was an excellent "cruising" engine, and as such the F2A-3 had some value and saw initial service on the carriers Saratoga and Lexington.

Even in late 1940 it was apparent that the Buffalo was rapidly becoming obsolete.[N 2] It badly needed a more powerful engine and an enlarged wing (to offset the increased weight), but the limits of the airframe had been reached, making installation of a larger engine impossible. Soon after deliveries of the F2A-3 began, the Navy decided to eliminate the type altogether. However, a project was begun to replace the wing-mounted .50 M2 machine guns with two M2 20mm cannons. At least eight sets of wings were completed, and at least one F2A-3 was fitted with them (preserved photographically). By then, considered a second line aircraft, some were transferred to the U.S. Marine Corps, which deployed two F2A-3 squadrons to the Pacific, one at Palmyra Atoll, and another at Midway Island. Those which still remained on board aircraft carriers narrowly missed a combat opportunity when a relief mission was dispatched to Wake Island, but the relief force was withdrawn before completing the mission. Shortly thereafter, F2A-3s still in naval service were transferred to training squadrons for use as advanced trainers.

Operational history edit

The first unit to be equipped with the F2A-1 was Lt. Cdr. Warren Harvey's VF-3, assigned to USS Saratoga air group. On 8 December 1939, VF-3 received 10 of the 11 Buffalos delivered to the U.S. Navy.[21] The remaining 43 F2A-1s were declared surplus (to be replaced with an equal number of the improved F2A-2s) and sold to Finland.[22] Ralph Ingersoll wrote in late 1940 after visiting Britain that the Buffalo and other American aircraft "cannot compete with either the existing English or German fighters", so Britain used them "either as advanced trainers --or for fighting equally obsolete Italian planes in the Middle East. That is all they are good for". Even the Eagle Squadrons's American pilots used Hawker Hurricanes instead of the Buffalo.[23] Early in the war all modern monoplane fighter types were in high demand, however. Consequently, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and the Netherlands East Indies purchased several hundred export models.[24]

Finland edit

 
Finnish company Nokia donated sufficient funds for the FAF to purchase a B-239. In return, NOKA was inscribed on BW-355. Operated by No. 24 Squadron, it was destroyed on 24 October 1944.[25] Future ace Paavo Mellin shot down an I-16 and shared in the destruction of a MiG-3 whilst flying this aircraft.[26]

In April 1939, the Finnish government contacted the Roosevelt administration, requesting the supply of modern combat aircraft as quickly as possible. On 17 October, the Finnish Embassy in Washington, D.C., received a telegram clearing the purchase of fighter aircraft. The only strict requirements laid down by Finnish authorities were that the aircraft be already operational and able to use 87-octane fuel.[27] Part of an F2A-1 shipment – 44 aircraft originally intended for the US Navy – was diverted to Finland,[N 3] by the US State Department, after the USN agreed to instead accept a later shipment of F2A-2 variants.

On 16 December, the Finnish government signed a contract to purchase 44 aircraft: a F2A-1 variant designated Model B-239E by Brewster.[27] Unlike other fighters already in service, the F2A-1 and B-239E lacked self-sealing fuel tanks and cockpit armor. However, the B-239E was built with a more powerful engine than the F2A-1, in the form of the Wright R-1820-G5, producing 950 hp (710 kW),[28] and the capacity to carry four machine guns (rather than the two carried by the F2A-1). The B-239E was also "de-navalized" before shipment: equipment such as tailhooks and life raft containers were removed.[28] The upgraded engine and slightly reduced net weight (i.e. from the omitted armor and de-navalization) resulted in an improved power-to-weight ratio and better general performance.

In four batches the B-239E was shipped initially to Bergen, in Norway, in January and February 1940 from New York City. The crated fighters were then sent by railway to Sweden and assembled by SAAB at Trollhättan, northeast of Gothenburg.[29]

After delivery of the B-239E, the Finnish Air Force added armored backrests, metric flight instruments, the Väisälä T.h.m.40 gunsight, and four .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns. The top speed of the Finnish B-239s, as modified, was 297 mph (478 km/h) at 15,675 ft (4,778 m), and their loaded weight was 5,820 lb (2,640 kg).[11][30]

In February 1940, pilot Lieutenant Jorma "Joppe" Karhunen flight-tested the first B-239 to become operational in Finland.[11][31] Unfamiliar with the aircraft, he burned out the engine while flying very low at high speed; crashing on a snow-covered field, damaging the propeller and some belly panels.[11][31] Initially unimpressed, the Finns later witnessed a demonstration by a Brewster test pilot, who was able to stay on the tail of a Finnish Fiat G.50 Freccia [N 4] fighter from Italy; although the Fiat fighter was faster in level flight,[N 5] the Brewster could out-turn it.[32]

None of the B-239E fighters saw combat in the Winter War (1939–1940). However, five of the six delivered during the war became combat-ready before it ended.

The B-239E was never referred to as the name Buffalo in Finland; it was known simply as the Brewster, or by the nicknames Taivaan helmi ("sky pearl") or Pohjoisten taivaiden helmi ("pearl of the northern skies"). Other nicknames were Pylly-Valtteri (lit. "butt-walter"), Amerikanrauta ("American hardware" or "American car") and Lentävä kaljapullo ("flying beer-bottle").[citation needed] The total of 44 examples of the B-239E fighters used by the FAF received serial numbers BW-351 to BW-394.

 
Finnish Air Force Brewster B-239 formation during the Continuation War

Finnish pilots regarded the B-239E as being easy to fly, or in the words of ace Ilmari Juutilainen, a "gentlemen's travelling [or touring] plane".[33] The Buffalo was also popular within the FAF because of its relatively long range and good maintenance record. This was in part due to the efforts of the Finnish mechanics, who solved a problem that plagued the Wright Cyclone engine by inverting one of the piston rings in each cylinder, which had a positive effect on reliability.[citation needed] The cooler weather of Finland also helped, because the engine was prone to overheating as noted in tropical Pacific use. The Brewster Buffalo earned a reputation in Finnish Air Force service as one of its more successful fighter aircraft, along with the Fiat G.50, which scored an unprecedented kill-loss ratio of 33-1.[34]

In service from 1941 to 1945, Buffalos of Lentolaivue 24 (Fighter Squadron 24) claimed 477 Soviet Air Force warplanes destroyed, with the combat loss of just 19 Buffalos, an outstanding victory ratio of 26:1.[35]

During the Continuation War, Lentolaivue 24 (Fighter Squadron 24) was equipped with the B-239s until May 1944, when the Buffalos were transferred to Hävittäjälentolaivue 26 (Fighter Squadron 26). Most of the pilots of Lentolaivue 24 were Winter War combat veterans. This squadron claimed a total of 459 Soviet aircraft with B-239s, while losing 15 Buffalos in combat.[11]

The Brewsters had their baptism by fire in Finland on 25 June 1941, when a pair of Buffalos from 2/LLv24, operating from Selänpää airfield (ICAO:EFSE) intercepted 27 Soviet Tupolev SBs from 201st SBAP [N 6] near Heinola. Five SBs were claimed as downed. Subsequent attacks were repelled by LLv24 pilots who, by dusk, had flown 77 sorties.[36]

Many Finnish pilots racked up enormous scores by using basic tactics against Soviet aircraft. The default tactic was the four-plane "parvi" (swarm), with a pair flying lower as bait, and a higher pair to dive on enemy interceptors. The Soviet Air Force was never able to counter this tactic. The top-scoring B-239 pilot was Hans Wind, with 39 kills.[37] Lt Hans Wind, with six other Buffalos of LeLv 24, intercepted some 60 Soviet aircraft near Kronstad. Two Soviet Pe-2 bombers, one Soviet Hawker Hurricane fighter, and 12 I-16s were claimed for the loss of just one B-239 (BW-378).[38] After evaluation of claims against actual Soviet losses, aircraft BW-364 was found to have been used to achieve 42½ kills in total by all pilots operating it, possibly making it the highest-scoring fighter airframe in the history of air warfare.[citation needed] The top scoring Finnish ace, Ilmari Juutilainen, scored 34 of his 94½ kills in B-239s, including 28 in BW-364.[39]

During the Continuation War, a lack of replacements led the Finns to develop a copy of the Buffalo built from non-strategic materials such as plywood, however the Humu, as they called it, was already obsolete and only a single prototype was built. By late 1943, the lack of spares, wear-and-tear, and better Soviet fighters and training greatly reduced the effectiveness of Finnish B-239s, though LeLv 26 pilots would still claim some 35 victories against Soviet aircraft in mid-1944. The last victory by a Buffalo against Soviet aircraft was claimed over the Karelian Isthmus on 17 June 1944.[24]

From 1943, Finland's air force received Messerschmitt Bf 109Gs from Germany, and this much-superior fighter re-equipped most Finnish Air Force fighter squadrons.

After Finland signed an armistice with the Soviet Union in September, 1944, they had to drive Finland's former ally, Nazi Germany out of the country during the "Lapland War". The only clash with the Luftwaffe took place on 3 October 1944 when HLeLV 26 intercepted Junkers Ju 87s, claiming two, the last victories to be made by Brewster pilots in World War II.[40] By the end of the war in Lapland, only eight B-239s were left.

Five B-239s continued to fly until 1948, with last flights of Brewsters by the Finnish Air Force on 14 September 1948, when they were stored until scrapped in 1953.[41]

Belgium edit

Just before the start of the war, Belgium sought more modern aircraft to expand and modernize its air force. Belgium ordered 40 Brewster B-339 aircraft, a de-navalized F2A-2, fitted with the Wright R-1820-G-105 engine approved for export use. The G-105 engine had a power output of 1,000 hp (745.7 kW) (peak) on takeoff, some 200 hp (150 kW) less than the engine fitted to the U.S. Navy F2A-2. The arrestor hook and liferaft container were removed, and the aircraft was modified with a slightly longer tail.

Only one aircraft[42][43][N 7] reached France by the time Germany launched its Blitzkrieg in the West on 10 May 1940. The Buffalo was later captured intact by the Germans, and it was partially rediscovered near Darmstadt in 1945.[44]

Six more Belgian Brewsters were offloaded at the French Caribbean island of Martinique and languished on a coastal hillside, never to be flown.[45] The rest of the order went to the RAF.

British Commonwealth (Malaya) edit

 
Brewster Buffalo Mk Is being inspected by RAF personnel at RAF Sembawang, Singapore in April 1941.[46]

Facing a shortage of combat aircraft in January 1940, the British Purchasing Commission was established to acquire U.S. aircraft that would help supplement domestic production. Among the U.S. fighter aircraft that caught the Commission's attention was the Brewster. The remaining 32 B-339 aircraft ordered by the Belgians, suspended at the fall of France, were passed on to the United Kingdom.[47] Appraisal by Royal Air Force acceptance personnel criticized it on numerous points including inadequate armament and lack of pilot armor, poor high-altitude performance, engine overheating, maintenance issues, and cockpit controls, while it was praised for its handling, roomy cockpit, and visibility.[11] With a top speed of about 323 mph (520 km/h) at 21,000 ft (6,400 m), but with fuel starvation issues over 15,000 ft (4,600 m), it was considered unfit for duty in western Europe.[11] Still desperately in need of fighter aircraft in the Pacific and Asia for British and Commonwealth air forces, the UK ordered an additional 170 aircraft under the type specification B-339E.[48]

Delivery and assembly of the Buffalos in Singapore took place in the spring of 1941.[49] The first Buffalo units (Nos 67 and 243 Squadron RAF) were formed at RAF Kallang in March 1941.[50]

 
Brewster B-339E (AN196/WP-W) of No. 243 Squadron RAF. This aircraft was flown by Flying Officer Maurice Holder, who flew the first Buffalo sortie in the Malayan Campaign on 8 December 1941, strafing landing barges on the Kelantan River.[51] Damaged by ground fire, it was abandoned at RAF Kota Bharu before its fall to the Japanese.[51]

The B-339E, or Brewster Buffalo Mk I as it was designated in British service, was initially intended to be fitted with an export-approved Wright R-1820-G-105 Cyclone engine with a 1,000 hp (745.7 kW) (peak takeoff) engine.[52][N 8] The Brewster aircraft delivered to British and Commonwealth air forces were significantly altered from the B-339 type sold to the Belgium and French forces in accordance with their purchase order. The Brewster factory removed the Navy life raft container and arrestor hook, while adding many new items of equipment, including a British Mk III reflector gun sight, a gun camera, a larger fixed pneumatic tire tail wheel, fire extinguisher, engine shutters, a larger battery, and reinforced armor plating and armored glass behind the canopy windshield.[53]

The Brewster Model B-339E, as modified and supplied to Great Britain was distinctly inferior in performance to the F2A-2 (Model B-339) from the original order. It had a less powerful (1,000 hp (745.7 kW)) engine compared to the F2A-2's 1,200 hp (890 kW) Cyclone, yet was substantially heavier due to all of the additional modifications by some 900 lb (410 kg). The semi-retractable tail wheel had been exchanged for a larger fixed model, which was also less aerodynamic. Top speed was reduced from 323 to 313 mph (520 to 504 km/h) at combat altitudes.[11]

In its original form, the B-339 had a theoretical maximum speed of 323 mph (520 km/h) at a rather unrealistic 21,000 ft (6,400 m), but fuel starvation problems and poor supercharger performance at higher altitudes meant that this figure was never achieved in combat; the B-339E was no different in this regard. Its maneuverability was severely impaired (the aircraft was unable to perform loops), and initial rate of climb was reduced to 2,300 ft/min (700 m/min). The Wright Cyclone 1890-G-105 engine designated for use in the Brewster Mk I was in short supply; many aircraft were fitted with secondhand Wright engines sourced from Douglas DC-3 airliners and rebuilt to G105 or G102A specifications by Wright.[48] In service, some effort was made by at least one Brewster squadron to improve the type's sluggish performance; a few aircraft were lightened by some 1,000 lb (450 kg) by removing armor plate, armored windshields, radios, gun camera, and all other unnecessary equipment, and by replacing the .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns with .303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns.[54] The fuselage tanks were filled with a minimum of fuel, and run on high-octane aviation petrol where available. At Alor Star airfield in Malaya, the Japanese captured over 1,000 barrels (160 m3) of high-octane aviation petrol from British forces, which they promptly used in their own fighter aircraft.[55]

 
Buffalo Mk I formation over Malaya, late 1941.

