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Lockheed P-2 Neptune

The Lockheed P-2 Neptune (designated P2V by the United States Navy prior to September 1962) is a maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare (ASW) aircraft. It was developed for the US Navy by Lockheed to replace the Lockheed PV-1 Ventura and PV-2 Harpoon, and was replaced in turn by the Lockheed P-3 Orion. Designed as a land-based aircraft, the Neptune never made a carrier landing, but a small number were converted and deployed as carrier-launched (using JATO assist), stop-gap nuclear bombers that would have to land on shore or ditch. The type was successful in export, and saw service with several armed forces.

P-2 (P2V) Neptune
SP-2H of VP-56 over the Atlantic.
Role Maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lockheed
First flight 17 May 1945
Introduction March 1947
Retired 1984 from military use
Primary users United States Navy
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
Royal Australian Air Force
Royal Canadian Air Force
Number built 1,177 (total)[1]
Variants Kawasaki P-2J

Design and development edit

 
XP2V-1 prototype in 1945
 
P2V-2 of VP-18 over NAS Jacksonville, 1953

Development of a new land-based patrol bomber began early in World War II, with design work starting at Lockheed's Vega subsidiary as a private venture on 6 December 1941.[2] At first, the new design was considered a low priority compared to other aircraft in development at the time, with Vega also developing and producing the PV-2 Harpoon patrol bomber. On 19 February 1943, the U.S. Navy signed a letter of intent for two prototype XP2Vs, which was confirmed by a formal contract on 4 April 1944 with a further 15 aircraft being ordered 10 days later.[3] It was not until 1944 that the program went into full swing.[4] A major factor in the design was ease of manufacture and maintenance, and this may have been a major factor in the type's long life and worldwide success. The first aircraft flew in May 1945. Production began in 1946, and the aircraft was accepted into service in 1947. Potential use as a bomber led to successful launches from aircraft carriers.[5]

Beginning with the P2V-5F model, the Neptune became one of the first operational aircraft fitted with both piston and jet engines. The Convair B-36, several Boeing C-97 Stratofreighter, Fairchild C-123 Provider, North American AJ Savage, and Avro Shackleton aircraft were also so equipped. To save weight and complexity of two separate fuel systems, the Westinghouse J34 jet engines on P2Vs burned the 115–145 Avgas fuel of the piston engines, instead of jet fuel. The jet pods were fitted with intake doors that remained closed when the J-34s were not running. This prevented windmilling, allowing for economical piston-engine-only long-endurance search and patrol operations. In normal US Navy operations, the jet engines were run at full power (97%) to assure takeoff, then shut down upon reaching a safe altitude. The jets were also started and kept running at flight idle during low-altitude (500-foot (150 m) during the day and 1,000-foot (300 m) at night) anti-submarine and/or anti-shipping operations as a safety measure should one of the radials develop problems.

Normal crew access was via a ladder on the aft bulkhead of the nosewheel well to a hatch on the left side of the wheel well, then forward to the observer nose, or up through another hatch to the main deck. There was also a hatch in the floor of the aft fuselage, near the sonobuoy chutes.

Operational history edit

Early Cold War edit

 
Emerson nose turret from the Neptune at the National Naval Aviation Museum, Florida, 2007

Prior to the introduction of the P-3 Orion in the mid-1960s, the Neptune was the primary U.S. land-based anti-submarine patrol aircraft, intended to be operated as the hunter of a '"Hunter-Killer" group, with destroyers employed as killers. Several features aided the P-2 in its hunter role:

  • Sonobuoys could be launched from a station in the aft portion of the fuselage and monitored by radio
  • Some models were equipped with "pointable" twin .5 in (12.70 mm) machine guns in the nose, but most had a forward observation bubble with an observer seat, a feature often seen in images.
  • The AN/ASQ-8 Magnetic Anomaly Detector was fitted in an extended tail, producing a paper chart. Unmarked charts were not classified, but those with annotations were classified as secret.
  • A belly-mounted AN/APS-20 surface-search radar enabled detection of surfaced and snorkeling submarines at considerable distances.

As the P-2 was replaced in the US Navy by the P-3A Orion in active Fleet squadrons in the early and mid-1960s, the P-2 continued to remain operational in the Naval Air Reserve through the mid-1970s, primarily in its SP-2H version. As active Fleet squadrons transitioned to the P-3B and P-3C in the mid- and late-1960s and early 1970s, the Naval Air Reserve P-2s were eventually replaced by P-3As and P-3Bs and the P-2 exited active U.S. naval service. VP-23 was the last active duty patrol squadron to operate the SP-2H, retiring its last Neptune on 20 February 1970,[6] while the last Naval Reserve patrol squadron to operate the Neptune, VP-94, retired its last SP-2H in 1978.

Nuclear bomber edit

 
A P2V takes off from USS Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1951

At the end of World War II, the US Navy felt the need to acquire a nuclear strike capability to maintain its political influence. In the short term, carrier-based aircraft were the best solution. The large Fat Man nuclear munitions at that time were bulky and required a very large aircraft to carry them. The US Navy Bureau of Ordnance built 25 outdated but more compact Little Boy nuclear bomb designs to be used in the smaller bomb bay of the P2V Neptune. There was enough fissionable material available by 1948 to build ten complete uranium projectiles and targets, although there were only enough initiators to complete six.[7][8] The U.S. Navy improvised a carrier-based nuclear strike aircraft by modifying the P2V Neptune for carrier takeoff using jet assisted takeoff (JATO) rocket boosters, with initial takeoff tests in 1948. However, the Neptune could not land on a carrier, therefore the crew had to either make their way to a friendly land base after a strike, or ditch in the sea near a U.S. Navy vessel. It was replaced in this emergency role by the North American AJ Savage (transferred to the Pacific Fleet in October 1952) the first nuclear strike aircraft that was fully capable of carrier launch and recovery operations; it was also short-lived in that role as the US Navy was adopting fully jet powered nuclear strike aircraft.[9]

Covert operations P2V-7U/RB-69A variants edit

 
Side view of RB-69A, the first converted P2V-7U

In 1954 under Project Cherry, the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) obtained five newly built P2V-7 and converted these into P2V-7U/RB-69A variants by Lockheed's Skunk Works at Hangar B5 in Burbank, California, for the CIA's own private fleet of covert ELINT/ferret aircraft. Later, to make up for P2V-7U/RB-69A operational losses, the CIA obtained and converted two existing US Navy P2V-7s, one in September 1962, and one in December 1964 to P2V-7U/RB-69A Phase VI standard, and also acquired an older P2V-5 from the US Navy as a training aircraft in 1963. Test flights were made by lead aircraft at Edwards AFB from 1955 to 1956, all the aircraft painted with dark sea blue color but with USAF markings. In 1957 one P2V-7U was sent to Eglin AFB for testing aircraft performance at low level and under adverse conditions.

The initial two aircraft were sent to Europe, based at Wiesbaden, West Germany, but were later withdrawn in 1959 when the CIA reduced its covert aircraft assets in Europe. The CIA sent the other two P2V-7U/RB-69As to Hsinchu Air Base, Taiwan, where by December 1957, they were given to a "Black Op" unit, the 34th Squadron, better known as the Black Bat Squadron, of the Republic of China Air Force; these were painted in ROCAF markings. The ROCAF P2V-7U/RB-69A's mission was to conduct low-level penetration flights into mainland China to conduct ELINT/ferret missions including mapping out China's air defense networks, inserting agents via airdrop, and dropping leaflets and supplies. The agreement for plausible deniability between US and Republic of China (ROC) governments meant the RB-69A would be manned by ROCAF crew while conducting operational missions, but would be manned by CIA crew when ferrying RB-69A out of Taiwan or other operational area to US.[citation needed]

The P2V-7U/RB-69A flew with ROCAF Black Bat Squadron over China from 1957 to November 1966. All five original aircraft (two crashed in South Korea, three shot down over China) were lost with all hands on board. In January 1967, two remaining RB-69As flew back to NAS Alameda, California, and were converted back to regular US Navy P2V-7/SP-2H ASW aircraft configurations.[10][11] Most of the 34th Squadron's Black Op missions remain classified by the CIA—though a CIA internal draft history, Low-Level Technical Reconnaissance over Mainland China (1955–66), reference CSHP-2.348, written in 1972 that covers CIA/ROCAF 34th Squadron's Black Op missions is known to exist. The CIA does not plan to declassify it until after 2022.[12]

Vietnam War edit

 
OP-2E Neptune formerly of VO-67, in AMARC storage at Davis-Monthan AFB, c. 1971. The camouflage is green for low level operations over Vietnam.