Many of the pilots assigned the Buffalo lacked adequate training and experience in the type. A total of 20 of the original 169 Buffalos were lost in training accidents during 1941. By December 1941, approximately 150 Buffalo B-339E aircraft made up the bulk of the British fighter defenses of Burma, Malaya and Singapore. The two RAAF, two RAF, and one RNZAF squadrons, during December 1941 – January 1942, were beset with numerous problems,[56] including poorly built and ill-equipped aircraft.[11] Aviation historian Dan Ford characterized it as, "The performance... was pathetic." Inadequate spare parts and support staff, airfields that were difficult to defend against air attack, lack of a clear and coherent command structure, a Japanese spy in the Army air liaison staff, antagonism between RAF and RAAF squadrons and personnel, and inexperienced pilots lacking appropriate training would lead to disaster. Although the Mk I had .50-inch guns, many aircraft were equipped with .303 Browning mounts and electric firing solenoids, which tended to fail in service.[48] Moreover, according to Flight Lieutenant Mowbray Garden of 243 Squadron RAF, the Buffalos were supplied with only armour-piercing ammunition and no incendiary;[49] Japanese aircraft lacked armor and self-sealing fuel tanks in the early years of the war, a fact unknown to the Allies at the time.

 
Buffalos of No. 453 Squadron RAAF lined up at RAF Sembawang in November 1941. Buffalo AN185/TD-V was flown by Flt Lt Doug Vanderfield, who shot down three Japanese bombers (two Ki-48s and one Ki-51) over Butterworth, Penang on 13 December 1941, while his undercarriage was still down.[57]

When the Japanese invaded northern Malaya on 8 December 1941, the B-339E initially performed adequately. Against the Nakajima Ki-27 "Nate", the overloaded Brewsters could at least hold their own if given time to get to altitude, and at first achieved a respectable number of kills. However, the appearance of ever greater numbers of Japanese fighters, including markedly superior types such as the Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar" soon overwhelmed the Buffalo pilots, both in the air and on the ground. Another significant factor was the Brewster engine's tendency to overheat in the tropical climate, which caused oil to spray over the windscreen, usually forcing an aborted mission and greatly complicating attempts to intercept and destroy enemy aircraft. In the end, more than 60 Brewster Mk I (B-339E) aircraft were shot down in combat, 40 destroyed on the ground, and approximately 20 more destroyed in accidents. Only about 20 Buffalos survived to reach India or the Dutch East Indies.[58] The last airworthy Buffalo in Singapore flew out on 10 February, five days before the island fell.[59]

It is not entirely clear how many Japanese aircraft the Buffalo squadrons shot down, although RAAF pilots alone managed to shoot down at least 20.[60] Eighty were claimed in total, a ratio of kills to losses of just 1.3 to 1. Additionally, most of the Japanese aircraft shot down by the Buffalos were bombers.[48] The Hawker Hurricane, which fought in Singapore alongside the Buffalo from 20 January, also suffered severe losses from ground attack; most were destroyed.[61] The Fleet Air Arm also used the Buffalo in the Mediterranean in the Battle of Crete in early 1941.

The Brewster Mark I produced four Commonwealth aces: Geoff Fisken, Maurice Holder, A. W. B. (Alf) Clare and R. D. (Doug) Vanderfield.[62] New Zealander Fisken, the top-scoring pilot, later flew RNZAF P-40s and became the highest-scoring Commonwealth pilot within the Pacific theatre.

Japanese invasion of Burma edit

 
Flying officer Edward Sadler of 67 Squadron RAF with a Nakajima Ki-27 that was shot down near Rangoon on 24 January 1942

No. 67 Squadron RAF was originally formed in Singapore before their redeployment to Burma in October 1941.[50] They were equipped with thirty Buffalos inherited from 60 Squadron RAF at Mingaladon; the aircraft they received in Singapore were passed on to 488 Squadron RNZAF.[63] They were joined by Curtiss P-40 fighters of the American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers). AVG crews were initially impressed with the Buffalo, some even urging General Claire Chennault to trade a squadron of P-40s for Buffalos.[64] In response, Chennault arranged a mock dogfight between both fighters, with 1st Lieutenant Erik Shilling flying the P-40 and Squadron Leader Jack Brandt flying the Buffalo.[64] Over their training base in Toungoo, the P-40 proved to be superior to the Buffalo.[64] When Shilling and Brandt met again fifty years later, the RAF pilot said, "how I wish I could have swapped my aircraft for yours".[64]

The squadron first saw action on 23 December 1941, when 15 Buffalos intercepted a formation of 42 Ki-21 heavy bombers, 27 Ki-30 light bombers and 30 Ki-27 fighters during a daylight raid on Rangoon. Together with twelve P-40s, they claimed 13 bombers destroyed and seven probable;[65] four P-40s including two pilots were lost while all the Buffalos returned safely. Nevertheless, the Japanese succeeded in bombing Rangoon, its port facilities and RAF Mingaladon, inflicting extensive damage and casualties.[66]

The Buffalos and P-40s carried out air defenses over Rangoon and Mingaladon as well as strafing missions on Japanese airfields. Like Malaya and Singapore, lack of effective early warning systems greatly hampered British and AVG efforts to defend Burma from air raids.[67] Reports of Japanese aircraft performance from the Malayan Campaign prompted Buffalo pilots in Burma to employ different tactics; according to Flight Sergeant Vic Bargh, "come in from above, or at the same level at the very least, then dive away before they got onto you, because if they did get onto you, well, you were shot down".[68] One of the Buffalo's final victories of the Burma Campaign was claimed by Bargh; he found the wreckage of the bomber and had his picture taken with it as proof.[69]

The IJAAF secured air superiority over Rangoon by early February 1942, and with the situation on the ground rapidly deteriorating, No. 67 Squadron withdrew north to Toungoo.[69] On 13 February, the squadron moved further north to Magwe with only eight Buffalos, where they continued to carry out reconnaissance flights as well as escorting Westland Lysanders on ground attack missions.[69] The Buffalo flew its last combat sortie with the RAF on 5 March, escorting Hawker Hurricanes and Bristol Blenheims for an attack on a Japanese airbase in Chiang Mai, Thailand.[69] Only six Buffalos remained when the squadron withdrew to Calcutta, India on 11 March to re-equip with Hurricanes.[70] They were swiftly relegated to training duties, though two were briefly acquired by No. 146 Squadron RAF in early April, one of which was regularly flown by Squadron Leader Count Manfred Czernin.[70] No. 67 Squadron claimed 27 Japanese aircraft destroyed; eight Buffalos were shot down and eight pilots were killed.[70] For their actions, Squadron Leader Jack Brandt and Flight Lieutenant Colin Pinckney were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (the latter posthumously), while Sergeant Gordon Williams received the Distinguished Flying Medal.[70]

Netherlands East Indies edit

 
Brewster Buffalos of the ML-KNIL

The Militaire Luchtvaart van het Koninklijk Nederlands-Indisch Leger ("Military Air Service of the Royal Netherlands East Indian Army", ML-KNIL) had ordered 144 Brewster B-339C and 339D models, the former with rebuilt Wright G-105 engines supplied by the Dutch and the latter with new 1,200 hp (890 kW) Wright R-1820-40 engines Brewster purchased from Wright. At the outbreak of war[clarification needed], only 71 had arrived in the Dutch East Indies, and not all were in service. A small number served briefly at Singapore before being withdrawn for the defense of Borneo and Java.

As the Brewster B-339 aircraft used by the ML-KNIL were lighter than the modified B-339E Brewster Mark Is used by British, Australian, and New Zealand air forces, they were able to successfully engage the Japanese Army Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar", although both the "Oscar" and the Japanese Navy's A6M Zero still out-climbed the B-339 at combat altitudes (the Zero was faster as well).[71] After the first few engagements, the Dutch halved the fuel and ammo load in the wing, which allowed their Buffalos (and their Hurricanes) to stay with the Oscars in turns.[8] In February 1942 they received new model gunsights. Around the same time the Dutch started to use tracer ammunition as well. These two improved their hit ratio. Still, their lack of heavy machine guns (.50") meant their success rate wasn't as high as it could have been.[8]

Apart from their role as fighters, the Brewster fighters were also used as dive bombers against Japanese troopships. Although reinforced by British Commonwealth Buffalo Mk I (B-339E) aircraft retreating from Malaya, the Dutch squadrons faced superior numbers in the air, usually odds of one against two or three. Timely early warning from British radar would have countered this deficit, especially in avoiding unnecessary losses from raids on airfields, but the British government had decided too late to send these: the first British radar stations became operational only towards the end of February.

In a major engagement above Semplak on 19 February 1942, eight Dutch Brewster fighters intercepted a formation of about 35 Japanese bombers with an escort of about 20 Zeros. The Brewster pilots destroyed 11 Japanese aircraft and lost four Brewsters; two Dutch pilots died.[72]

Only four airworthy Buffalos remained on 7 March.[59] Capt. Jacob van Helsdingen led this flight on its final sortie that day, and was credited with a Zero before he was killed.[59] This made him and Lt. August Deibel the most successful Dutch pilots on the Buffalo with three victories each.[59] Altogether, 17 ML-KNIL pilots were killed, and 30 aircraft shot down; 15 were destroyed on the ground, and several were lost to misadventure. Dutch pilots claimed 55 enemy aircraft destroyed.[62]

USAAF/RAAF in Australia edit

Following the surrender of the Netherlands East Indies on 8 March 1942, a shipment of 17 Brewster B339-23 fighters ordered for the ML-KNIL was diverted to the US Fifth Air Force in Australia.

All of these Buffalos were subsequently lent to the RAAF, which gave them the serial number prefix A51–. They were used mainly for air defence duties outside frontline areas, photo-reconnaissance and as mock targets in gunnery training.[73] They served with 1 PRU, 24 Sqn, 25 Sqn, 85 Sqn and the Air Gunnery Training School, at RAAF Williamtown.[73]

Between August 1942 and November 1943, 10 of these Buffalos constituted the air defense force for Perth, Western Australia, while assigned to 25 and 85 Sqns at RAAF Pearce and RAAF Guildford. In 1944, all of the surviving aircraft were transferred to the USAAF.[60]

U.S. Marine Corps edit

 
F2A-3, probably from VMF-212, at Marine Corps Air Station Ewa, Hawaii, 25 April 1942
 
F2A-3 of VMF-211 rests in the flight deck gallery walkway after suffering landing gear failure while landing on board USS Long Island, off Palmyra Atoll, 25 July 1942. VMF-211 was the last Marine Corps unit to operate the F2A in a front-line capacity.

At Midway Island, United States Marine Corps fighter squadron VMF-221 operated a mixed group of 20 Brewster F2A-3 Buffalos and seven Grumman F4F-3 Wildcats.[74] They were originally assigned to USS Saratoga as part of a relief force bound for Wake Island, but were diverted to Midway instead after the force was controversially recalled on 22 December 1941. Wake Island fell on the following day.[75] The squadron first saw action on 10 March 1942 when a Kawanishi H8K "Emily" flying boat was shot down by Captain James L. Neefus near Midway, the Buffalo's first kill in U.S. service.[76][77][78][79]

From February - April 1942 the rebuilt squadron VMF-211 (most of which had been lost in the Battle of Wake Island) was re-equipped with F2A-3s and was ferried by the escort carrier Long Island to Palmyra Atoll, where it remained until recalled in July of that year, ferrying their aircraft to land on Long Island to return to Hawaii to re-equip with F4F-4s.

During the Battle of Midway in 1942, VMF-221 was destined to participate in one of the few aerial combats involving the Buffalo in U.S. military service. The initial Buffalo interception of the first Japanese air raid was led by Major Floyd B. Parks, whose 13-aircraft division did not fly in paired flights of mutually supporting aircraft. After attacking a formation of 30–40 Aichi D3A1 "Val" dive bombers escorted by 36 Zeros, the Marines, flying in two divisions of aircraft, downed several Japanese bombers before the escorting Zeros reacted; a furious dogfight developed. Thirteen out of 20 Buffalos were lost;[80] of the six Wildcats, only two remained flyable at the end of the mission. The losses included the Marine air commander, Major Parks, who bailed out of his burning Buffalo, only to be strafed by Zeros after parachuting into the sea.[74]

The Marine pilots who managed to shake off the Zeros used high speed split-s turns or very steep dives.[74] These maneuvers were later found to be the best means to evade pursuit by the highly maneuverable Japanese fighters. One F2A-3 pilot, Marine Captain William Humberd, dove away from his pursuers, then attacked a Zero in a head-on pass, shooting his opponent down.[81] In the battle, some F2A-3s suffered from inoperative guns.[11] The nose-mounted guns' occasional failure to fire was noticed by other users as well; the phenomenon may have been caused by frayed electrical wires in the mechanism that synchronized the nose guns with the propeller. Other Buffalos had not been fitted with plate armor behind the pilot, making them vulnerable to even a single bullet or shell. Losses were aggravated due to the Japanese practice of strafing pilots who had bailed out.[74] Second Lt. Charles S. Hughes, whose Buffalo was forced to retire at the start of the raid due to engine trouble, had a ringside view of the aerial combat:

The Zeros came in strafing immediately afterward. I saw two Brewsters trying to fight the Zeros. One was shot down and the other was saved by ground fires covering his tail. Both looked like they were tied to a string while the Zeros made passes at them.[82]

Second Lt. Charles M. Kunz reported that after successfully downing two Val bombers, he was attacked by Japanese fighters:

I was at an altitude of about 9,000 ft, and shoved over in a dive trying to shake the plane on my tail until I was about 20 feet from the water. I was making radical turns hoping the pilot couldn't get steadied on me. I glanced out of the rear and saw that it was a Zero fighter. I continued flying on a rapid turning course at full throttle when I was hit in the head by a glancing bullet. After he fired a few short bursts he left as I had been in a general direction of 205 degrees heading away from the island. My plane was badly shot up... In my opinion, the Zero fighter has been far underestimated. I think it is probably one of the finest fighters in the present war. As for the F2A-3, (or Brewster trainer), it should be in Miami as a training plane, rather than used as a first-line fighter.[81]

Claire Chennault's report on the Zero and air combat reached Washington in 1941, where it was disseminated to aviation forces of the U.S. Army and Navy.[83] This information, along with the development of two-plane mutual defensive formations and tactics, were incorporated into U.S. and Marine Corps air combat training doctrine by some prescient U.S. commanders, including Lieutenant Commander "Jimmy" Thach. The Thach Weave was developed for use by Wildcat pilots against the Zero and was later adopted by other Wildcat squadrons in the Pacific.[83]

With the emergence of new tactics for the F4F-3 and F4F-4 Wildcat, the Battle of Midway marked the end of the Buffalo in both U.S. Navy and Marine Corps fighting squadrons. Surviving F2A-3 aircraft were transported to the U.S. mainland, where they were used as advanced trainers. The introduction in late 1943 of vastly superior American carrier-borne fighters such as the F6F Hellcat and Vought F4U Corsair soon relegated the Brewster F2A-3 to a distant memory.

Buffalo aces edit

The Finnish Air Force produced 36 Buffalo aces. The top three were Capt. Hans Wind, with 39 Buffalo air victories (out of 75), WO Eino Ilmari Juutilainen, with 34 (out of 94) and Capt. Jorma Karhunen, with 25.5 (out of 31.5). First Lt Lauri Nissinen also had victories in the type (22.5 out of 32.5).[6]

The non-Finnish Buffalo aces were: Geoff Fisken (RNZAF), with six air victories, and Doug Vanderfield (RAAF) with five individual kills, plus one shared. Alf Clare (RAAF) and Maurice Holder (RAF) had five victories each.[62][84]

Variants edit

 
Brewster Buffalo F2A-2
XF2A-1
Prototype
F2A-1
(with Wright R-1820-34 Cyclone engine and two guns above engine cowling, plus two optional guns in the wings) for the United States Navy, 11 built
F2A-2
(with Wright R-1820-40 Cyclone engine and four guns) for the United States Navy and Marines, 43 built
F2A-3
Improved[citation needed] F2A-2 for the United States Navy with larger fuel tank, heavier armour, and provision to carry two underwing 100 lb (45 kg) bombs, 108 built
XF2A-4
One converted from an F2A-3
B-239
Export version of the F2A-1 for Finland (with Wright R-1820-G5 Cyclone engines and four guns), 44 built
B-339B
Export version for Belgium, 40 built (only two delivered to Belgium, the rest to the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm)
B-339C
Export version for the Netherlands East Indies with Wright GR-1820-G105 Cyclone engines; 24 built
B-339D
Export version for the Netherlands East Indies with 1,200 hp (890 kW) Wright R-1820-40 Cyclone engines; 48 built (47 delivered to Dutch East Indies)
B-339E
Export version of the F2A-2 for the Royal Air Force with Wright GR-1820-G105 Cyclone engines as the Buffalo Mk I; 170 built (also used by the RAAF and RNZAF)
B-339-23 a.k.a. B-439
Export version of the F2A-3 for the Netherlands East Indies with 1,200 hp (890 kW) Wright GR-1820-G205A engines; 20 built (17 later to the RAAF, some used by the USAAF)

Operators edit

 
U.S. Navy F2A being rearmed in 1943
  Australia
Royal Australian Air Force
No. 21 Squadron RAAF
No. 24 Squadron RAAF
No. 25 Squadron RAAF (ex-Dutch)
No. 43 Squadron RAAF
No. 85 Squadron RAAF (ex-25 Sqn.)
No. 453 Squadron RAAF
No. 452 Squadron RAAF
No. 1 PRU RAAF (ex-Dutch, Photo Reconnaissance Unit)
  Finland
Finnish Air Force
No. 24 Squadron (1941–1944)
No. 26 Squadron (1944–1945)
 
Captured Dutch Buffalo displayed as a war trophy with Japanese roundels.[85]
  Japan
Captured Buffalos were repaired and test flown, both in Japanese markings, and – starring in recreated combat footage – in incorrect RAF markings.
  Netherlands
Militaire Luchtvaart KNIL
Vliegtuiggroep IV, 3e Afdeling (3-VLG-IV: 3rd Squadron, IV Group)
Vliegtuiggroep V, 1e Afdeling (1-VLG-V)
Vliegtuiggroep V, 2e Afdeling (2-VLG-V, helped defend Singapore)
Vliegtuiggroep V, 3e Afdeling (3-VLG-V)
  New Zealand
Royal New Zealand Air Force
No. 488 Squadron RNZAF
  United Kingdom
Royal Air Force
No. 60 Squadron RAF
No. 67 Squadron RAF (ex-60 Sqn., most pilots were RNZAF)
No. 71 Squadron RAF
No. 146 Squadron RAF (ex-67 Sqn.)
No. 243 Squadron RAF (most pilots were RNZAF)
Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm
711 Naval Air Squadron
759 Naval Air Squadron
760 Naval Air Squadron
804 Naval Air Squadron
805 Naval Air Squadron
813 Naval Air Squadron
885 Naval Air Squadron
  United States
United States Army Air Forces
5th Air Force, Australia (ex-Dutch)
United States Marine Corps
VMF-111, based at Camp Kearney, Calif.
VMF-112, based at Camp Kearney, Calif.
VMD-2
VMF-211, based at Palmyra Atoll
VMF-212, based at MCAS Ewa
VMF-213, based at MCAS Ewa
VMF-214, based at MCAS Ewa
VMF-221, used in Battle of Midway
VMF-222, based at MCAS Ewa
VMF-224
VMO-251
United States Navy
VF-2
VF-3
VF-9
VJ-5
VJ-6
VS-201
Training Units at NAS Pensacola and NAS Miami

Surviving aircraft and replicas edit

 
Lauri Pekuri's FAF BW-372 at the Aviation Museum of Central Finland
 
Replica of Lt. Gerard Bruggink's B-339C at the National Military Museum in Soesterberg, Netherlands

Only export models of the Buffalo are preserved. There is currently a complete Finnish B-239 (BW-372), a VL Humu variant (HM-671 at the Central Finland Aviation museum), and two replicas – one in ML-KNIL markings and the other in U.S. Navy markings.

Finnish B-239 (serial no. BW-372) flown by Lt. Lauri Pekuri was damaged by a Soviet Hawker Hurricane and crashed in 1942 on Lake Big Kolejärvi, about 31 mi (50 km) from Segezha, Russia and was rediscovered in 1998 and is now on display at the Keski-Suomen Ilmailumuseo (Aviation Museum of Central Finland).[85] The Finnish museum also has components from FAF BW-393.

In June 2012, divers discovered the partial wreckage of a Buffalo in shallow water just off Midway Atoll. The aircraft had been ditched during February 1942, after an aborted landing attempt in bad weather by 1st Lt Charles W. Somers Jr., USMC (later Colonel, USMC Ret).[86] Officials at the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument, where the wreckage was found, have not decided whether to recover any of the parts or leave them in place.[87]

In July 2008, a static full-scale replica B-339C was completed by the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Long Island, New York. The aircraft carries the markings of an ML-KNIL fighter flown by Lt. Gerard Bruggink (two kills). It was built for the Militaire-Luchtvaartmuseum (Military Aviation Museum) at Soesterberg, the Netherlands.[85][88] The Cradle of Aviation Museum houses a static full-scale replica/model F2A-2, carrying the markings of unit "201-S-13" from VS-201, aboard USS Long Island.[89]

Specifications (F2A-3) edit

 
F2A-1 Buffalo 3-view drawing

Data from United States Navy Aircraft since 1911[90]

General characteristics

  • Crew: one
  • Length: 26 ft 4 in (8.03 m)
  • Wingspan: 35 ft 0 in (10.67 m)
  • Height: 12 ft 0 in (3.66 m)
  • Wing area: 209 sq ft (19.4 m2)
  • Airfoil:
  • Empty weight: 4,732 lb (2,146 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 7,159 lb (3,247 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Wright R-1820-40 Cyclone 9 9-cyl air-cooled radial piston engine, 1,200 hp (890 kW)
  • Propellers: 3-bladed

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 321 mph (517 km/h, 279 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 161 mph (259 km/h, 140 kn)
  • Range: 965 mi (1,553 km, 839 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 33,200 ft (10,100 m)
  • Rate of climb: 2,440 ft/min (12.4 m/s) [N 9]

Armament

  • Guns:
  • 2 × 0.50 in (12.7 mm) nose-mounted M2 Browning machine guns
  • 2 × 0.50 in (12.7 mm) wing-mounted M2 Browning machine guns
  • Bombs:
  • 2 x bombs on underwing racks.

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The guns were mounted well aft, just ahead of the cockpit.
  2. ^ By the fall of 1940 the Navy had witnessed the Chance-Vought XF4U-1 prototype (later to become the F4U Corsair) exceed 400 mph (640 km/h) in level flight with its huge Twin Wasp engine.
  3. ^ 11 F2A-1s had been delivered to the US Navy; 44 would go to the Finnish Air Force before orders for more were cancelled at the end of the Winter War.
  4. ^ Contemporary of the Buffalo and renowned for its handling
  5. ^ The Fiat G.50 had an all-out maximum speed of 301 mph (484 km/h) in level flight.
  6. ^ High speed bomber air regiment
  7. ^ Some sources claim two aircraft.
  8. ^ Some sources quote this engine as producing 1,100 hp (820.3 kW) peak takeoff power; there may also have been alternate use of the Wright GR-1820-G102A, which was also rated for 1,100 hp (820.3 kW) engine.
  9. ^ The initial rate of climb would be reduced with completely full petrol tanks.[10]