During the Vietnam War, the Neptune was used by the US Navy as a gunship, as an overland reconnaissance and sensor deployment aircraft, and in its traditional role as a maritime patrol aircraft. The Neptune was also utilized by the US Army's 1st Radio Research Company (Aviation), call sign "Crazy Cat", based at Cam Ranh Air Base in South Vietnam, as an electronic "ferret" aircraft intercepting low-powered tactical voice and morse code radio signals.[13] The US Army operated the P-2 from 1967[13] until 1972, flying 42,500 hours with no accidents.[14] Observation Squadron 67 (VO-67), call sign "Lindy", was the only P-2 Neptune aircraft squadron to ever receive the Presidential Unit Citation,[citation needed] flying Igloo White missions sowing seismic and acoustic sensors over the Ho Chi Minh trail.[15] VO-67 lost three OP-2E aircraft and 20 aircrew to ground fire during its secret missions into Laos and Vietnam in 1967–68. The Republic of China Air Force (ROCAF) secret 34th Black Bat Squadron's RB-69A/P2V-7U ELINT/SIGINT aircraft flew a low level electronic reconnaissance from Da Nang Air Base, flying over Thanh Hóa Province on 20 August 1963 to investigate an air resupply drop zone that turned out to be a trap for a ROCAF C-123B airdrop mission 10 days earlier due to the air-inserted agents having been captured and turned. Next year, an air defense radar mapping mission was also flown by 34th Squadron's RB-69A/P2V-7U aircraft into North Vietnam and Laos on the night of 16 March 1964. The RB-69A took off from Da Nang, flew up the Gulf of Tonkin before coasting in near Haiphong, then flew down North Vietnam and the Laos border. The mission was requested by SOG for helping plan the insert or resupply of agents. Seven AAA sites, 14 early warning radar sites and two GCI radar signals were detected.[12]

Falklands War edit

 
The Argentine Navy SP-2H that tracked HMS Sheffield

The Argentine Naval Aviation had received at least 16 Neptunes of different variants since 1958 including eight former RAF examples for use in the Escuadrilla Aeronaval de Exploración (Naval Exploration Squadron). They were intensively used in 1978 during the Operation Soberania against Chile including over the Pacific Ocean.[16]

During the Falklands War in 1982, the last two airframes in service (2-P-111 and 2-P-112) carried out reconnaissance missions over the South Atlantic and on 4 May, after detecting a group of British warships, helped to direct an attack by two Dassault Super Étendards that resulted in the sinking of the British destroyer HMS Sheffield.[17] The lack of spare parts, caused by the US having enacted an arms embargo in 1977 due to the Dirty War, led to the type being retired before the end of the war; Argentine Air Force Lockheed C-130 Hercules took over the task of searching for targets for strike aircraft.[citation needed]

Other military operators edit

The Royal Canadian Air Force's Air Command replaced their aging Avro Lancaster maritime aircraft beginning in 1955 with P2V-7 Neptunes in the anti-submarine, anti-shipping, and maritime reconnaissance roles, as a stopgap pending deliveries of the Canadair CP-107 Argus, which began in 1960. Canadian Neptunes were delivered without the underwing Westinghouse J34 jet engine pods, which were retrofitted in 1959. Armament included two torpedoes, mines, depth charges, bombs carried internally plus unguided rockets mounted under the wings. Twenty five Neptunes served with 404, 405 and 407 squadrons until 1960. Upon unification of the Canadian Forces in 1968, the Neptune was re-designated the CP122 and was officially retired two years later.[18]

With the founding of NATO in 1949 and the resulting additional maritime commitments it entailed for Britain, The Royal Air Force Coastal Command operated 52 P2V-5s, designated Neptune MR.1, as a stop-gap modern maritime patrol aircraft until sufficient numbers of the Avro Shackleton could enter service.[19] The Neptunes were used from between 1952[20] and March 1957,[21] being used for airborne early warning experiments as well as for maritime patrol.[22]

In Australia, the Netherlands, and the US Navy, its tasks were taken over by the larger and more capable P-3 Orion, and by the 1970s, it was in use only by patrol squadrons in the US Naval Reserve and the Dutch Navy.[citation needed] The 320 Squadron of the Royal Dutch Navy retired its last seven Neptunes in March 1982 as they were being replaced by the Lockheed Orion.[23] The US Naval Reserve retired its last Neptunes in 1978, those aircraft also having been replaced by the P-3 Orion. By the 1980s, the Neptune had fallen out of military use in most purchasing nations, replaced by newer aircraft.

The Netherlands received its first Neptunes in 1953–54, when it acquired 12 P2V-5s. These remained in service until 1960, when they were transferred to Portugal. The P2V-5s were initially not replaced, with the anti-submarine aircraft requirement being met by carrier-borne Grumman S-2 Trackers.[24] A new, urgent, requirement for maritime patrol aircraft soon developed, for service over Dutch New Guinea, and 15 new P2V-7s were purchased, entering service from September 1961. While initially employed on reconnaissance and patrol duties, as Indonesian infiltration attempts against New Guinea increased, the Neptunes added bombing and strafing operations to their patrol duties.[N 1] On 17 May 1962, a Netherlands Navy Neptune shot down an Indonesian C-47 transport. A truce ended the conflict in September 1962, with Dutch New Guinea passing to UN control before becoming part of Indonesia, and the P2V-7s returned to Europe.[25] The aircraft were upgraded to SP-2H standard soon after returning to the Netherlands, and remained in service until March 1982, when they were replaced by Lockheed Orions.[26]

 
Neptune Aviation Services' P-2V Neptune drops Phos-Chek on the 2007 WSA Complex fire in Oregon.

In Japan, the Neptune was license-built from 1966 by Kawasaki as the P-2J, with the piston engines replaced by IHI-built T64 turboprops. Kawasaki continued their manufacture much later than Lockheed did; the P-2J remained in service until 1984.

Civilian firefighting edit

P-2/P2Vs have been employed in aerial firefighting roles by operators such as Minden Air Corp and Neptune Aviation Services. The fire fighters can carry 2,080 US gal (7,900 L) of retardant and have a service life of 15,000 hours. Neptune Aviation Services proposes to replace them with British Aerospace 146 aircraft, which have an estimated service life of 80,000 hours and carry upwards of 3,000 US gal (11,000 L; 2,500 imp gal) of retardant.[27]

"The Truculent Turtle" edit

The third production P2V-1 was chosen for a record-setting mission, ostensibly to test crew endurance and long-range navigation but also for publicity purposes: to display the capabilities of the US Navy's latest patrol bomber, and to surpass the standing record set by a Japanese Tachikawa Ki-77. Its nickname was The Turtle, which was painted on the aircraft's nose (along with a cartoon of a turtle smoking a pipe pedaling a device attached to a propeller). However, in press releases immediately before the flight, the US Navy referred to it as "The Truculent Turtle".[28]

 
P2V-1 "The Turtle" in 1946

Loaded with fuel in extra tanks fitted in practically every spare space in the aircraft, "The Turtle" set out from Perth, Australia to the United States. With a crew of four (and a nine-month-old gray kangaroo, a gift from Australia for the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.) the aircraft set off on 9 September 1946, with a RATO (rocket-assisted takeoff). 2+12 days (55h, 18m) later, "The Turtle" touched down in Columbus, Ohio after 11,236.6 mi (18,083.6 km). It was the longest un-refueled flight yet beating the unofficial 10,212 mi (16,435 km) record set by the Japanese Tachikawa Ki-77. This would stand as the absolute unrefueled distance record until 1962 when it was beaten by a USAF Boeing B-52 Stratofortress, and would remain as a piston-engined record until 1986 when the Rutan Voyager broke it circumnavigating the globe. "The Turtle" is preserved at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola.

Variants edit

 
VP-5 P2V-3 in 1953
 
P2V-5 with nose turret in 1952
 
VO-67 OP-2E in 1967/68 over Laos
 
VP-7 P-2V
 
Restored French P-2H in Australia
 
US Navy VAH-21 AP-2H
 
AP-2H of Heavy Attack Squadron VAH-21
 
Minden Air's Tanker 55, formerly an SP-2H, at Fox Field
 
RB-69A of the CIA in USAF markings at Eglin AFB, Florida in 1957.
 
US Army AP-2E also designated RP-2E used in SIGINT/ELINT operations in Vietnam. The Burbank Boomerang is on display at the US Army Aviation Museum at Ft. Rucker Alabama.

Lockheed produced seven main variants of the P2V. In addition, Kawasaki built the turboprop-powered P-2J in Japan.

XP2V-1
Prototype, two built. Powered by two 2,300 horsepower (1,700 kW) Wright R-3350-8 engines with four-bladed propellers, with armament of two .50 in machine guns in nose, tail and dorsal turrets, and 8,000 pounds (3,600 kg) of stores in an internal bomb bay.[4]
P2V-1
First production model with R-3350-8A engine. Provision for 16 5-inch (127 mm) HVAR or 4 11+34-inch (300 mm) Tiny Tim rockets underwing; 14 built.[29]
XP2V-2
Fifth production P2V-1 modified as a prototype for P2V-2. Powered by water injected R-3350-24W engines.[30]
P2V-2
Second production model, powered by two 2,800 horsepower (2,100 kW) R-3350-24W engines driving three-bladed propellers. Nose turret replaced by "attack" nose fitted with six fixed 20 mm cannon. First eight aircraft retained Bell tail turret fitted with twin .50 (12.7 mm) machine guns, with remaining aircraft using Emerson tail turret with twin 20 mm cannon. 80 built.[29][30]
P2V-2N "Polar Bear"
Two P2V-2 modified for polar exploration under Project Ski Jump. Armament removed, with ski landing gear and provision for JATO rockets. Fitted with early MAD gear for magnetic survey purposes. Used for Operation Deep Freeze Antarctic exploration.[29][31] The specially modified P2Vs had 16-foot (4.9 m) long aluminum skis that were attached to the main landing gear units that when retracted, tucked into fairing just below the engines. This way the modified P2Vs could still land on a regular runway surface.[32]
P2V-2S
One P2V-2 modified as a prototype anti-submarine variant with an AN/APS-20 search radar and additional fuel.[33]
P2V-3
Improved patrol bomber with 3,200 horsepower (2,400 kW) R-3350-26W engines with jet stack engine exhausts. 53 built.[33][34]
P2V-3B
Conversions from other P2V-3 models, including P2V-3C and −3W, fitted with the ASB-1 Low Level Radar Bombing System; 16 converted. Redesignated as P-2C in 1962.[35]
P2V-3C
Stop-gap carrier based one-way nuclear-armed bomber, not intended to return for a landing on a carrier. Fitted with JATO rocket to aid take-off from carrier and more fuel. Nose guns and dorsal turret removed to save weight. 11 P2V-3s and one P2V-2 modified.[36]
P2V-3W
Airborne Early Warning variant, AN/APS-20 search radar; 30 built.[36]
P2V-3Z
VIP combat transport with armored cabin in rear fuselage with seats for six passengers. Retained tail turret. Two converted from P2V-3s.[36]
P2V-4
Improved anti-submarine aircraft. Fitted with AN/APS-20 search radar and provision for dropping sonobuoys with additional dedicated sonobuoy operator. Underwing tip-tanks added, with searchlight in nose of starboard tip tank. Gun Turrets in tail and dorsal position. First 25 aircraft powered by 3,200 horsepower (2,400 kW) R-3350-26WA engines, with remaining 27 powered by 3,250 horsepower (2,420 kW) Wright R-3350-30W turbo-compound engines. 52 built in total. Surviving aircraft redesignated P-2D in 1962.[36][37]
P2V-5
Fitted with Emerson nose turret with two 20 mm cannon replacing solid nose of earlier versions, while retaining dorsal and tail turrets. New, larger, jettisonable tip tanks, with traversable searchlight slaved to nose turret in front of starboard tip-tank and AN/APS-8 radar in nose of port tip-tank. AN/APS-20 search radar under fuselage. Later aircraft featured glazed observation nose and MAD gear in place of nose and tail turrets, and revised crew accommodation, with many earlier aircraft refitted.[38][39] Dorsal turret often removed. 424 built.[40]
P2V-5F
Modification with two 3,250 pounds-force (14.5 kN) J34 jet engines to increase power on take-off, and 3,500 horsepower (2,600 kW) R-3350-32W piston engines.[41] The J34 engines and R-3350 had a common fuel system burning AvGas rather than having dedicated jet fuel (as did all Neptunes with jets except the Kawasaki P-2J).[citation needed] Four underwing rocket pylons removed but increased 10,000 pounds (4,500 kg) weapon load.[38] Redesignated P-2E in 1962.[42]
P2V-5FD
P2V-5F converted for drone launch missions. All weaponry deleted. Redesignated DP-2E in 1962.[38]
P2V-5FE
P2V-5F with additional electronic equipment. Redesignated EP-2E in 1962.[42]
P2V-5FS
P2V-5F with Julie/Jezebel ASW gear, featuring AQA-3 long range acoustic search equipment and Julie explosive echo sounding gear. Redesignated SP-2E in 1962.[42]
P2V-5JF
P2V-5F modified for weather reconnaissance, to include tropical storm/hurricane/typhoon penetrations, with Airborne Early Warning Squadron THREE (VW-3) and Weather Reconnaissance Squadron FOUR (VW-4)[43]
AP-2E
Designation applied to P2V-5F with special SIGINT/ELINT equipment used by the US Army's 1st Radio Research Company at Cam Ranh Bay Air Base. Carrying a crew of up to fifteen, the AP-2E was the heaviest P-2, with a take-off weight of up to 80,000 pounds (36,000 kg).[15] Five converted (also designated RP-2E).[44]
NP-2E
Single P-2E converted as permanent test aircraft.[45]
OP-2E
Modified for use as part of Operation Igloo White for sensor deployment over South-East Asia with Observation Squadron 67 (VO-67). Fitted with terrain avoidance radar in nose, chaff dispensers, wing mounted gun pods and waist guns. 12 converted.[15]
P2V-6
Multi-role version with lengthened weapons bay and provision for aerial minelaying and photo-reconnaissance. Smaller AN/APS-70 radar instead of AN/APS-20. Initially fitted with gun turrets as P2V-5, though retaining the ability to be refitted with glazed nose. A total of 67 were built for the US Navy and France.[42][46] Redesignated P-2F in 1962.[47]
P2V-6B
Anti-shipping version with provision to carry two AUM-N-2 Petrel anti-ship missiles. 16 built. Later redesignated P2V-6M then MP-2F in 1962.[42][46]
P2V-6F
P2V-6 refitted with J34 jet engines. Redesignated P-2G in 1962.[42]
P2V-6T
Crew trainer conversion with armament deleted, wingtip tanks often deleted. Redesignated TP-2F in 1962.[42][47]
P2V-7
Last Neptune variant produced by Lockheed, powered by R-3350-32W and J-34 engines. Fitted with lower drag wingtip tanks, AN/APS-20 search radar in a revised radome and a bulged cockpit canopy. Early aircraft were fitted with defensive gun turrets but these were removed as for the P2V-5.[48] 287 were built, including 48 assembled by Kawasaki in Japan.[42] Redesignated P-2H in 1962.[49]
 
P2V-7B of the Royal Netherlands Navy
P2V-7B
15 aircraft with non-glazed nose fitted with four fixed 20 mm cannon for Royal Netherlands Naval Air Service. Subsequently fitted with glazed nose and modified to SP-2H standard.[42] Supplemented by four SP-2H from France.[50]
P2V-7LP
Four aircraft built with wheel/ski landing gear and JATO gear for Antarctic operations. Redesignated LP-2J in 1962.[42] (No relation to Kawasaki P-2J)
P2V-7S
Additional ASW/ECM equipment including Julie/Jezebel gear. Redesignated SP-2H in 1962.[45]
P2V-7U
Naval designation of the RB-69A variant.[46]
AP-2H
Specialized night and all-weather ground attack variant fitted with FLIR and Low Light TV systems, tail turret, fuselage mounted grenade launchers and downwards firing miniguns. Bombs and napalm carried on underwing pylons. Four converted in 1968 for Heavy Attack Squadron 21 (VAH-21) for operation over South Vietnam.[48]
DP-2H
P-2H converted for drone launch and control.[51]
EP-2H
Single P-2H modified with UHF telemetry equipment instead of ASW systems.[51]
NP-2H
Testbed conversion of P2V-H.[51]
RB-69A
Five new built and two converted from P2V-7s[45] for CIA covert operations, obtained with USAF help and operated by ROCAF 34th Squadron. Aerial reconnaissance/ELINT platform, modular sensor packages fitted depended on the mission needs. Originally fitted with Westinghouse APQ-56 Side Looking Airborne Radar (SLAR), the APQ-24 search radar, the Fairchild Mark IIIA cameras, the APR-9/13 radar intercept receiver, the QRC-15 DF system, the APA-69A DF display, the APA-74 pulse analyser, the Ampex tape recorder, the System 3 receiver to intercept enemy communications, the APS-54 RWR, a noise jammer, the RADAN system doppler radar navigation, and others. In May 1959, an upgrade program known as Phase VI was approved, and added the ATIR air-to-air radar jammer, replacing APR-9/13 with ALQ-28 ferret system, the QRC-15, 3 14-channel recorders and 1 7-channel high speed recorder to record ELINT systems, the K-band receiver, the ASN-7 navigation computer replacing RADAN, and Fulton Skyhook system.[52][verification needed]
Neptune MR.1
British designation of P2V-5; 52 delivered.[53]
CP-122 Neptune
RCAF designation of P2V-7.(jet pod not initially fitted to 25 P2V-7 aircraft delivered to RCAF, but subsequently retrofitted)[54]
Kawasaki P-2J (P2V-Kai)
Japanese variant produced by Kawasaki for JMSDF with T64 turboprop engines, various other improvements; 82 built.[51]
Production numbers
Aircraft Number
P2V-1 14
P2V-2 80
P2V-3 53
P2V-3W 30
P2V-4 52
P2V-5 424
P2V-6/P-2F 67
P2V-6B 16
P2V-7/P-2H 287
P2V-7B 15
RB-69A 5
Neptune MR.1 52
P-2J 82