Citations edit

  1. ^ . United States Navy Naval History & Heritage Command. Archived from the original on 17 April 2001. Retrieved 23 September 2013. By the beginning of the Pacific War, the F2A, by then also known by the popular name 'Buffalo', was passing out of carrier squadron service in favor of the F4F-3.
  2. ^ a b Wheeler 1992, p. 58.
  3. ^ "Brewster F2A Buffalo". www.warbirdalley.com. The Doublestar Group. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  4. ^ Ethell 1995, p. 212.
  5. ^ Neulen 2000, p. 217.
  6. ^ a b Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 85.
  7. ^ Ethell 1995, p. 213.
  8. ^ a b c Boer 2006, p. 83.
  9. ^ Theodore, Taylor. The Battle Off Midway Island. New York: Avon, 1982. ISBN 0-380-78790-3.
  10. ^ a b c d e Lundstrom 2005, p. 12.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ford, Dan. "The Sorry Saga of the Brewster Buffalo." warbirdforum.com, 2008. Retrieved: 6 September 2009.
  12. ^ Shores 1971, p. 133.
  13. ^ Baugher, Joe. "Brewster XF2A-1." U.S. Navy Fighter Aircraft: Brewster F2A, 25 December 1999. Retrieved: 8 March 2009.
  14. ^ Maas 1987, p. 5.
  15. ^ Enzo Angelucci, The American Fighter
  16. ^ Launius, Roger D. "Chapter 2, New Facilities, New Designs (1930–1945)". history.nasa.gov. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  17. ^ West, Rick. "Pappy Boyington and the Buffalo: Interview of Pappy Boyington, October 1977". www.warbirdforum.com. Retrieved: 8 March 2009.
  18. ^ Boyington,Baa Baa Black Sheep,[citation needed]
  19. ^ Green, William; Swanborough, Gordon (2001). The Great Book of Fighters. MBI Publishing. ISBN 978-0760311943.
  20. ^ Graham White, Allied Aircraft Piston Engines of WWII
  21. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, pp. 6–7.
  22. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 7.
  23. ^ Ingersoll, Ralph (1940). Report on England, November 1940. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 139, 154–156.
  24. ^ a b Stenman and Keskinen 1998, p. 74.
  25. ^ Stenman 2001, p. 27.
  26. ^ Stenman 2001, p. 39.
  27. ^ a b Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 10.
  28. ^ a b Maas, Jim. "Brewster F2A-1 & Model 239". clubhyper.com. Retrieved: 8 March 2009.
  29. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, pp. 10–11.
  30. ^ geocities.com. Retrieved: 25 October 2010.
  31. ^ a b Lindberg, J. "Jorma "Joppe" Karhunen." July 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Fighter Tactics Academy, January 2006. Retrieved: 10 August 2009.
  32. ^ Ford. Dan (reprinted by Jarmo Lindberg). "Robert Winston and the Finnish Brewsters, 1940 (part 1)." warbirdforum.com, June 2008. Retrieved: 30 October 2010.
  33. ^ "Ilmari Juutilainen". century-of-flight.net. 2019-11-15.
  34. ^ Arena 1996, p. 483.
  35. ^ Stenman and Keskinen 1998, p. 86.
  36. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, pp. 11–12.
  37. ^ Stenman and Keskinen 1998, p. 76.
  38. ^ Neulen 2000, p. 208.
  39. ^ Stenman and Keskinen 1998, p. 75.
  40. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, pp. 83–84.
  41. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 84.
  42. ^ Pacco 2003, p. 71.
  43. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 8."
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-09-09. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  45. ^ . belgian-wings.be. Archived from the original on 18 January 2018. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  46. ^ https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/digitised/page/straitstimes19410419-1.1.10
  47. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 8.
  48. ^ a b c d Rickard, J. "Brewster Buffalo in British Service." historyofwar.org, 27 June 2007. Retrieved: 6 September 2009.
  49. ^ a b Cull, Sortehaug and Haselden 2003, p. 15
  50. ^ a b Cull, Sortehaug and Haselden 2003, p. 14
  51. ^ a b Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 44.
  52. ^ Baugher, Joe. "Brewster Buffalo Mk I." U.S. Navy Fighter Aircraft: Brewster F2A,, 5 March 2003. Retrieved: 12 August 2010.
  53. ^ "1/48 Brewster B-339 Buffalo Pacific Theater." October 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine tamiya.com. Retrieved: 10 September 2007.
  54. ^ Gunston, Bill “The Illustrated Directory of Fighting Aircraft of World War II.” Salamander Books, 1988. ISBN 0-86288-672-4.
  55. ^ Cull, Sortehaug and Haselden 2003
  56. ^ Harper 1946, pp. 1–2.
  57. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 46.
  58. ^ Huggins 2007, pp. 35–36.
  59. ^ a b c d Stenman & Thomas 2010, p. 67.
  60. ^ a b Dennis et al. 2008, p. 115.
  61. ^ Wixey 2003, pp. 38–39.
  62. ^ a b c Flores, Santiago A. "Notable Brewster Buffalo pilots in Southeast Asia, 1941–42." warbirdforum.com, 2008. Retrieved: 3 October 2007.
  63. ^ Cull, Sortehaug and Haselden 2003, p. 26
  64. ^ a b c d C O Lamp 2007, unspecified page
  65. ^ The Battle for Burma (2009), Roy Conyers Nesbit, p. 17 and 19
  66. ^ Air Battle for Burma: Allied Pilots' Fight for Supremacy (2016), Bryn Evans, p. 17-18
  67. ^ Stenman & Thomas, p.72.
  68. ^ Stenman & Thomas 2010, p.74.
  69. ^ a b c d Stenman & Thomas, p.76.
  70. ^ a b c d Stenman & Thomas, p.77.
  71. ^ Stanaway 1998, p. 9.
  72. ^ Andriessen, Paul. "Brewster 339/439 in the East Indies." warbirdforum.com, 2008. Retrieved: 10 August 2009.
  73. ^ a b Wilson, Stewart (1994). Military Aircraft of Australia. Weston Creek, Australia: Aerospace Publications. p. 216. ISBN 1875671080.
  74. ^ a b c d "U.S. Marine Fighting Squadron VMF-221 Defends Midway." October 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Pacific War Home Page. Retrieved: 10 August 2009.
  75. ^ Moran 2011, p. 24.
  76. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 79.
  77. ^ "James L. Neefus." Military Times Hall of Valor. Retrieved: 15 June 2011.
  78. ^ Department of the Navy: Naval Historical Center. Retrieved: 22 May 2012.
  79. ^ Steve Horn 2005, page 137.
  80. ^ Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved: 20 November 2010.
  81. ^ a b "'Brewster Buffalo Part 2." USMC Combat Reports via warbirdforum.com. Retrieved: 8 March 2009.
  82. ^ "Brewster Buffalo, Part 1." USMC Combat Reports via warbirdforum.com. Retrieved: 8 March 2009.
  83. ^ a b Lundstrom 2005, p. 480.
  84. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 86.
  85. ^ a b c Lindberg, Jarno. "Annals of the Brewster Buffalo." warbirdforum.com. Retrieved: 10 August 2009.
  86. ^ "Charles Somers – Recipient – Military Times Hall Of Valor". valor.militarytimes.com. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  87. ^ Eckholm, Erik. "10 Feet below waters off Midway Atoll, a famous flying dud." The New York Times, 1 January 2013. Retrieved: 2 January 2013.
  88. ^ "Netherlands Military Aviation Museum." 2010-10-23 at the Wayback Machine militaireluchtvaartmuseum.nl. Retrieved: 16 June 2012.
  89. ^ Maloney, Bill. "Cradle Of Aviation Museum: Brewster F2-A2 Buffalo." williammaloney.com, 16 August 2008. Retrieved: 26 January 2010.
  90. ^ Swanborough and Bowers 1976, p. 72.
  91. ^ a b Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • Arena, Nino. I caccia a motore radiale Fiat G.50 (in Italian). Modena: Mucchi editore, 1996. NO ISBN
  • Boer, P.C. The Loss of Java. Singapore: NUS Press, 2011. ISBN 978-9971695132.
  • Boer, P.C. Het Verlies van Java (in Dutch). Amsterdam: De Bataafsche Leeuw, 2006. ISBN 90-6707-599-X.
  • Byk, Gary. Buffalo Down Under: The Modeller's Guide to Australia's Inherited Fighter. Glen Waverly, Victoria, Australia: Red Roo Models Publication, 1998.
  • Cull, Brian, Paul Sortenhaug and Mark Haselden. Buffaloes over Singapore: RAF, RAAF, RNZAF and Dutch Brewster Fighters in Action over Malaya and the East Indies 1941–1942. London: Grub Street, 2003. ISBN 1-904010-32-6.
  • Dann, Richard S/Ginter, Steve. Brewster F2A Buffalo and Export Variants. Simi Valley, CA: Ginter Publications, 2017. ISBN 978-0-9968258-6-3.
  • Dennis, Peter et al. The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History. Melbourne: Oxford University Press Australia & New Zealand, 2008 (Second edition). ISBN 978-0-19-551784-2.
  • Drendel, Lou. U.S. Navy Carrier Fighters of World War II. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications Inc., 1987. ISBN 0-89747-194-6
  • Ford, Daniel. "The Sorry Saga of the Brewster Buffalo". Air&Space/Smithsonian, July 1996. Expanded and revised digital edition, Warbird Books, 2013.
  • Gerdessen, F. "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 13, August–November 1980. p. 78. ISSN 0143-5450
  • Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. "Brewster F2A Buffalo". WW2 Fact Files: US Navy and Marine Corps Fighters. London: Macdonald and Jane's, 1976, pp. 5–15. ISBN 0-356-08222-9.
  • Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. "Brewster's Benighted Buffalo". Air Enthusiast Quarterly, No. 1, n.d., pp. 66–83. ISSN 0143-5450
  • Horn, Steve. "The Second Attack on Pearl Harbor: Operation K And Other Japanese Attempts to Bomb America in World War II". Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 2005. ISBN 978-1-59114-388-8.
  • Huggins, Mark. "Falcons on Every Front: Nakajima's KI-43-I Hayabusa in Combat." Air Enthusiast, Issue 131, September/October 2007.
  • Keskinen, Kalevi, Kari Stenman and Klaus Niska. Brewster B-239 ja Humu (in Finnish). Espoo, Finland: Tietoteos, 1977. ISBN 951-9035-16-8. Expanded and revised edition published in two parts:
    • Brewster Model 239: Suomen Ilmavoimien Historia 1A. Espoo, Finland: Kari Stenman Publishing, 2005. ISBN 952-99432-3-7.
    • Brewster Model 239: Suomen Ilmavoimien Historia 1B. Espoo, Finland: Kari Stenman Publishing, 2005. ISBN 952-99432-4-5.
  • Lamp, C. O. The Flying Tigers Poke Payoff: They Saved China. iUniverse, 2007. ISBN 978-0-595-86785-1.
  • Ledet, Michel (April 2002). "Des avions alliés aux couleurs japonais" [Allied Aircraft in Japanese Colors]. Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire (in French). No. 109. pp. 17–21. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Lundstrom, John B. The First Team: Pacific Naval Air Combat from Pearl Harbor to Midway. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 2005. ISBN 978-1-59114-471-7.
  • Maas, Jim. F2A Buffalo in action. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications Inc., 1988. ISBN 0-89747-196-2.
  • Moran, Jim. Wake Island 1941: A Battle to Make the Gods Weep (Osprey Campaign 144). Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978-1-849086-035.
  • Morareau, Lucien (September 1998). "Les oubliées des Antilles" [The Forgotten Ones of the Antilles]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French). No. 66. pp. 30–37. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Neulen, Hans Werner. In the Skies of Europe. Ramsbury, Marlborough, UK: The Crowood Press, 2000. ISBN 1-86126-799-1.
  • O'Leary, Michael. United States Naval Fighters of World War II in Action. Poole, Dorset, UK: Blandford Press, 1980. ISBN 0-7137-0956-1.
  • Pacco, John. "Brewster B-339" Belgisch Leger/Armee Belge: Het militair Vliegwezen/l'Aeronautique militaire 1930–1940 (in French). Artselaar, Belgium: J.P. Publications, 2003, pp. 70–71. ISBN 90-801136-6-2.
  • Raunio, Jukka. Lentäjän näkökulma 2 – Pilot's viewpoint 2 (in Finnish). Self-published, 1993. ISBN 951-96866-0-6.
  • Shores, Christopher. The Brewster Buffalo (Aircraft in Profile 217). Windsor, Berkshire, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1971.
  • Stanaway, John. Nakajima Ki.43 "Hayabusa": Allied Code Name "Oscar". Bennington, Vermont: Merriam Press, 1998. ISBN 978-1-57638-141-0.
  • Stenman, Kari and Andrew Thomas. Brewster F2A Buffalo Aces of World War 2 (Aircraft of the Aces). Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2010. ISBN 978-1-84603-481-7.
  • Stenman, Kari and Kalevi Keskinen. Finnish Aces of World War 2. Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 1998. ISBN 978-1-85532-783-2.
  • Stenman, Kari. Lentolaivue 24. Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-84176-262-8.
  • Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Navy Aircraft since 1911. London: Putnam, Second Edition, 1976. ISBN 0-370-10054-9.
  • Taylor, John W.R. "Brewster F2A Buffalo." Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1969. ISBN 0-425-03633-2.
  • Wheeler, Barry C. The Hamlyn Guide to Military Aircraft Markings. London: Chancellor Press, 1992. ISBN 1-85152-582-3.
  • Winchester, Jim. "Brewster Buffalo." The World's Worst Aircraft: From Pioneering Failures to Multimillion Dollar Disasters. London: Amber Books Ltd., 2005. ISBN 1-904687-34-2.
  • Wixey, Ken. A Rotund New Yorker: Brewster's Embattled Buffalo. Air Enthusiast 105, May/June 2003, pp. 26–40. ISSN 0143-5450
  • Zbiegniewski, Andre R. Brewster F2A Buffalo (bilingual Polish/English). Lublin, Poland: Kagero, 2003. ISBN 83-89088-14-2.

External links edit

  • Squadron Leader W.J. Harper, 1946, "Report on NO. 21 and NO. 453 RAAF squadrons" (transcribed by Dan Ford for Warbird's Forum.)
  • Brewster F2A-3 Buffalo
  • Finnish Buffalo BW372 recovery