Operators edit

 
A RAAF SP-2H with a USN P-5 and a RNZAF Sunderland in 1963
 
A Neptune MR.1 of 217 Sqn Coastal Command RAF in 1953
 
SP-2H Neptune of Flotille 25 Aeronavale, French Navy, in 1973
 
Aero Union P-2 Tanker 16 at Fox Field in 2003, without jet engines
 
Neptune Aviation Services' Tanker 44 takes off from Fox Field to fight the California wildfires of October 2007

Military operators edit

  Argentina
  Australia
  Brazil
  Canada
  France
  Japan
  Netherlands
  Portugal
  Republic of China
  United Kingdom
  United States

Civilian operators edit

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 27 November 1950 a P2V-2 crashed while conducting a test run with rockets near Kaena Point in Hawaii. The starboard wing separated from the aircraft. The crew of five died on impact.[56]
  • On 6 November 1951, a P2V of VP-6 carrying out a weather reconnaissance mission over international waters off Vladivostok was attacked and shot down by a number of MiG-15s. All ten crew were killed.[N 2]
  • On 5 January 1952, a Lockheed P2V-2 Neptune (122443) operated by the United States Navy undershot the runway at RAF Burtonwood and collided with a USAF Douglas C-47 (42-100912). One crew member on the Neptune and six others on the C-47 were killed. Fifteen others were injured, eleven on the Neptune and four on the C-47.[58]
  • On 18 January 1953, a P2V of VP-22 was shot down off Swatow in the Formosa Straits by Chinese anti-aircraft fire. Eleven of thirteen crewmen were rescued by a US Coast Guard PBM-5 under fire from shore batteries on Nan Ao Tao island. Attempting to takeoff in 8 to 12-foot swell, the PBM crashed. Ten survivors out of nineteen total (including five from the P2V) were rescued by USS Halsey Powell. During the search effort, a PBM-5 from VP-40 received fire from a small-caliber machine gun, and USS Gregory received fire from shore batteries.[N 3]
  • On December 17, 1953, P2V-5 Neptune S/N (BUN 12388) of VP-3 with a nine men crew, disappeared on a patrol flight from Keflavík Airport, an airfield near Iceland capital of Reykjavík. The wreck was sighted on Mýrdalsjökull glacier and at least three of the nine men crew were reported alive. A United States air rescue plane spotted the wreckage. Descried as "badly broken up “. The Neptune took off from Keflavík at 2 pm. Thursday for routine patrol over North Atlantic waters. It was circling back thru the storm toward that base when it radioed its last position. Helicopter lift recovered one body, but bodies of 8 men remain in the frozen wreck until spring (1954). On October 14, 1982 the remains of American crewmen was found 28 years after the crash into the glacier. The wreck was discovered by farmers rounding up sheep, apparently the glacier movement uncovered the wreck. The Crew: LT Henry Cason, LT Ishmuel M. Blum, ENS Sven Shieff, AD2 Eddie L. Cater, AN Everett Humbert, AT3 Amos W: Jones, AL2 Robert B. Whale, AO3 Marvin L Baker, ATAN William A. Ward. The Aircraft:P2V-5 Neptune, S/N: 12388
  • On 4 September 1954, a P2V-5 of VP-19 operating from NAS Atsugi ditched in the Sea of Japan, 40 miles (64 km) off the coast of Siberia after an attack by two Soviet Air Forces MiG-15s. One crewmen was killed, and the other nine were rescued by a USAF SA-16 Grumman Albatross amphibian.
  • On 22 June 1955, a P2V-5 of VP-9, flying a patrol mission from NAS Kodiak, Alaska, was attacked over the Bering Straits by two Soviet Air Forces MiG-15s. The P2V crash-landed on St. Lawrence Island after an engine was set afire. Of the eleven crew members, four sustained injuries due to gunfire and six were injured during the landing. The US government demanded $724,947 in compensation; the USSR finally paid half this amount.[N 4][N 5]
  • On 10 October 1956, a P2V-5 of No. 36 Squadron RAF (WX545) crashed into the side of Beinn na Lice, Mull of Kintyre, southwest Scotland, killing all nine crew members. WX545 was returning from an anti-submarine exercise off Derry, Northern Ireland to its base at RAF Topcliffe in North Yorkshire, England. Beinn na Lice was hidden by fog,[62][63] and a member of 36 Squadron alleges that the aircraft in the exercise had been ordered not to use radar in inshore waters.[64]
  • On 12 April 1957, a P2V-5F of VP-26 crashed on takeoff during a short takeoff practice exercise at NAS Brunswick, Maine. The apparent cause was a runaway varicam elevator control, which caused a hammerhead stall at very low altitude. The aircraft did an overhead loop, reversing its direction, but crashed into the woods near the departure end of the runway next to the base golf course. There were no survivors.[65]
  • On 21 July 1957, a US Navy Neptune searching for a sister P2V Neptune crashed near Mount Pra, Italy, near the French border, killing nine airmen. The other P2V for had disappeared two days earlier, 19 July, with 11 on board on a flight from Casablanca to Treviso.[66]
  • On 1 February 1958, USAF C-118A 53-3277 collided in mid-air with a US Navy Lockheed P2V Neptune 127723 over Norwalk, California, killing 47 of 49 on board both aircraft and 1 person on the ground.
  • On 4 February 1959, RAAF A89-308 crashed at RAAF Richmond, NSW, Australia. All eight crew died. The port engine began to disintegrate, causing a fuel leak in the wheel well. The resulting fire severed the magnesium wing spar, and the aircraft fell from the sky before the crew could bail out.
  • On 25 March 1960, an ROCAF RB-69A/P2V-7U (7101/140442/54-4040) crashed into a hill near Kunsan Air Base, South Korea, during a low-level ferry flight from Hsinchu, Taiwan to a staging area in Kunsan, South Korea. All 14 aircrew on board were killed.[12]
  • On 6 November 1961, an ROCAF RB-69A/P2V-7U (7099/140440/54-4039) conducting a low-level penetration flight over mainland China was shot down by ground fire over Liaodong peninsula. All 14 aircrew on board were killed in action.[12]
  • On 9 November 1961, an P2V-7LP of VX-6 crashed on takeoff from Wilkes Station, Antarctica, where it had refuelled en route to McMurdo Station. Four aircrew and one passenger were killed, with four aircrew surviving.[67]
  • On 8 January 1962, a ROCAF RB-69A/P2V-7U(7097/140438/54-4038) crashed into the Korea Bay while conducting ELINT and leaflet dropping missions. All 14 aircrew on board were killed in action.[12]
  • On 12 January 1962, a P2V-5 (designation LA-9) of VP-5 flew off course during a patrol over the Denmark Strait and crashed on the Kronborg Glacier in eastern Greenland. All 12 crew were killed. The wreckage was discovered by a party of British geologists in 1966.[68]
  • On 19 June 1963, an ROCAF RB-69A/P2V-7U (7105/141233/54-4041) was conducting an ELINT mission over mainland China, and was shot down by PLAAF MiG-17PF over Linchuan, Jiangxi, after being intercepted repeatedly by multiple MiG-17PFs and Tu-4Ps. All 14 aircrew on board were killed in action.[12]
  • On 11 June 1964, a RB-69A/P2V-7U (7047/135612/54-4037) was conducting an ELINT mission over mainland China and was shot down by a PLAN-AF MiG-15 over Shandong peninsula after being intercepted by MiG-15s and Il-28s. All 13 aircrew on board were killed in action.[12]
  • On 22 January 1965, an RCAF P2V-7 #24115 crashed short of the runway at CFB Summerside, Prince Edward Island, when it ran out of battery power to run the fuel pumps to the J-34 jet engines. The aircraft had lost one reciprocating engine, and the generator failed on the other. Also, because Canadian Neptunes had no other generators, these failures led to the loss of all thrust and the subsequent crash.[69]
  • On 22 January 1965, just before midnight, an MLD SP-2H (212) was taken from Vliegkamp Valkenburg, near The Hague, by two young aircraft mechanics lacking any flying experience. They managed to get the plane airborne, but stalled shortly after takeoff. It crashed into the North Sea, a few hundred metres offshore of the fishing town of Katwijk. The investigation report concluded that it was a drunken prank.[70][71]
  • On 3 December 1967, a Lockheed P-2E aircraft departed Naval Air Station Brunswick for a routine patrol flight. At some point, the aircraft developed mechanical problems and received clearance to land at Otis Air Force Base. As the aircraft was making its final approach, it crashed a half mile short of the runway. All twelve men aboard escaped; four of them suffered minor injuries. [72]
  • On 15 September 1976, an Argentine Navy Lockheed Neptune aircraft flew on a reconnaissance mission from Rio Gallegos to survey the sea ice conditions in Drake Passage at the beginning of the summer navigation season. The plane crashed in poor weather on the then-uninhabited Livingston Island, Antarctica, killing all 10 aircrew and a civilian television cameraman.[73]
  • On 5 September 2008, a Neptune Aviation Services Lockheed Neptune, registered N4235T, crashed soon after takeoff from Reno/Stead Airport, Reno, Nevada. The left engine and then left wing were seen to catch fire before the aircraft crashed. All three crew members on board were killed.[74]
  • On 3 June 2012, while engaged in firefighting operations in Utah, a Neptune Aviation Services Lockheed Neptune, registered N14447, crashed. Two crew members were killed.[75]