brewster, buffalo, american, fighter, aircraft, which, service, early, world, designed, built, brewster, aeronautical, corporation, first, monoplanes, with, arrestor, hook, other, modifications, aircraft, carriers, buffalo, competition, against, grumman, wildc. The Brewster F2A Buffalo 1 is an American fighter aircraft which saw service early in World War II Designed and built by the Brewster Aeronautical Corporation it was one of the first U S monoplanes with an arrestor hook and other modifications for aircraft carriers The Buffalo won a competition against the Grumman F4F Wildcat in 1939 to become the U S Navy s first monoplane fighter aircraft Although superior to the Grumman F3F biplane it replaced and the early F4Fs 2 the Buffalo was largely obsolete when the United States entered the war being unstable and overweight especially when compared to the Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Zero 3 F2A BuffaloRole Fighter aircraftNational origin United StatesManufacturer Brewster Aeronautical CorporationFirst flight 2 December 1937Introduction April 1939Retired 1948 Finland Primary users United States NavyRoyal Air ForceRoyal Netherlands East Indies Army Air ForceFinnish Air ForceProduced 1938 1941Number built 509Developed into VL HumuSeveral nations including Finland Belgium Britain and the Netherlands ordered the Buffalo The Finns were the most successful with their Buffalos flying them in combat against early Soviet fighters with excellent results 4 During the Continuation War of 1941 1944 the B 239s de navalized F2A 1s operated by the Finnish Air Force proved capable of engaging and destroying most types of Soviet fighter aircraft operating against Finland at that time and claimed in the first phase of that conflict 32 Soviet aircraft shot down for every B 239 lost 5 producing 36 Buffalo aces 6 In December 1941 Buffalos operated by both British Commonwealth B 339E and Dutch B 339C D air forces in South East Asia suffered severe losses in combat against the Japanese Navy s A6M Zero and the Japanese Army s Nakajima Ki 43 Oscar The British attempted to lighten their Buffalos by removing ammunition and fuel and installing lighter guns to improve performance but it made little difference 7 After the first few engagements the Dutch halved the fuel and ammunition load in the wings which allowed their Buffalos and their Hurricanes to stay with the Oscars in turns 8 The Buffalo was built in three variants for the U S Navy the F2A 1 F2A 2 and F2A 3 In foreign service with lower horsepower engines these types were designated B 239 B 339 and B 339 23 respectively The F2A 3 variant saw action with United States Marine Corps USMC squadrons at the Battle of Midway Shown by the experience of Midway to be no match for the Zero 2 the F2A 3 was derided by USMC pilots as a flying coffin 9 Indeed the F2A 3s performance was substantially inferior 10 to the F2A 2 variant used by the Navy before the outbreak of the war despite detail improvements Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 United States Navy 2 Operational history 2 1 Finland 2 2 Belgium 2 3 British Commonwealth Malaya 2 3 1 Japanese invasion of Burma 2 4 Netherlands East Indies 2 5 USAAF RAAF in Australia 2 6 U S Marine Corps 3 Buffalo aces 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Surviving aircraft and replicas 7 Specifications F2A 3 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Bibliography 10 External linksDesign and development editUnited States Navy edit In 1935 the U S Navy issued a requirement for a carrier based fighter intended to replace the Grumman F3F biplane The Brewster XF2A 1 monoplane designed by a team led by Dayton T Brown was one of two aircraft designs that were initially considered 11 The XF4F 1 with a double row radial engine was a classic biplane The U S Navy competition was re opened to allow another competitor the XFNF 1 a navalized Seversky P 35 eliminated early on when the prototype could not reach more than 267 mph 430 km h 12 The XF2A 1 first flew on 2 December 1937 and early test results showed it was far in advance of the Grumman biplane entry While the XF4F 1 did not enter production it later re emerged as a monoplane the Wildcat The Buffalo was manufactured at the Brewster Building in Long Island City New York nbsp Brewster XF2A 1 prototypeThe new Brewster fighter had a modern look with a stubby fuselage mid set monoplane wings and a host of advanced features It was all metal with flush riveted stressed aluminum construction although control surfaces were still fabric covered The XF2A 1 also featured split flaps a hydraulically operated retractable main undercarriage and partially retractable tailwheel and a streamlined framed canopy However as was still common at this time the aircraft lacked self sealing fuel tanks and pilot armor Fuel capacity was only 160 US gal 610 L stored in the fuselage Powered by a 950 hp 710 kW single row Wright R 1820 22 Cyclone radial engine it had a good initial climb rate of 2 750 ft min 840 m min and a top speed of 277 5 mph 446 6 km h The aircraft was then tested in 1938 in the Langley Research Center full scale wind tunnel where it was determined that certain factors were contributing to parasitic drag Based on the tests improvements were made to the cowling streamlining and carburetor and oil cooler intakes and the Buffalo s speed rose to 304 mph 489 km h at 16 000 ft 4 900 m without any increase in power 13 14 15 Other manufacturers took notice of this 10 increase in speed and efficiency and wind tunnel tests became standard procedure in the US 16 With only a single stage supercharger high altitude performance fell off rapidly 10 Fuselage armament was one fixed 50 in 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine gun with 200 rounds and one fixed 30 in 7 62 mm AN Browning machine gun with 600 rounds both in the nose N 1 The Navy awarded Brewster Aeronautical Corporation a production contract for 54 aircraft the F2A 1s Service testing of the XF2A 1 prototype began in January 1938 and in June production started on the F2A 1 They were powered by 940 hp 700 kW Wright R 1820 34 engines and had larger fins The added weight of two additional 50 in 12 7 mm Browning wing guns and other equipment specified by the Navy for combat operations reduced the initial rate of climb to 2 600 ft min 790 m min Plagued by production difficulties Brewster delivered only 11 F2A 1 aircraft to the Navy the remainder of the order was later diverted to the Finnish Air Force in modified form under the export designation Model 239 nbsp LT John S Thach tipped this F2A 1 onto its nose on Saratoga March 1940 nbsp F2A 3s serving as U S Navy training aircraft at NAS Miami 1942 1943A later variant the F2A 2 of which 43 were ordered by the U S Navy included a more powerful R 1820 40 engine a better propeller and integral flotation gear while still lacking pilot armor and self sealing tanks The increase in engine power was welcomed but to some extent offset by the increased loaded weight 5 942 lb 2 695 kg of the aircraft while top speed was increased to a respectable 323 mph 520 km h at 16 500 ft 5 000 m initial climb rates dropped to 2 500 ft min 760 m min Both the F2A 1 and the F2A 2 variants of the Brewster were liked by early Navy and Marine pilots including Pappy Boyington who praised the good turning and maneuvering abilities of the aircraft 17 the early models before they weighed it all down with armor plate radios and other equipment were pretty sweet little ships Not real fast but the early F2As could turn and roll in a phone booth 18 This might reasonably have been expected with the low wing loading in earlier variants which was comparable with the Mitsubishi A6M Zero s lb sq ft 19 The F2A 3 was the last version of the Buffalo to enter service with the U S Navy and Marine Corps A total of 108 examples were ordered in January 1941 By this time the Navy had become disenchanted with the Buffalo and had become especially annoyed at Brewster Aeronautical Corporation s frequent production delays and its frequent management difficulties This order was seen more as a way of keeping Brewster s production lines running they would eventually build Corsair fighters for the Navy as well as Buccaneer Bermuda dive bombers The F2A 3s were conceived as long range reconnaissance fighters with new wet wings with self sealing features and larger fuselage tanks which provided increased fuel capacity and protection but this also increased the aircraft weight by more than 500 lb 230 kg 10 The wing and enlarged fuselage tank carried an additional 80 U S gal 300 L of fuel at 6 lb U S gal 0 72 kg L the fuel alone weighed nearly 500 lb 230 kg The addition of armor plating for the pilot and increased ammunition capacity further increased the aircraft s weight resulting in a reduced top speed and rate of climb while substantially degrading the Brewster s turning and maneuvering capability 10 The Navy found that the added weight of the F2A 3 also aggravated the problem of landing gear failure during carrier landings However the 40 two speed 20 supercharged Cyclone engine in the F2A 3 was an excellent cruising engine and as such the F2A 3 had some value and saw initial service on the carriers Saratoga and Lexington Even in late 1940 it was apparent that the Buffalo was rapidly becoming obsolete N 2 It badly needed a more powerful engine and an enlarged wing to offset the increased weight but the limits of the airframe had been reached making installation of a larger engine impossible Soon after deliveries of the F2A 3 began the Navy decided to eliminate the type altogether However a project was begun to replace the wing mounted 50 M2 machine guns with two M2 20mm cannons At least eight sets of wings were completed and at least one F2A 3 was fitted with them preserved photographically By then considered a second line aircraft some were transferred to the U S Marine Corps which deployed two F2A 3 squadrons to the Pacific one at Palmyra Atoll and another at Midway Island Those which still remained on board aircraft carriers narrowly missed a combat opportunity when a relief mission was dispatched to Wake Island but the relief force was withdrawn before completing the mission Shortly thereafter F2A 3s still in naval service were transferred to training squadrons for use as advanced trainers Operational history editThe first unit to be equipped with the F2A 1 was Lt Cdr Warren Harvey s VF 3 assigned to USS Saratoga air group On 8 December 1939 VF 3 received 10 of the 11 Buffalos delivered to the U S Navy 21 The remaining 43 F2A 1s were declared surplus to be replaced with an equal number of the improved F2A 2s and sold to Finland 22 Ralph Ingersoll wrote in late 1940 after visiting Britain that the Buffalo and other American aircraft cannot compete with either the existing English or German fighters so Britain used them either as advanced trainers or for fighting equally obsolete Italian planes in the Middle East That is all they are good for Even the Eagle Squadrons s American pilots used Hawker Hurricanes instead of the Buffalo 23 Early in the war all modern monoplane fighter types were in high demand however Consequently the United Kingdom Belgium and the Netherlands East Indies purchased several hundred export models 24 Finland edit nbsp Finnish company Nokia donated sufficient funds for the FAF to purchase a B 239 In return NOKA was inscribed on BW 355 Operated by No 24 Squadron it was destroyed on 24 October 1944 25 Future ace Paavo Mellin shot down an I 16 and shared in the destruction of a MiG 3 whilst flying this aircraft 26 In April 1939 the Finnish government contacted the Roosevelt administration requesting the supply of modern combat aircraft as quickly as possible On 17 October the Finnish Embassy in Washington D C received a telegram clearing the purchase of fighter aircraft The only strict requirements laid down by Finnish authorities were that the aircraft be already operational and able to use 87 octane fuel 27 Part of an F2A 1 shipment 44 aircraft originally intended for the US Navy was diverted to Finland N 3 by the US State Department after the USN agreed to instead accept a later shipment of F2A 2 variants On 16 December the Finnish government signed a contract to purchase 44 aircraft a F2A 1 variant designated Model B 239E by Brewster 27 Unlike other fighters already in service the F2A 1 and B 239E lacked self sealing fuel tanks and cockpit armor However the B 239E was built with a more powerful engine than the F2A 1 in the form of the Wright R 1820 G5 producing 950 hp 710 kW 28 and the capacity to carry four machine guns rather than the two carried by the F2A 1 The B 239E was also de navalized before shipment equipment such as tailhooks and life raft containers were removed 28 The upgraded engine and slightly reduced net weight i e from the omitted armor and de navalization resulted in an improved power to weight ratio and better general performance In four batches the B 239E was shipped initially to Bergen in Norway in January and February 1940 from New York City The crated fighters were then sent by railway to Sweden and assembled by SAAB at Trollhattan northeast of Gothenburg 29 After delivery of the B 239E the Finnish Air Force added armored backrests metric flight instruments the Vaisala T h m 40 gunsight and four 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns The top speed of the Finnish B 239s as modified was 297 mph 478 km h at 15 675 ft 4 778 m and their loaded weight was 5 820 lb 2 640 kg 11 30 In February 1940 pilot Lieutenant Jorma Joppe Karhunen flight tested the first B 239 to become operational in Finland 11 31 Unfamiliar with the aircraft he burned out the engine while flying very low at high speed crashing on a snow covered field damaging the propeller and some belly panels 11 31 Initially unimpressed the Finns later witnessed a demonstration by a Brewster test pilot who was able to stay on the tail of a Finnish Fiat G 50 Freccia N 4 fighter from Italy although the Fiat fighter was faster in level flight N 5 the Brewster could out turn it 32 None of the B 239E fighters saw combat in the Winter War 1939 1940 However five of the six delivered during the war became combat ready before it ended The B 239E was never referred to as the name Buffalo in Finland it was known simply as the Brewster or by the nicknames Taivaan helmi sky pearl or Pohjoisten taivaiden helmi pearl of the northern skies Other nicknames were Pylly Valtteri lit butt walter Amerikanrauta American hardware or American car and Lentava kaljapullo flying beer bottle citation needed The total of 44 examples of the B 239E fighters used by the FAF received serial numbers BW 351 to BW 394 nbsp Finnish Air Force Brewster B 239 formation during