Surviving aircraft edit

There are a few Neptunes that have been restored and are on display in museums and parks.[76]

Argentina edit

On display
SP-2H

Australia edit

Airworthy
SP-2H
On Display
SP-2H
In Storage
SP-2H
Under Restoration
SP-2E
SP-2H

Canada edit

On display
EP-2H

Chile edit

Under restoration
SP-2H
  • 147967 – To be displayed is the Neptune /Firestar registered CC-CHU of Heliworks Ltda. Currently dismantled in Concepción/Carriel Sur airport, N703AU/Tanker 03's incorporation into Chile's Museo Nacional Aeronáutico y del Espacio collection at the former Los Cerrillos airport in Santiago, was announced during the ceremony of the 69th Anniversary of Museum on 4 July 2013.[93]

France edit

On Display
P2V-7
In Storage
P2V-7

Netherlands edit

On display
SP-2H
  • 201 – on display outside at the Nationaal Militair Museum, Soesterberg.[96]
  • 210 - on display outside at Aviodrome Lelystad AirPort. This aircraft was donated to KLM engineering & maintenance for training purposes and was painted in KLM colors. Afterwards transported by barge to Aviodrome and now in partial Dark Sea grey color.
  • 216 – gate guardian at the former naval airbase Valkenburg, after closing it was moved to naval airbase De Kooy near Den Helder, The Netherlands.[97]

Portugal edit

 
Ex-Portuguese Air Force P2V on display at the Museu do Ar in Sintra.
On display
P2V

United Kingdom edit

On display
P-2H
  • 204 – Royal Air Force Museum Cosford.[98] former Royal Netherlands Navy, last airworthy airframe donated to the UK in 1982 after arrival of the first P-3c in the Royal Netherlands Navy.

United States edit

Airworthy
P2V-7/P-2H
P2V-7S/SP-2H
On display
P2V-1
P2V-5F/P-2E
P2V-5FS/AP-2E
P2V-5FS/SP-2E
P2V-5/SP2-E
  • 128402 – On static display at Moffett Historical Museum, Moffett Federal Airfield (former NAS Moffett Field), California.[108]
P2V-7/P-2H
P2V-7S/AP-2H
P2V-7S/SP-2H
Under restoration or in storage
P2V-5
P2V-5F/P-2E
  • 131502 – in storage by Premier Jets in Hillsboro, Oregon.[116]
  • 131482 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[117]
P2V-5FS/SP-2E
  • 131542 – for static display by the Historic Aircraft Restoration Project at former NAS New York / Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn, New York.[118]
P2V-7/P-2H
  • 140154 – in storage by the Museum of Flight and Aerial Firefighting in Greybull, Wyoming.[119]
  • 140972 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[120]
  • 147949 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[121]
  • 148341 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[122]
  • 148346 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[123]
  • 148356 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[124]
  • 148359 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[125]
  • 148362 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[126]
P2V-7S/SP-2H
  • 147965 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[127]
  • 148339 – in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Montana.[128]

Specifications (P-2H / P2V-7) edit

 
3-view line drawing of the Lockheed P2V-4 Neptune

Data from Combat Aircraft since 1945[129]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 7-9
  • Length: 91 ft 8 in (27.94 m)
  • Wingspan: 103 ft 10 in (31.65 m)
  • Height: 29 ft 4 in (8.94 m)
  • Wing area: 1,000 sq ft (93 m2)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 2419 mod; tip: NACA 4410.5[130]
  • Empty weight: 49,935 lb (22,650 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 79,895 lb (36,240 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Wright R-3350-32W Duplex-Cyclone 18-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine, 3,700 hp (2,800 kW) each turbo-compound with water injection
  • Powerplant: 2 × Westinghouse J34-WE-34 turbojet engines, 3,400 lbf (15 kN) thrust each pylon mounted
  • Propellers: 4-bladed constant-speed propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 363 mph (584 km/h, 315 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 207 mph (333 km/h, 180 kn)
  • Range: 2,157 mi (3,471 km, 1,874 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 22,400 ft (6,800 m)

Armament

  • Rockets: 2.75 in (70 mm) FFAR in removable wing-mounted pods
  • Bombs: 8,000 lb (3,629 kg) including free-fall bombs, depth charges, and torpedoes

See also edit

  • Neptune Mission, a 1958 Canadian short documentary about a Neptune anti-submarine mission

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Netherlands fitted its P2V-7s with the cannon-armed nose of the P2V-3 because of the potential counter-insurgency requirements.[25]
  2. ^ During the Korean War, the US Navy operated a number of specially equipped Lockheed P2V Neptune's flying ELINT sorties against the Soviet Union...[57]
  3. ^ P2V-5 shot down by Chinese antiaircraft fire near Swatow.[59]
  4. ^ USN P2V-5 Neptune of VP-9[60]
  5. ^ (This was the only incident in which the Soviet Union admitted any responsibility.[61])

Citations edit

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  4. ^ a b Francillon 1982, p. 259.
  5. ^ "Big Navy bomber flies from ship". Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). Associated Press. 19 March 1949. p. 2.
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  7. ^ Hansen 1995.
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Bibliography edit

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  • Burden, Rodney A.; Draper, Michael I.; Rough, Douglas A.; Smith, Colin R.; Wilton, David. Falklands: The Air War. British Aviation Research Group, 1986. ISBN 0-906339-05-7.
  • Donald, David, ed. "Lockheed P2V Neptune". The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1997. ISBN 0-7607-0592-5
  • Eden, Paul. "Lockheed P2V Neptune". Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft. London: Amber Books, 2004. ISBN 1-904687-84-9.
  • "Fledgling Neptune: A Portfolio of Early Lockheed P2Vs". Air Enthusiast (84): 64–65. November–December 1999. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Francillon, René J. Lockheed Aircraft since 1913. London: Putnam, 1982. ISBN 0-370-30329-6.
  • Hansen, Chuck (1995). Volume V: US Nuclear Weapons Histories. Swords of Armageddon: US Nuclear Weapons Development since 1945. Sunnyvale, California: Chuckelea Publications. ISBN 978-0-9791915-0-3. OCLC 231585284.
  • Howard, Peter J. "The Lockheed Neptune in R.A.F. Service: Part 1". Air Pictorial, Vol. 34, No. 8, August 1972, pp. 284–289, 294.
  • Howard, Peter J. "The Lockheed Neptune in R.A.F. Service: Part 2". Air Pictorial, Vol. 34, No. 9, September 1972, pp. 356–360.
  • Mutza, Wayne. "Army Neptunes...Over South East Asia". Air Enthusiast, Twenty-nine, November 1985 – February 1986. pp. 35–42, 73–77. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Scutts, Jerry. "Tractable Turtle: The Lockheed Neptune Story: Part 1". Air International, Vol. 48, No. 1, January 1995. pp. 42–46. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Scutts, Jerry. "Tractable Turtle: The Lockheed Neptune Story: Part 2". Air International, Vol. 48, No. 2, February 1995. pp. 80–87. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Swanborough, Gordon and Peter M. Bowers. United States Navy Aircraft since 1911. London: Putnam, Second edition, 1976. ISBN 0-370-10054-9.
  • Sullivan, Jim, P2V Neptune in action. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1985. ISBN 978-0-89747-160-2.
  • Ullings, Ben (November 1982). "Neptune Nostalgia". Aircraft Illustrated. Vol. 15, no. 11. pp. 508–515. ISSN 0002-2675.
  • Wilson, Stewart. Combat Aircraft since 1945. Fyshwick, ACT, Australia: Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd., 2000. ISBN 1-875671-50-1.