the Continuation WarFinnish pilots regarded the B 239E as being easy to fly or in the words of ace Ilmari Juutilainen a gentlemen s travelling or touring plane 33 The Buffalo was also popular within the FAF because of its relatively long range and good maintenance record This was in part due to the efforts of the Finnish mechanics who solved a problem that plagued the Wright Cyclone engine by inverting one of the piston rings in each cylinder which had a positive effect on reliability citation needed The cooler weather of Finland also helped because the engine was prone to overheating as noted in tropical Pacific use The Brewster Buffalo earned a reputation in Finnish Air Force service as one of its more successful fighter aircraft along with the Fiat G 50 which scored an unprecedented kill loss ratio of 33 1 34 In service from 1941 to 1945 Buffalos of Lentolaivue 24 Fighter Squadron 24 claimed 477 Soviet Air Force warplanes destroyed with the combat loss of just 19 Buffalos an outstanding victory ratio of 26 1 35 During the Continuation War Lentolaivue 24 Fighter Squadron 24 was equipped with the B 239s until May 1944 when the Buffalos were transferred to Havittajalentolaivue 26 Fighter Squadron 26 Most of the pilots of Lentolaivue 24 were Winter War combat veterans This squadron claimed a total of 459 Soviet aircraft with B 239s while losing 15 Buffalos in combat 11 The Brewsters had their baptism by fire in Finland on 25 June 1941 when a pair of Buffalos from 2 LLv24 operating from Selanpaa airfield ICAO EFSE intercepted 27 Soviet Tupolev SBs from 201st SBAP N 6 near Heinola Five SBs were claimed as downed Subsequent attacks were repelled by LLv24 pilots who by dusk had flown 77 sorties 36 Many Finnish pilots racked up enormous scores by using basic tactics against Soviet aircraft The default tactic was the four plane parvi swarm with a pair flying lower as bait and a higher pair to dive on enemy interceptors The Soviet Air Force was never able to counter this tactic The top scoring B 239 pilot was Hans Wind with 39 kills 37 Lt Hans Wind with six other Buffalos of LeLv 24 intercepted some 60 Soviet aircraft near Kronstad Two Soviet Pe 2 bombers one Soviet Hawker Hurricane fighter and 12 I 16s were claimed for the loss of just one B 239 BW 378 38 After evaluation of claims against actual Soviet losses aircraft BW 364 was found to have been used to achieve 42 kills in total by all pilots operating it possibly making it the highest scoring fighter airframe in the history of air warfare citation needed The top scoring Finnish ace Ilmari Juutilainen scored 34 of his 94 kills in B 239s including 28 in BW 364 39 During the Continuation War a lack of replacements led the Finns to develop a copy of the Buffalo built from non strategic materials such as plywood however the Humu as they called it was already obsolete and only a single prototype was built By late 1943 the lack of spares wear and tear and better Soviet fighters and training greatly reduced the effectiveness of Finnish B 239s though LeLv 26 pilots would still claim some 35 victories against Soviet aircraft in mid 1944 The last victory by a Buffalo against Soviet aircraft was claimed over the Karelian Isthmus on 17 June 1944 24 From 1943 Finland s air force received Messerschmitt Bf 109Gs from Germany and this much superior fighter re equipped most Finnish Air Force fighter squadrons After Finland signed an armistice with the Soviet Union in September 1944 they had to drive Finland s former ally Nazi Germany out of the country during the Lapland War The only clash with the Luftwaffe took place on 3 October 1944 when HLeLV 26 intercepted Junkers Ju 87s claiming two the last victories to be made by Brewster pilots in World War II 40 By the end of the war in Lapland only eight B 239s were left Five B 239s continued to fly until 1948 with last flights of Brewsters by the Finnish Air Force on 14 September 1948 when they were stored until scrapped in 1953 41 Belgium edit Just before the start of the war Belgium sought more modern aircraft to expand and modernize its air force Belgium ordered 40 Brewster B 339 aircraft a de navalized F2A 2 fitted with the Wright R 1820 G 105 engine approved for export use The G 105 engine had a power output of 1 000 hp 745 7 kW peak on takeoff some 200 hp 150 kW less than the engine fitted to the U S Navy F2A 2 The arrestor hook and liferaft container were removed and the aircraft was modified with a slightly longer tail Only one aircraft 42 43 N 7 reached France by the time Germany launched its Blitzkrieg in the West on 10 May 1940 The Buffalo was later captured intact by the Germans and it was partially rediscovered near Darmstadt in 1945 44 Six more Belgian Brewsters were offloaded at the French Caribbean island of Martinique and languished on a coastal hillside never to be flown 45 The rest of the order went to the RAF British Commonwealth Malaya edit nbsp Brewster Buffalo Mk Is being inspected by RAF personnel at RAF Sembawang Singapore in April 1941 46 Facing a shortage of combat aircraft in January 1940 the British Purchasing Commission was established to acquire U S aircraft that would help supplement domestic production Among the U S fighter aircraft that caught the Commission s attention was the Brewster The remaining 32 B 339 aircraft ordered by the Belgians suspended at the fall of France were passed on to the United Kingdom 47 Appraisal by Royal Air Force acceptance personnel criticized it on numerous points including inadequate armament and lack of pilot armor poor high altitude performance engine overheating maintenance issues and cockpit controls while it was praised for its handling roomy cockpit and visibility 11 With a top speed of about 323 mph 520 km h at 21 000 ft 6 400 m but with fuel starvation issues over 15 000 ft 4 600 m it was considered unfit for duty in western Europe 11 Still desperately in need of fighter aircraft in the Pacific and Asia for British and Commonwealth air forces the UK ordered an additional 170 aircraft under the type specification B 339E 48 Delivery and assembly of the Buffalos in Singapore took place in the spring of 1941 49 The first Buffalo units Nos 67 and 243 Squadron RAF were formed at RAF Kallang in March 1941 50 nbsp Brewster B 339E AN196 WP W of No 243 Squadron RAF This aircraft was flown by Flying Officer Maurice Holder who flew the first Buffalo sortie in the Malayan Campaign on 8 December 1941 strafing landing barges on the Kelantan River 51 Damaged by ground fire it was abandoned at RAF Kota Bharu before its fall to the Japanese 51 The B 339E or Brewster Buffalo Mk I as it was designated in British service was initially intended to be fitted with an export approved Wright R 1820 G 105 Cyclone engine with a 1 000 hp 745 7 kW peak takeoff engine 52 N 8 The Brewster aircraft delivered to British and Commonwealth air forces were significantly altered from the B 339 type sold to the Belgium and French forces in accordance with their purchase order The Brewster factory removed the Navy life raft container and arrestor hook while adding many new items of equipment including a British Mk III reflector gun sight a gun camera a larger fixed pneumatic tire tail wheel fire extinguisher engine shutters a larger battery and reinforced armor plating and armored glass behind the canopy windshield 53 The Brewster Model B 339E as modified and supplied to Great Britain was distinctly inferior in performance to the F2A 2 Model B 339 from the original order It had a less powerful 1 000 hp 745 7 kW engine compared to the F2A 2 s 1 200 hp 890 kW Cyclone yet was substantially heavier due to all of the additional modifications by some 900 lb 410 kg The semi retractable tail wheel had been exchanged for a larger fixed model which was also less aerodynamic Top speed was reduced from 323 to 313 mph 520 to 504 km h at combat altitudes 11 In its original form the B 339 had a theoretical maximum speed of 323 mph 520 km h at a rather unrealistic 21 000 ft 6 400 m but fuel starvation problems and poor supercharger performance at higher altitudes meant that this figure was never achieved in combat the B 339E was no different in this regard Its maneuverability was severely impaired the aircraft was unable to perform loops and initial rate of climb was reduced to 2 300 ft min 700 m min The Wright Cyclone 1890 G 105 engine designated for use in the Brewster Mk I was in short supply many aircraft were fitted with secondhand Wright engines sourced from Douglas DC 3 airliners and rebuilt to G105 or G102A specifications by Wright 48 In service some effort was made by at least one Brewster squadron to improve the type s sluggish performance a few aircraft were lightened by some 1 000 lb 450 kg by removing armor plate armored windshields radios gun camera and all other unnecessary equipment and by replacing the 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns with 303 in 7 7 mm machine guns 54 The fuselage tanks were filled with a minimum of fuel and run on high octane aviation petrol where available At Alor Star airfield in Malaya the Japanese captured over 1 000 barrels 160 m3 of high octane aviation petrol from British forces which they promptly used in their own fighter aircraft 55 nbsp Buffalo Mk I formation over Malaya late 1941 Many of the pilots assigned the Buffalo lacked adequate training and experience in the type A total of 20 of the original 169 Buffalos were lost in training accidents during 1941 By December 1941 approximately 150 Buffalo B 339E aircraft made up the bulk of the British fighter defenses of Burma Malaya and Singapore The two RAAF two RAF and one RNZAF squadrons during December 1941 January 1942 were beset with numerous problems 56 including poorly built and ill equipped aircraft 11 Aviation historian Dan Ford characterized it as The performance was pathetic Inadequate spare parts and support staff airfields that were difficult to defend against air attack lack of a clear and coherent command structure a Japanese spy in the Army air liaison staff antagonism between RAF and RAAF squadrons and personnel and inexperienced pilots lacking appropriate training would lead to disaster Although the Mk I had 50 inch guns many aircraft were equipped with 303 Browning mounts and electric firing solenoids which tended to fail in service 48 Moreover according to Flight Lieutenant Mowbray Garden of 243 Squadron RAF the Buffalos were supplied with only armour piercing ammunition and no incendiary 49 Japanese aircraft lacked armor and self sealing fuel tanks in the early years of the war a fact unknown to the Allies at the time nbsp Buffalos of No 453 Squadron RAAF lined up at RAF Sembawang in November 1941 Buffalo AN185 TD V was flown by Flt Lt Doug Vanderfield who shot down three Japanese bombers two Ki 48s and one Ki 51 over Butterworth Penang on 13 December 1941 while his undercarriage was still down 57 When the Japanese invaded northern Malaya on 8 December 1941 the B 339E initially performed adequately Against the Nakajima Ki 27 Nate the overloaded Brewsters could at least hold their own if given time to get to altitude and at first achieved a respectable number of kills However the appearance of ever greater numbers of Japanese fighters including markedly superior types such as the Nakajima Ki 43 Oscar soon overwhelmed the Buffalo pilots both in the air and on the ground Another significant factor was the Brewster engine s tendency to overheat in the tropical climate which caused oil to spray over the windscreen usually forcing an aborted mission and greatly complicating attempts to intercept and destroy enemy aircraft In the end more than 60 Brewster Mk I B 339E aircraft were shot down in combat 40 destroyed on the ground and approximately 20 more destroyed in accidents Only about 20 Buffalos survived to reach India or the Dutch East Indies 58 The last airworthy Buffalo in Singapore flew out on 10 February five days before the island fell 59 It is not entirely clear how many Japanese aircraft the Buffalo squadrons shot down although RAAF pilots alone managed to shoot down at least 20 60 Eighty were claimed in total a ratio of kills to losses of just 1 3 to 1 Additionally most of the Japanese aircraft shot down by the Buffalos were bombers 48 The Hawker Hurricane which fought in Singapore alongside the Buffalo from 20 January also suffered severe losses from ground attack most were destroyed 61 The Fleet Air Arm also used the Buffalo in the Mediterranean in the Battle of Crete in early 1941 The Brewster Mark I produced four Commonwealth aces Geoff Fisken Maurice Holder A W B Alf Clare and R D Doug Vanderfield 62 New Zealander Fisken the top scoring pilot later flew RNZAF P 40s and became the highest scoring Commonwealth pilot within the Pacific theatre Japanese invasion of Burma edit Main article Japanese invasion of Burma nbsp Flying officer Edward Sadler of 67 Squadron RAF with a Nakajima Ki 27 that was shot down near Rangoon on 24 January 1942No 67 Squadron RAF was originally formed in Singapore before their redeployment to Burma in October 1941 50 They were equipped with thirty Buffalos inherited from 60 Squadron RAF at Mingaladon the aircraft they received in Singapore were passed on to 488 Squadron RNZAF 63 They were joined by Curtiss P 40 fighters of the American Volunteer Group Flying Tigers AVG crews were initially impressed with the Buffalo some even urging General Claire Chennault to trade a squadron of P 40s for Buffalos 64 In response Chennault arranged a mock dogfight between both fighters with 1st Lieutenant Erik Shilling flying the P 40 and Squadron Leader Jack Brandt flying the Buffalo 64 Over their training base in Toungoo the P 40 proved to be superior to the Buffalo 64 When Shilling and Brandt met again fifty years later the RAF pilot said how I wish I could have swapped my aircraft for yours 64 The squadron first saw action on 23 December 1941 when 15 Buffalos intercepted a formation of 42 Ki 21 heavy bombers 27 Ki 30 light bombers and 30 Ki 27 fighters during a daylight raid on Rangoon Together with twelve P 40s they claimed 13 bombers destroyed and seven probable 65 four P 40s including two pilots were lost while all the Buffalos returned safely Nevertheless the Japanese succeeded in bombing Rangoon its port facilities and RAF Mingaladon inflicting extensive damage and casualties 66 The Buffalos and P 40s carried out air defenses over Rangoon and Mingaladon as well as strafing missions on Japanese airfields Like Malaya and Singapore lack of effective early warning systems greatly hampered British and AVG efforts to defend Burma from air raids 67 Reports of Japanese aircraft performance from the Malayan Campaign prompted Buffalo pilots in Burma to employ different tactics according to Flight Sergeant