Further reading edit

  • Arbeletche, Pablo Marcelo. "50° ANIVERSARIO DE LA ESCUADRILLA AERONAVAL DE EXPLORACION". Historia y Arqueologia Marítima (Histarmar) (in Spanish). Carlos Mey. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  • Lefebvre, Jean-Michel (June 1983). "2600, riche, retard, ou la fin des P2V-7 en France" [2600, Rich, Retard, or the End of the P2V-7 in France]. Le Fana de l'Aviation (in French) (163): 48–55. ISSN 0757-4169.
  • Núñez Padin, Jorge (2009). Núñez Padin, Jorge Felix (ed.). . Serie Aeronaval (in Spanish). Vol. 23. Bahía Blanca, Argentina: Fuerzas Aeronavales. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 1 August 2014.

External links edit

  • Patrol Squadron 65 History with the Neptune
  • P2 development history
  • Mid-Atlantic Air Museum: Lockheed P2V Neptune
  • US Navy Patrol Squadrons: Lockheed P2 Neptune
  • US Navy Patrol Squadrons: "Flight of the Truculent Turtle"
  • Aero Union Corporation
  • Missoulian article on Neptune's P2V water bombers and their proposed replacement with Q300s[permanent dead link]
  • Listing of the carrier launch conversions 17 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Observation Squadron Sixty-Seven
  • Use of P2V aircraft for Operation Deep Freeze by the US Navy's squadron VX-6
  • List of Lockheed P2V-5/P-2E/F/H Neptune used by the "Escuadrilla Aeronaval de Exploración" (Argentine Naval Aviation)