Vic Bargh come in from above or at the same level at the very least then dive away before they got onto you because if they did get onto you well you were shot down 68 One of the Buffalo s final victories of the Burma Campaign was claimed by Bargh he found the wreckage of the bomber and had his picture taken with it as proof 69 The IJAAF secured air superiority over Rangoon by early February 1942 and with the situation on the ground rapidly deteriorating No 67 Squadron withdrew north to Toungoo 69 On 13 February the squadron moved further north to Magwe with only eight Buffalos where they continued to carry out reconnaissance flights as well as escorting Westland Lysanders on ground attack missions 69 The Buffalo flew its last combat sortie with the RAF on 5 March escorting Hawker Hurricanes and Bristol Blenheims for an attack on a Japanese airbase in Chiang Mai Thailand 69 Only six Buffalos remained when the squadron withdrew to Calcutta India on 11 March to re equip with Hurricanes 70 They were swiftly relegated to training duties though two were briefly acquired by No 146 Squadron RAF in early April one of which was regularly flown by Squadron Leader Count Manfred Czernin 70 No 67 Squadron claimed 27 Japanese aircraft destroyed eight Buffalos were shot down and eight pilots were killed 70 For their actions Squadron Leader Jack Brandt and Flight Lieutenant Colin Pinckney were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross the latter posthumously while Sergeant Gordon Williams received the Distinguished Flying Medal 70 Netherlands East Indies edit nbsp Brewster Buffalos of the ML KNILThe Militaire Luchtvaart van het Koninklijk Nederlands Indisch Leger Military Air Service of the Royal Netherlands East Indian Army ML KNIL had ordered 144 Brewster B 339C and 339D models the former with rebuilt Wright G 105 engines supplied by the Dutch and the latter with new 1 200 hp 890 kW Wright R 1820 40 engines Brewster purchased from Wright At the outbreak of war clarification needed only 71 had arrived in the Dutch East Indies and not all were in service A small number served briefly at Singapore before being withdrawn for the defense of Borneo and Java As the Brewster B 339 aircraft used by the ML KNIL were lighter than the modified B 339E Brewster Mark Is used by British Australian and New Zealand air forces they were able to successfully engage the Japanese Army Nakajima Ki 43 Oscar although both the Oscar and the Japanese Navy s A6M Zero still out climbed the B 339 at combat altitudes the Zero was faster as well 71 After the first few engagements the Dutch halved the fuel and ammo load in the wing which allowed their Buffalos and their Hurricanes to stay with the Oscars in turns 8 In February 1942 they received new model gunsights Around the same time the Dutch started to use tracer ammunition as well These two improved their hit ratio Still their lack of heavy machine guns 50 meant their success rate wasn t as high as it could have been 8 Apart from their role as fighters the Brewster fighters were also used as dive bombers against Japanese troopships Although reinforced by British Commonwealth Buffalo Mk I B 339E aircraft retreating from Malaya the Dutch squadrons faced superior numbers in the air usually odds of one against two or three Timely early warning from British radar would have countered this deficit especially in avoiding unnecessary losses from raids on airfields but the British government had decided too late to send these the first British radar stations became operational only towards the end of February In a major engagement above Semplak on 19 February 1942 eight Dutch Brewster fighters intercepted a formation of about 35 Japanese bombers with an escort of about 20 Zeros The Brewster pilots destroyed 11 Japanese aircraft and lost four Brewsters two Dutch pilots died 72 Only four airworthy Buffalos remained on 7 March 59 Capt Jacob van Helsdingen led this flight on its final sortie that day and was credited with a Zero before he was killed 59 This made him and Lt August Deibel the most successful Dutch pilots on the Buffalo with three victories each 59 Altogether 17 ML KNIL pilots were killed and 30 aircraft shot down 15 were destroyed on the ground and several were lost to misadventure Dutch pilots claimed 55 enemy aircraft destroyed 62 USAAF RAAF in Australia edit Following the surrender of the Netherlands East Indies on 8 March 1942 a shipment of 17 Brewster B339 23 fighters ordered for the ML KNIL was diverted to the US Fifth Air Force in Australia All of these Buffalos were subsequently lent to the RAAF which gave them the serial number prefix A51 They were used mainly for air defence duties outside frontline areas photo reconnaissance and as mock targets in gunnery training 73 They served with 1 PRU 24 Sqn 25 Sqn 85 Sqn and the Air Gunnery Training School at RAAF Williamtown 73 Between August 1942 and November 1943 10 of these Buffalos constituted the air defense force for Perth Western Australia while assigned to 25 and 85 Sqns at RAAF Pearce and RAAF Guildford In 1944 all of the surviving aircraft were transferred to the USAAF 60 U S Marine Corps edit nbsp F2A 3 probably from VMF 212 at Marine Corps Air Station Ewa Hawaii 25 April 1942 nbsp F2A 3 of VMF 211 rests in the flight deck gallery walkway after suffering landing gear failure while landing on board USS Long Island off Palmyra Atoll 25 July 1942 VMF 211 was the last Marine Corps unit to operate the F2A in a front line capacity At Midway Island United States Marine Corps fighter squadron VMF 221 operated a mixed group of 20 Brewster F2A 3 Buffalos and seven Grumman F4F 3 Wildcats 74 They were originally assigned to USS Saratoga as part of a relief force bound for Wake Island but were diverted to Midway instead after the force was controversially recalled on 22 December 1941 Wake Island fell on the following day 75 The squadron first saw action on 10 March 1942 when a Kawanishi H8K Emily flying boat was shot down by Captain James L Neefus near Midway the Buffalo s first kill in U S service 76 77 78 79 From February April 1942 the rebuilt squadron VMF 211 most of which had been lost in the Battle of Wake Island was re equipped with F2A 3s and was ferried by the escort carrier Long Island to Palmyra Atoll where it remained until recalled in July of that year ferrying their aircraft to land on Long Island to return to Hawaii to re equip with F4F 4s During the Battle of Midway in 1942 VMF 221 was destined to participate in one of the few aerial combats involving the Buffalo in U S military service The initial Buffalo interception of the first Japanese air raid was led by Major Floyd B Parks whose 13 aircraft division did not fly in paired flights of mutually supporting aircraft After attacking a formation of 30 40 Aichi D3A1 Val dive bombers escorted by 36 Zeros the Marines flying in two divisions of aircraft downed several Japanese bombers before the escorting Zeros reacted a furious dogfight developed Thirteen out of 20 Buffalos were lost 80 of the six Wildcats only two remained flyable at the end of the mission The losses included the Marine air commander Major Parks who bailed out of his burning Buffalo only to be strafed by Zeros after parachuting into the sea 74 The Marine pilots who managed to shake off the Zeros used high speed split s turns or very steep dives 74 These maneuvers were later found to be the best means to evade pursuit by the highly maneuverable Japanese fighters One F2A 3 pilot Marine Captain William Humberd dove away from his pursuers then attacked a Zero in a head on pass shooting his opponent down 81 In the battle some F2A 3s suffered from inoperative guns 11 The nose mounted guns occasional failure to fire was noticed by other users as well the phenomenon may have been caused by frayed electrical wires in the mechanism that synchronized the nose guns with the propeller Other Buffalos had not been fitted with plate armor behind the pilot making them vulnerable to even a single bullet or shell Losses were aggravated due to the Japanese practice of strafing pilots who had bailed out 74 Second Lt Charles S Hughes whose Buffalo was forced to retire at the start of the raid due to engine trouble had a ringside view of the aerial combat The Zeros came in strafing immediately afterward I saw two Brewsters trying to fight the Zeros One was shot down and the other was saved by ground fires covering his tail Both looked like they were tied to a string while the Zeros made passes at them 82 Second Lt Charles M Kunz reported that after successfully downing two Val bombers he was attacked by Japanese fighters I was at an altitude of about 9 000 ft and shoved over in a dive trying to shake the plane on my tail until I was about 20 feet from the water I was making radical turns hoping the pilot couldn t get steadied on me I glanced out of the rear and saw that it was a Zero fighter I continued flying on a rapid turning course at full throttle when I was hit in the head by a glancing bullet After he fired a few short bursts he left as I had been in a general direction of 205 degrees heading away from the island My plane was badly shot up In my opinion the Zero fighter has been far underestimated I think it is probably one of the finest fighters in the present war As for the F2A 3 or Brewster trainer it should be in Miami as a training plane rather than used as a first line fighter 81 Claire Chennault s report on the Zero and air combat reached Washington in 1941 where it was disseminated to aviation forces of the U S Army and Navy 83 This information along with the development of two plane mutual defensive formations and tactics were incorporated into U S and Marine Corps air combat training doctrine by some prescient U S commanders including Lieutenant Commander Jimmy Thach The Thach Weave was developed for use by Wildcat pilots against the Zero and was later adopted by other Wildcat squadrons in the Pacific 83 With the emergence of new tactics for the F4F 3 and F4F 4 Wildcat the Battle of Midway marked the end of the Buffalo in both U S Navy and Marine Corps fighting squadrons Surviving F2A 3 aircraft were transported to the U S mainland where they were used as advanced trainers The introduction in late 1943 of vastly superior American carrier borne fighters such as the F6F Hellcat and Vought F4U Corsair soon relegated the Brewster F2A 3 to a distant memory Buffalo aces editThe Finnish Air Force produced 36 Buffalo aces The top three were Capt Hans Wind with 39 Buffalo air victories out of 75 WO Eino Ilmari Juutilainen with 34 out of 94 and Capt Jorma Karhunen with 25 5 out of 31 5 First Lt Lauri Nissinen also had victories in the type 22 5 out of 32 5 6 The non Finnish Buffalo aces were Geoff Fisken RNZAF with six air victories and Doug Vanderfield RAAF with five individual kills plus one shared Alf Clare RAAF and Maurice Holder RAF had five victories each 62 84 Variants edit nbsp Brewster Buffalo F2A 2XF2A 1 Prototype F2A 1 with Wright R 1820 34 Cyclone engine and two guns above engine cowling plus two optional guns in the wings for the United States Navy 11 built F2A 2 with Wright R 1820 40 Cyclone engine and four guns for the United States Navy and Marines 43 built F2A 3 Improved citation needed F2A 2 for the United States Navy with larger fuel tank heavier armour and provision to carry two underwing 100 lb 45 kg bombs 108 built XF2A 4 One converted from an F2A 3 B 239 Export version of the F2A 1 for Finland with Wright R 1820 G5 Cyclone engines and four guns 44 built B 339B Export version for Belgium 40 built only two delivered to Belgium the rest to the Royal Navy s Fleet Air Arm B 339C Export version for the Netherlands East Indies with Wright GR 1820 G105 Cyclone engines 24 built B 339D Export version for the Netherlands East Indies with 1 200 hp 890 kW Wright R 1820 40 Cyclone engines 48 built 47 delivered to Dutch East Indies B 339E Export version of the F2A 2 for the Royal Air Force with Wright GR 1820 G105 Cyclone engines as the Buffalo Mk I 170 built also used by the RAAF and RNZAF B 339 23 a k a B 439 Export version of the F2A 3 for the Netherlands East Indies with 1 200 hp 890 kW Wright GR 1820 G205A engines 20 built 17 later to the RAAF some used by the USAAF Operators edit nbsp U S Navy F2A being rearmed in 1943 nbsp Australia Royal Australian Air ForceNo 21 Squadron RAAF No 24 Squadron RAAF No 25 Squadron RAAF ex Dutch No 43 Squadron RAAF No 85 Squadron RAAF ex 25 Sqn No 453 Squadron RAAF No 452 Squadron RAAF No 1 PRU RAAF ex Dutch Photo Reconnaissance Unit dd nbsp Finland Finnish Air ForceNo 24 Squadron 1941 1944 No 26 Squadron 1944 1945 dd nbsp Captured Dutch Buffalo displayed as a war trophy with Japanese roundels 85 nbsp Japan Captured Buffalos were repaired and test flown both in Japanese markings and starring in recreated combat footage in incorrect RAF markings nbsp Netherlands Militaire Luchtvaart KNILVliegtuiggroep IV 3e Afdeling 3 VLG IV 3rd Squadron IV Group Vliegtuiggroep V 1e Afdeling 1 VLG V Vliegtuiggroep V 2e Afdeling 2 VLG V helped defend Singapore Vliegtuiggroep V 3e Afdeling 3 VLG V dd nbsp New Zealand Royal New Zealand Air ForceNo 488 Squadron RNZAF dd nbsp United Kingdom Royal Air ForceNo 60 Squadron RAF No 67 Squadron RAF ex 60 Sqn most pilots were RNZAF No 71 Squadron RAF No 146 Squadron RAF ex 67 Sqn No 243 Squadron RAF most pilots were RNZAF dd Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm711 Naval Air Squadron 759 Naval Air Squadron 760 Naval Air Squadron 804 Naval Air Squadron 805 Naval Air Squadron 813 Naval Air Squadron 885 Naval Air Squadron dd nbsp United States United States Army Air Forces5th Air Force Australia ex Dutch dd United States Marine CorpsVMF 111 based at Camp Kearney Calif VMF 112 based at Camp Kearney Calif VMD 2 VMF 211 based at Palmyra Atoll VMF 212 based at MCAS Ewa VMF 213 based at MCAS Ewa VMF 214 based at MCAS Ewa VMF 221 used in Battle of Midway VMF 222 based at MCAS Ewa VMF 224 VMO 251 dd United States NavyVF 2 VF 3 VF 9 VJ 5 VJ 6 VS 201 Training Units at NAS Pensacola and NAS Miami dd Surviving aircraft and replicas edit nbsp Lauri Pekuri s FAF BW 372 at the Aviation Museum of Central Finland nbsp Replica of Lt Gerard Bruggink s B 339C at the National Military Museum in Soesterberg NetherlandsOnly export models of the Buffalo are preserved There is currently a complete Finnish B 239 BW 372 a VL Humu variant HM 671 at the Central Finland Aviation museum and two replicas one in ML KNIL markings and the other in U S Navy markings Finnish B 239 serial no BW 372 flown by Lt Lauri Pekuri was damaged by a Soviet Hawker Hurricane and crashed in 1942 on Lake Big Kolejarvi about 31 mi 50 km from Segezha Russia and was rediscovered in 1998 and is now on display at the Keski Suomen Ilmailumuseo