lockheed, neptune, designated, united, states, navy, prior, september, 1962, maritime, patrol, anti, submarine, warfare, aircraft, developed, navy, lockheed, replace, lockheed, ventura, harpoon, replaced, turn, lockheed, orion, designed, land, based, aircraft,. The Lockheed P 2 Neptune designated P2V by the United States Navy prior to September 1962 is a maritime patrol and anti submarine warfare ASW aircraft It was developed for the US Navy by Lockheed to replace the Lockheed PV 1 Ventura and PV 2 Harpoon and was replaced in turn by the Lockheed P 3 Orion Designed as a land based aircraft the Neptune never made a carrier landing but a small number were converted and deployed as carrier launched using JATO assist stop gap nuclear bombers that would have to land on shore or ditch The type was successful in export and saw service with several armed forces P 2 P2V NeptuneSP 2H of VP 56 over the Atlantic Role Maritime patrol and anti submarine warfareNational origin United StatesManufacturer LockheedFirst flight 17 May 1945Introduction March 1947Retired 1984 from military usePrimary users United States NavyJapan Maritime Self Defense Force Royal Australian Air Force Royal Canadian Air ForceNumber built 1 177 total 1 Variants Kawasaki P 2J Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 2 1 Early Cold War 2 2 Nuclear bomber 2 3 Covert operations P2V 7U RB 69A variants 2 4 Vietnam War 2 5 Falklands War 2 6 Other military operators 2 7 Civilian firefighting 2 8 The Truculent Turtle 3 Variants 4 Operators 4 1 Military operators 4 2 Civilian operators 5 Accidents and incidents 6 Surviving aircraft 6 1 Argentina 6 2 Australia 6 3 Canada 6 4 Chile 6 5 France 6 6 Netherlands 6 7 Portugal 6 8 United Kingdom 6 9 United States 7 Specifications P 2H P2V 7 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksDesign and development edit nbsp XP2V 1 prototype in 1945 nbsp P2V 2 of VP 18 over NAS Jacksonville 1953Development of a new land based patrol bomber began early in World War II with design work starting at Lockheed s Vega subsidiary as a private venture on 6 December 1941 2 At first the new design was considered a low priority compared to other aircraft in development at the time with Vega also developing and producing the PV 2 Harpoon patrol bomber On 19 February 1943 the U S Navy signed a letter of intent for two prototype XP2Vs which was confirmed by a formal contract on 4 April 1944 with a further 15 aircraft being ordered 10 days later 3 It was not until 1944 that the program went into full swing 4 A major factor in the design was ease of manufacture and maintenance and this may have been a major factor in the type s long life and worldwide success The first aircraft flew in May 1945 Production began in 1946 and the aircraft was accepted into service in 1947 Potential use as a bomber led to successful launches from aircraft carriers 5 Beginning with the P2V 5F model the Neptune became one of the first operational aircraft fitted with both piston and jet engines The Convair B 36 several Boeing C 97 Stratofreighter Fairchild C 123 Provider North American AJ Savage and Avro Shackleton aircraft were also so equipped To save weight and complexity of two separate fuel systems the Westinghouse J34 jet engines on P2Vs burned the 115 145 Avgas fuel of the piston engines instead of jet fuel The jet pods were fitted with intake doors that remained closed when the J 34s were not running This prevented windmilling allowing for economical piston engine only long endurance search and patrol operations In normal US Navy operations the jet engines were run at full power 97 to assure takeoff then shut down upon reaching a safe altitude The jets were also started and kept running at flight idle during low altitude 500 foot 150 m during the day and 1 000 foot 300 m at night anti submarine and or anti shipping operations as a safety measure should one of the radials develop problems Normal crew access was via a ladder on the aft bulkhead of the nosewheel well to a hatch on the left side of the wheel well then forward to the observer nose or up through another hatch to the main deck There was also a hatch in the floor of the aft fuselage near the sonobuoy chutes Operational history editEarly Cold War edit nbsp Emerson nose turret from the Neptune at the National Naval Aviation Museum Florida 2007Prior to the introduction of the P 3 Orion in the mid 1960s the Neptune was the primary U S land based anti submarine patrol aircraft intended to be operated as the hunter of a Hunter Killer group with destroyers employed as killers Several features aided the P 2 in its hunter role Sonobuoys could be launched from a station in the aft portion of the fuselage and monitored by radio Some models were equipped with pointable twin 5 in 12 70 mm machine guns in the nose but most had a forward observation bubble with an observer seat a feature often seen in images The AN ASQ 8 Magnetic Anomaly Detector was fitted in an extended tail producing a paper chart Unmarked charts were not classified but those with annotations were classified as secret A belly mounted AN APS 20 surface search radar enabled detection of surfaced and snorkeling submarines at considerable distances As the P 2 was replaced in the US Navy by the P 3A Orion in active Fleet squadrons in the early and mid 1960s the P 2 continued to remain operational in the Naval Air Reserve through the mid 1970s primarily in its SP 2H version As active Fleet squadrons transitioned to the P 3B and P 3C in the mid and late 1960s and early 1970s the Naval Air Reserve P 2s were eventually replaced by P 3As and P 3Bs and the P 2 exited active U S naval service VP 23 was the last active duty patrol squadron to operate the SP 2H retiring its last Neptune on 20 February 1970 6 while the last Naval Reserve patrol squadron to operate the Neptune VP 94 retired its last SP 2H in 1978 Nuclear bomber edit nbsp A P2V takes off from USS Franklin D Roosevelt in 1951At the end of World War II the US Navy felt the need to acquire a nuclear strike capability to maintain its political influence In the short term carrier based aircraft were the best solution The large Fat Man nuclear munitions at that time were bulky and required a very large aircraft to carry them The US Navy Bureau of Ordnance built 25 outdated but more compact Little Boy nuclear bomb designs to be used in the smaller bomb bay of the P2V Neptune There was enough fissionable material available by 1948 to build ten complete uranium projectiles and targets although there were only enough initiators to complete six 7 8 The U S Navy improvised a carrier based nuclear strike aircraft by modifying the P2V Neptune for carrier takeoff using jet assisted takeoff JATO rocket boosters with initial takeoff tests in 1948 However the Neptune could not land on a carrier therefore the crew had to either make their way to a friendly land base after a strike or ditch in the sea near a U S Navy vessel It was replaced in this emergency role by the North American AJ Savage transferred to the Pacific Fleet in October 1952 the first nuclear strike aircraft that was fully capable of carrier launch and recovery operations it was also short lived in that role as the US Navy was adopting fully jet powered nuclear strike aircraft 9 Covert operations P2V 7U RB 69A variants edit nbsp Side view of RB 69A the first converted P2V 7UIn 1954 under Project Cherry the US Central Intelligence Agency CIA obtained five newly built P2V 7 and converted these into P2V 7U RB 69A variants by Lockheed s Skunk Works at Hangar B5 in Burbank California for the CIA s own private fleet of covert ELINT ferret aircraft Later to make up for P2V 7U RB 69A operational losses the CIA obtained and converted two existing US Navy P2V 7s one in September 1962 and one in December 1964 to P2V 7U RB 69A Phase VI standard and also acquired an older P2V 5 from the US Navy as a training aircraft in 1963 Test flights were made by lead aircraft at Edwards AFB from 1955 to 1956 all the aircraft painted with dark sea blue color but with USAF markings In 1957 one P2V 7U was sent to Eglin AFB for testing aircraft performance at low level and under adverse conditions The initial two aircraft were sent to Europe based at Wiesbaden West Germany but were later withdrawn in 1959 when the CIA reduced its covert aircraft assets in Europe The CIA sent the other two P2V 7U RB 69As to Hsinchu Air Base Taiwan where by December 1957 they were given to a Black Op unit the 34th Squadron better known as the Black Bat Squadron of the Republic of China Air Force these were painted in ROCAF markings The ROCAF P2V 7U RB 69A s mission was to conduct low level penetration flights into mainland China to conduct ELINT ferret missions including mapping out China s air defense networks inserting agents via airdrop and dropping leaflets and supplies The agreement for plausible deniability between US and Republic of China ROC governments meant the RB 69A would be manned by ROCAF crew while conducting operational missions but would be manned by CIA crew when ferrying RB 69A out of Taiwan or other operational area to US citation needed The P2V 7U RB 69A flew with ROCAF Black Bat Squadron over China from 1957 to November 1966 All five original aircraft two crashed in South Korea three shot down over China were lost with all hands on board In January 1967 two remaining RB 69As flew back to NAS Alameda California and were converted back to regular US Navy P2V 7 SP 2H ASW aircraft configurations 10 11 Most of the 34th Squadron s Black Op missions remain classified by the CIA though a CIA internal draft history Low Level Technical Reconnaissance over Mainland China 1955 66 reference CSHP 2 348 written in 1972 that covers CIA ROCAF 34th Squadron s Black Op missions is known to exist The CIA does not plan to declassify it until after 2022 12 Vietnam War edit nbsp OP 2E Neptune formerly of VO 67 in AMARC storage at Davis Monthan AFB c 1971 The camouflage is green for low level operations over Vietnam During the Vietnam War the Neptune was used by the US Navy as a gunship as an overland reconnaissance and sensor deployment aircraft and in its traditional role as a maritime patrol aircraft The Neptune was also utilized by the US Army s 1st Radio Research Company Aviation call sign Crazy Cat based at Cam Ranh Air Base in South Vietnam as an electronic ferret aircraft intercepting low powered tactical voice and morse code radio signals 13 The US Army operated the P 2 from 1967 13 until 1972 flying 42 500 hours with no accidents 14 Observation Squadron 67 VO 67 call sign Lindy was the only P 2 Neptune aircraft squadron to ever receive the Presidential Unit Citation citation needed flying Igloo White missions sowing seismic and acoustic sensors over the Ho Chi Minh trail 15 VO 67 lost three OP 2E aircraft and 20 aircrew to ground fire during its secret missions into Laos and Vietnam in 1967 68 The Republic of China Air Force ROCAF secret 34th Black Bat Squadron s RB 69A P2V 7U ELINT SIGINT aircraft flew a low level electronic reconnaissance from Da Nang Air Base flying over Thanh Hoa Province on 20 August 1963 to investigate an air resupply drop zone that turned out to be a trap for a ROCAF C 123B airdrop mission 10 days earlier due to the air inserted agents having been captured and turned Next year an air defense radar mapping mission was also flown by 34th Squadron s RB 69A P2V 7U aircraft into North Vietnam and Laos on the night of 16 March 1964 The RB 69A took off from Da Nang flew up the Gulf of Tonkin before coasting in near Haiphong then flew down North Vietnam and the Laos border The mission was requested by SOG for helping plan the insert or resupply of agents Seven AAA sites 14 early warning radar sites and two GCI radar signals were detected 12 Falklands War edit nbsp The Argentine Navy SP 2H that tracked HMS SheffieldThe Argentine Naval Aviation had received at least 16 Neptunes of different variants since 1958 including eight former RAF examples for use in