Aviation Museum of Central Finland 85 The Finnish museum also has components from FAF BW 393 In June 2012 divers discovered the partial wreckage of a Buffalo in shallow water just off Midway Atoll The aircraft had been ditched during February 1942 after an aborted landing attempt in bad weather by 1st Lt Charles W Somers Jr USMC later Colonel USMC Ret 86 Officials at the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument where the wreckage was found have not decided whether to recover any of the parts or leave them in place 87 In July 2008 a static full scale replica B 339C was completed by the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Long Island New York The aircraft carries the markings of an ML KNIL fighter flown by Lt Gerard Bruggink two kills It was built for the Militaire Luchtvaartmuseum Military Aviation Museum at Soesterberg the Netherlands 85 88 The Cradle of Aviation Museum houses a static full scale replica model F2A 2 carrying the markings of unit 201 S 13 from VS 201 aboard USS Long Island 89 Specifications F2A 3 edit nbsp F2A 1 Buffalo 3 view drawingData from United States Navy Aircraft since 1911 90 General characteristicsCrew one Length 26 ft 4 in 8 03 m Wingspan 35 ft 0 in 10 67 m Height 12 ft 0 in 3 66 m Wing area 209 sq ft 19 4 m2 Airfoil Root NACA 23018 91 Tip NACA 23009 91 Empty weight 4 732 lb 2 146 kg Max takeoff weight 7 159 lb 3 247 kg Powerplant 1 Wright R 1820 40 Cyclone 9 9 cyl air cooled radial piston engine 1 200 hp 890 kW Propellers 3 bladedPerformance Maximum speed 321 mph 517 km h 279 kn Cruise speed 161 mph 259 km h 140 kn Range 965 mi 1 553 km 839 nmi Service ceiling 33 200 ft 10 100 m Rate of climb 2 440 ft min 12 4 m s N 9 Armament Guns 2 0 50 in 12 7 mm nose mounted M2 Browning machine guns 2 0 50 in 12 7 mm wing mounted M2 Browning machine guns Bombs 2 x bombs on underwing racks See also edit nbsp Aviation portalRelated development VL HumuAircraft of comparable role configuration and era CAC Boomerang Grumman F4F Wildcat Hawker Sea Hurricane Mitsubishi A6M Zero Polikarpov I 16Related lists List of United States Navy aircraft designations pre 1962 List of military aircraft of the United States List of fighter aircraft List of aircraft of World War IIReferences editNotes edit The guns were mounted well aft just ahead of the cockpit By the fall of 1940 the Navy had witnessed the Chance Vought XF4U 1 prototype later to become the F4U Corsair exceed 400 mph 640 km h in level flight with its huge Twin Wasp engine 11 F2A 1s had been delivered to the US Navy 44 would go to the Finnish Air Force before orders for more were cancelled at the end of the Winter War Contemporary of the Buffalo and renowned for its handling The Fiat G 50 had an all out maximum speed of 301 mph 484 km h in level flight High speed bomber air regiment Some sources claim two aircraft Some sources quote this engine as producing 1 100 hp 820 3 kW peak takeoff power there may also have been alternate use of the Wright GR 1820 G102A which was also rated for 1 100 hp 820 3 kW engine The initial rate of climb would be reduced with completely full petrol tanks 10 Citations edit Brewster F2A Buffalo Fighters United States Navy Naval History amp Heritage Command Archived from the original on 17 April 2001 Retrieved 23 September 2013 By the beginning of the Pacific War the F2A by then also known by the popular name Buffalo was passing out of carrier squadron service in favor of the F4F 3 a b Wheeler 1992 p 58 Brewster F2A Buffalo www warbirdalley com The Doublestar Group Retrieved 23 February 2015 Ethell 1995 p 212 Neulen 2000 p 217 a b Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 85 Ethell 1995 p 213 a b c Boer 2006 p 83 Theodore Taylor The Battle Off Midway Island New York Avon 1982 ISBN 0 380 78790 3 a b c d e Lundstrom 2005 p 12 a b c d e f g h i j Ford Dan The Sorry Saga of the Brewster Buffalo warbirdforum com 2008 Retrieved 6 September 2009 Shores 1971 p 133 Baugher Joe Brewster XF2A 1 U S Navy Fighter Aircraft Brewster F2A 25 December 1999 Retrieved 8 March 2009 Maas 1987 p 5 Enzo Angelucci The American Fighter Launius Roger D Chapter 2 New Facilities New Designs 1930 1945 history nasa gov Retrieved 4 April 2018 West Rick Pappy Boyington and the Buffalo Interview of Pappy Boyington October 1977 www warbirdforum com Retrieved 8 March 2009 Boyington Baa Baa Black Sheep citation needed Green William Swanborough Gordon 2001 The Great Book of Fighters MBI Publishing ISBN 978 0760311943 Graham White Allied Aircraft Piston Engines of WWII Stenman and Thomas 2010 pp 6 7 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 7 Ingersoll Ralph 1940 Report on England November 1940 New York Simon and Schuster pp 139 154 156 a b Stenman and Keskinen 1998 p 74 Stenman 2001 p 27 Stenman 2001 p 39 a b Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 10 a b Maas Jim Brewster F2A 1 amp Model 239 clubhyper com Retrieved 8 March 2009 Stenman and Thomas 2010 pp 10 11 Finnish Air Force Fighters 1939 1945 Performance specifications geocities com Retrieved 25 October 2010 a b Lindberg J Jorma Joppe Karhunen Archived July 19 2009 at the Wayback Machine Fighter Tactics Academy January 2006 Retrieved 10 August 2009 Ford Dan reprinted by Jarmo Lindberg Robert Winston and the Finnish Brewsters 1940 part 1 warbirdforum com June 2008 Retrieved 30 October 2010 Ilmari Juutilainen century of flight net 2019 11 15 Arena 1996 p 483 Stenman and Keskinen 1998 p 86 Stenman and Thomas 2010 pp 11 12 Stenman and Keskinen 1998 p 76 Neulen 2000 p 208 Stenman and Keskinen 1998 p 75 Stenman and Thomas 2010 pp 83 84 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 84 Pacco 2003 p 71 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 8 Brewster Buffalo NX56B Archived from the original on 2018 09 09 Retrieved 2018 09 09 Some of the Belgian Brewster 339B Buffalo s in storage at La Pointe des Sables on the French island Martinique belgian wings be Archived from the original on 18 January 2018 Retrieved 4 April 2018 https eresources nlb gov sg newspapers digitised page straitstimes19410419 1 1 10 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 8 a b c d Rickard J Brewster Buffalo in British Service historyofwar org 27 June 2007 Retrieved 6 September 2009 a b Cull Sortehaug and Haselden 2003 p 15 a b Cull Sortehaug and Haselden 2003 p 14 a b Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 44 Baugher Joe Brewster Buffalo Mk I U S Navy Fighter Aircraft Brewster F2A 5 March 2003 Retrieved 12 August 2010 1 48 Brewster B 339 Buffalo Pacific Theater Archived October 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine tamiya com Retrieved 10 September 2007 Gunston Bill The Illustrated Directory of Fighting Aircraft of World War II Salamander Books 1988 ISBN 0 86288 672 4 Cull Sortehaug and Haselden 2003 Harper 1946 pp 1 2 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 46 Huggins 2007 pp 35 36 a b c d Stenman amp Thomas 2010 p 67 a b Dennis et al 2008 p 115 Wixey 2003 pp 38 39 a b c Flores Santiago A Notable Brewster Buffalo pilots in Southeast Asia 1941 42 warbirdforum com 2008 Retrieved 3 October 2007 Cull Sortehaug and Haselden 2003 p 26 a b c d C O Lamp 2007 unspecified page The Battle for Burma 2009 Roy Conyers Nesbit p 17 and 19 Air Battle for Burma Allied Pilots Fight for Supremacy 2016 Bryn Evans p 17 18 Stenman amp Thomas p 72 Stenman amp Thomas 2010 p 74 a b c d Stenman amp Thomas p 76 a b c d Stenman amp Thomas p 77 Stanaway 1998 p 9 Andriessen Paul Brewster 339 439 in the East Indies warbirdforum com 2008 Retrieved 10 August 2009 a b Wilson Stewart 1994 Military Aircraft of Australia Weston Creek Australia Aerospace Publications p 216 ISBN 1875671080 a b c d U S Marine Fighting Squadron VMF 221 Defends Midway Archived October 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine Pacific War Home Page Retrieved 10 August 2009 Moran 2011 p 24 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 79 James L Neefus Military Times Hall of Valor Retrieved 15 June 2011 Photo 80 G 6170 picture data Department of the Navy Naval Historical Center Retrieved 22 May 2012 Steve Horn 2005 page 137 Brewster F2A Buffalo Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 20 November 2010 a b Brewster Buffalo Part 2 USMC Combat Reports via warbirdforum com Retrieved 8 March 2009 Brewster Buffalo Part 1 USMC Combat Reports via warbirdforum com Retrieved 8 March 2009 a b Lundstrom 2005 p 480 Stenman and Thomas 2010 p 86 a b c Lindberg Jarno Annals of the Brewster Buffalo warbirdforum com Retrieved 10 August 2009 Charles Somers Recipient Military Times Hall Of Valor valor militarytimes com Retrieved 4 April 2018 Eckholm Erik 10 Feet below waters off Midway Atoll a famous flying dud The New York Times 1 January 2013 Retrieved 2 January 2013 Netherlands Military Aviation Museum Archived 2010 10 23 at the Wayback Machine militaireluchtvaartmuseum nl Retrieved 16 June 2012 Maloney Bill Cradle Of Aviation Museum Brewster F2 A2 Buffalo williammaloney com 16 August 2008 Retrieved 26 January 2010 Swanborough and Bowers 1976 p 72 a b Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography edit Arena Nino I caccia a motore radiale Fiat G 50 in Italian Modena Mucchi editore 1996 NO ISBN Boer P C The Loss of Java Singapore NUS Press 2011 ISBN 978 9971695132 Boer P C Het Verlies van Java in Dutch Amsterdam De Bataafsche Leeuw 2006 ISBN 90 6707 599 X Byk Gary Buffalo Down Under The Modeller s Guide to Australia s Inherited Fighter Glen Waverly Victoria Australia Red Roo Models Publication 1998 Cull Brian Paul Sortenhaug and Mark Haselden Buffaloes over Singapore RAF RAAF RNZAF and Dutch Brewster Fighters in Action over Malaya and the East Indies 1941 1942 London Grub Street 2003 ISBN 1 904010 32 6 Dann Richard S Ginter Steve Brewster F2A Buffalo and Export Variants Simi Valley CA Ginter Publications 2017 ISBN 978 0 9968258 6 3 Dennis Peter et al The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History Melbourne Oxford University Press Australia amp New Zealand 2008 Second edition ISBN 978 0 19 551784 2 Drendel Lou U S Navy Carrier Fighters of World War II Carrollton Texas Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1987 ISBN 0 89747 194 6 Ford Daniel The Sorry Saga of the Brewster Buffalo Air amp Space Smithsonian July 1996 Expanded and revised digital edition Warbird Books 2013 Gerdessen F Talkback Air Enthusiast No 13 August November 1980 p 78 ISSN 0143 5450 Green William and Gordon Swanborough Brewster F2A Buffalo WW2 Fact Files US Navy and Marine Corps Fighters London Macdonald and Jane s 1976 pp 5 15 ISBN 0 356 08222 9 Green William and Gordon Swanborough Brewster s Benighted Buffalo Air Enthusiast Quarterly No 1 n d pp 66 83 ISSN 0143 5450 Horn Steve The Second Attack on Pearl Harbor Operation K And Other Japanese Attempts to Bomb America in World War II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 59114 388 8 Huggins Mark Falcons on Every Front Nakajima s KI 43 I Hayabusa in Combat Air Enthusiast Issue 131 September October 2007 Keskinen Kalevi Kari Stenman and Klaus Niska Brewster B 239 ja Humu in Finnish Espoo Finland Tietoteos 1977 ISBN 951 9035 16 8 Expanded and revised edition published in two parts Brewster Model 239 Suomen Ilmavoimien Historia 1A Espoo Finland Kari Stenman Publishing 2005 ISBN 952 99432 3 7 Brewster Model 239 Suomen Ilmavoimien Historia 1B Espoo Finland Kari Stenman Publishing 2005 ISBN 952 99432 4 5 Lamp C O The Flying Tigers Poke Payoff They Saved China iUniverse 2007 ISBN 978 0 595 86785 1 Ledet Michel April 2002 Des avions allies aux couleurs japonais Allied Aircraft in Japanese Colors Avions Toute l Aeronautique et son histoire in French No 109 pp 17 21 ISSN 1243 8650 Lundstrom John B The First Team Pacific Naval Air Combat from Pearl Harbor to Midway Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 59114 471 7 Maas Jim F2A Buffalo in action Carrollton Texas Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1988 ISBN 0 89747 196 2 Moran Jim Wake Island 1941 A Battle to Make the Gods Weep Osprey Campaign 144 Botley Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2011 ISBN 978 1 849086 035 Morareau Lucien September 1998 Les oubliees des Antilles The Forgotten Ones of the Antilles Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French No 66 pp 30 37 ISSN 1243 8650 Neulen Hans Werner In the Skies of Europe Ramsbury Marlborough UK The Crowood Press 2000 ISBN 1 86126 799 1 O Leary Michael United States Naval Fighters of World War II in Action Poole Dorset UK Blandford Press 1980 ISBN 0 7137 0956 1 Pacco John Brewster B 339 Belgisch Leger Armee Belge Het militair Vliegwezen l Aeronautique militaire 1930 1940 in French Artselaar Belgium J P Publications 2003 pp 70 71 ISBN 90 801136 6 2 Raunio Jukka Lentajan nakokulma 2 Pilot s viewpoint 2 in Finnish Self published 1993 ISBN 951 96866 0 6 Shores Christopher The Brewster Buffalo Aircraft in Profile 217 Windsor Berkshire UK Profile Publications Ltd 1971 Stanaway John Nakajima Ki 43 Hayabusa Allied Code Name Oscar Bennington Vermont Merriam Press 1998 ISBN 978 1 57638 141 0 Stenman Kari and Andrew Thomas Brewster F2A Buffalo Aces of World War 2 Aircraft of the Aces Botley Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2010 ISBN 978 1 84603 481 7 Stenman Kari and Kalevi Keskinen Finnish Aces of World War 2 Botley Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 1998 ISBN 978 1 85532 783 2 Stenman Kari Lentolaivue 24 Botley Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2001 ISBN 1 84176 262 8 Swanborough Gordon and Peter M Bowers United States Navy Aircraft since 1911 London Putnam Second Edition 1976 ISBN 0 370 10054 9 Taylor John W R Brewster F2A Buffalo Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present New York G P Putnam s Sons 1969 ISBN 0 425 03633 2 Wheeler Barry C The Hamlyn Guide to Military Aircraft Markings London Chancellor Press 1992 ISBN 1 85152 582 3 Winchester Jim Brewster Buffalo The World s Worst Aircraft From Pioneering Failures to Multimillion Dollar Disasters London Amber Books Ltd 2005 ISBN 1 904687 34 2 Wixey Ken A Rotund New Yorker Brewster s Embattled Buffalo Air Enthusiast 105 May June 2003 pp 26 40 ISSN 0143 5450 Zbiegniewski Andre R Brewster F2A Buffalo bilingual Polish English Lublin Poland Kagero 2003 ISBN 83 89088 14 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brewster F2A Buffalo Manual 1939 AP 1806A Pilot s Notes The Buffalo I Aeroplane Wright Cyclone GR 1820 G 105A Engine Squadron Leader W J Harper 1946 Report on NO 21 and NO 453 RAAF squadrons transcribed by Dan Ford for Warbird s Forum Brewster F2A 3 Buffalo Finnish Buffalo BW372 recovery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brewster F2A Buffalo amp oldid 1190475885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.