the Escuadrilla Aeronaval de Exploracion Naval Exploration Squadron They were intensively used in 1978 during the Operation Soberania against Chile including over the Pacific Ocean 16 During the Falklands War in 1982 the last two airframes in service 2 P 111 and 2 P 112 carried out reconnaissance missions over the South Atlantic and on 4 May after detecting a group of British warships helped to direct an attack by two Dassault Super Etendards that resulted in the sinking of the British destroyer HMS Sheffield 17 The lack of spare parts caused by the US having enacted an arms embargo in 1977 due to the Dirty War led to the type being retired before the end of the war Argentine Air Force Lockheed C 130 Hercules took over the task of searching for targets for strike aircraft citation needed Other military operators edit The Royal Canadian Air Force s Air Command replaced their aging Avro Lancaster maritime aircraft beginning in 1955 with P2V 7 Neptunes in the anti submarine anti shipping and maritime reconnaissance roles as a stopgap pending deliveries of the Canadair CP 107 Argus which began in 1960 Canadian Neptunes were delivered without the underwing Westinghouse J34 jet engine pods which were retrofitted in 1959 Armament included two torpedoes mines depth charges bombs carried internally plus unguided rockets mounted under the wings Twenty five Neptunes served with 404 405 and 407 squadrons until 1960 Upon unification of the Canadian Forces in 1968 the Neptune was re designated the CP122 and was officially retired two years later 18 With the founding of NATO in 1949 and the resulting additional maritime commitments it entailed for Britain The Royal Air Force Coastal Command operated 52 P2V 5s designated Neptune MR 1 as a stop gap modern maritime patrol aircraft until sufficient numbers of the Avro Shackleton could enter service 19 The Neptunes were used from between 1952 20 and March 1957 21 being used for airborne early warning experiments as well as for maritime patrol 22 In Australia the Netherlands and the US Navy its tasks were taken over by the larger and more capable P 3 Orion and by the 1970s it was in use only by patrol squadrons in the US Naval Reserve and the Dutch Navy citation needed The 320 Squadron of the Royal Dutch Navy retired its last seven Neptunes in March 1982 as they were being replaced by the Lockheed Orion 23 The US Naval Reserve retired its last Neptunes in 1978 those aircraft also having been replaced by the P 3 Orion By the 1980s the Neptune had fallen out of military use in most purchasing nations replaced by newer aircraft The Netherlands received its first Neptunes in 1953 54 when it acquired 12 P2V 5s These remained in service until 1960 when they were transferred to Portugal The P2V 5s were initially not replaced with the anti submarine aircraft requirement being met by carrier borne Grumman S 2 Trackers 24 A new urgent requirement for maritime patrol aircraft soon developed for service over Dutch New Guinea and 15 new P2V 7s were purchased entering service from September 1961 While initially employed on reconnaissance and patrol duties as Indonesian infiltration attempts against New Guinea increased the Neptunes added bombing and strafing operations to their patrol duties N 1 On 17 May 1962 a Netherlands Navy Neptune shot down an Indonesian C 47 transport A truce ended the conflict in September 1962 with Dutch New Guinea passing to UN control before becoming part of Indonesia and the P2V 7s returned to Europe 25 The aircraft were upgraded to SP 2H standard soon after returning to the Netherlands and remained in service until March 1982 when they were replaced by Lockheed Orions 26 nbsp Neptune Aviation Services P 2V Neptune drops Phos Chek on the 2007 WSA Complex fire in Oregon In Japan the Neptune was license built from 1966 by Kawasaki as the P 2J with the piston engines replaced by IHI built T64 turboprops Kawasaki continued their manufacture much later than Lockheed did the P 2J remained in service until 1984 Civilian firefighting edit P 2 P2Vs have been employed in aerial firefighting roles by operators such as Minden Air Corp and Neptune Aviation Services The fire fighters can carry 2 080 US gal 7 900 L of retardant and have a service life of 15 000 hours Neptune Aviation Services proposes to replace them with British Aerospace 146 aircraft which have an estimated service life of 80 000 hours and carry upwards of 3 000 US gal 11 000 L 2 500 imp gal of retardant 27 The Truculent Turtle edit The third production P2V 1 was chosen for a record setting mission ostensibly to test crew endurance and long range navigation but also for publicity purposes to display the capabilities of the US Navy s latest patrol bomber and to surpass the standing record set by a Japanese Tachikawa Ki 77 Its nickname was The Turtle which was painted on the aircraft s nose along with a cartoon of a turtle smoking a pipe pedaling a device attached to a propeller However in press releases immediately before the flight the US Navy referred to it as The Truculent Turtle 28 nbsp P2V 1 The Turtle in 1946Loaded with fuel in extra tanks fitted in practically every spare space in the aircraft The Turtle set out from Perth Australia to the United States With a crew of four and a nine month old gray kangaroo a gift from Australia for the National Zoo in Washington D C the aircraft set off on 9 September 1946 with a RATO rocket assisted takeoff 2 1 2 days 55h 18m later The Turtle touched down in Columbus Ohio after 11 236 6 mi 18 083 6 km It was the longest un refueled flight yet beating the unofficial 10 212 mi 16 435 km record set by the Japanese Tachikawa Ki 77 This would stand as the absolute unrefueled distance record until 1962 when it was beaten by a USAF Boeing B 52 Stratofortress and would remain as a piston engined record until 1986 when the Rutan Voyager broke it circumnavigating the globe The Turtle is preserved at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola Variants edit nbsp VP 5 P2V 3 in 1953 nbsp P2V 5 with nose turret in 1952 nbsp VO 67 OP 2E in 1967 68 over Laos nbsp VP 7 P 2V nbsp Restored French P 2H in Australia nbsp US Navy VAH 21 AP 2H nbsp AP 2H of Heavy Attack Squadron VAH 21 nbsp Minden Air s Tanker 55 formerly an SP 2H at Fox Field nbsp RB 69A of the CIA in USAF markings at Eglin AFB Florida in 1957 nbsp US Army AP 2E also designated RP 2E used in SIGINT ELINT operations in Vietnam The Burbank Boomerang is on display at the US Army Aviation Museum at Ft Rucker Alabama Lockheed produced seven main variants of the P2V In addition Kawasaki built the turboprop powered P 2J in Japan XP2V 1 Prototype two built Powered by two 2 300 horsepower 1 700 kW Wright R 3350 8 engines with four bladed propellers with armament of two 50 in machine guns in nose tail and dorsal turrets and 8 000 pounds 3 600 kg of stores in an internal bomb bay 4 P2V 1 First production model with R 3350 8A engine Provision for 16 5 inch 127 mm HVAR or 4 11 3 4 inch 300 mm Tiny Tim rockets underwing 14 built 29 XP2V 2 Fifth production P2V 1 modified as a prototype for P2V 2 Powered by water injected R 3350 24W engines 30 P2V 2 Second production model powered by two 2 800 horsepower 2 100 kW R 3350 24W engines driving three bladed propellers Nose turret replaced by attack nose fitted with six fixed 20 mm cannon First eight aircraft retained Bell tail turret fitted with twin 50 12 7 mm machine guns with remaining aircraft using Emerson tail turret with twin 20 mm cannon 80 built 29 30 P2V 2N Polar Bear Two P2V 2 modified for polar exploration under Project Ski Jump Armament removed with ski landing gear and provision for JATO rockets Fitted with early MAD gear for magnetic survey purposes Used for Operation Deep Freeze Antarctic exploration 29 31 The specially modified P2Vs had 16 foot 4 9 m long aluminum skis that were attached to the main landing gear units that when retracted tucked into fairing just below the engines This way the modified P2Vs could still land on a regular runway surface 32 P2V 2S One P2V 2 modified as a prototype anti submarine variant with an AN APS 20 search radar and additional fuel 33 P2V 3 Improved patrol bomber with 3 200 horsepower 2 400 kW R 3350 26W engines with jet stack engine exhausts 53 built 33 34 P2V 3B Conversions from other P2V 3 models including P2V 3C and 3W fitted with the ASB 1 Low Level Radar Bombing System 16 converted Redesignated as P 2C in 1962 35 P2V 3C Stop gap carrier based one way nuclear armed bomber not intended to return for a landing on a carrier Fitted with JATO rocket to aid take off from carrier and more fuel Nose guns and dorsal turret removed to save weight 11 P2V 3s and one P2V 2 modified 36 P2V 3W Airborne Early Warning variant AN APS 20 search radar 30 built 36 P2V 3Z VIP combat transport with armored cabin in rear fuselage with seats for six passengers Retained tail turret Two converted from P2V 3s 36 P2V 4 Improved anti submarine aircraft Fitted with AN APS 20 search radar and provision for dropping sonobuoys with additional dedicated sonobuoy operator Underwing tip tanks added with searchlight in nose of starboard tip tank Gun Turrets in tail and dorsal position First 25 aircraft powered by 3 200 horsepower 2 400 kW R 3350 26WA engines with remaining 27 powered by 3 250 horsepower 2 420 kW Wright R 3350 30W turbo compound engines 52 built in total Surviving aircraft redesignated P 2D in 1962 36 37 P2V 5 Fitted with Emerson nose turret with two 20 mm cannon replacing solid nose of earlier versions while retaining dorsal and tail turrets New larger jettisonable tip tanks with traversable searchlight slaved to nose turret in front of starboard tip tank and AN APS 8 radar in nose of port tip tank AN APS 20 search radar under fuselage Later aircraft featured glazed observation nose and MAD gear in place of nose and tail turrets and revised crew accommodation with many earlier aircraft refitted 38 39 Dorsal turret often removed 424 built 40 P2V 5F Modification with two 3 250 pounds force 14 5 kN J34 jet engines to increase power on take off and 3 500 horsepower 2 600 kW R 3350 32W piston engines 41 The J34 engines and R 3350 had a common fuel system burning AvGas rather than having dedicated jet fuel as did all Neptunes with jets except the Kawasaki P 2J citation needed Four underwing rocket pylons removed but increased 10 000 pounds 4 500 kg weapon load 38 Redesignated P 2E in 1962 42 P2V 5FD P2V 5F converted for drone launch missions All weaponry deleted Redesignated DP 2E in 1962 38 P2V 5FE P2V 5F with additional electronic equipment Redesignated EP 2E in 1962 42 P2V 5FS P2V 5F with Julie Jezebel ASW gear featuring AQA 3 long range acoustic search equipment and Julie explosive echo sounding gear Redesignated SP 2E in 1962 42 P2V 5JF P2V 5F modified for weather reconnaissance to include tropical storm hurricane typhoon penetrations with Airborne Early Warning Squadron THREE VW 3 and Weather Reconnaissance Squadron FOUR VW 4 43 AP 2E Designation applied to P2V 5F with special SIGINT ELINT equipment used by the US Army s 1st Radio Research Company at Cam Ranh Bay Air Base Carrying a crew of up to fifteen the AP 2E was the heaviest P 2 with a take off weight of up to 80 000 pounds 36 000 kg 15 Five converted also designated RP 2E 44 NP 2E Single P 2E converted as permanent test aircraft 45 OP 2E Modified for use as part of Operation Igloo White for sensor deployment over South East Asia with Observation Squadron 67 VO 67 Fitted with terrain avoidance radar in nose chaff dispensers wing mounted gun pods and waist guns 12 converted 15 P2V 6 Multi role version with lengthened weapons bay and provision for aerial minelaying and photo reconnaissance Smaller AN APS 70 radar instead of AN APS 20 Initially fitted with gun turrets as P2V 5 though retaining the ability to be refitted with glazed nose A total of 67 were built for the US Navy and France 42 46 Redesignated P 2F in 1962 47 P2V 6B Anti shipping version with provision to carry two AUM N 2 Petrel anti ship missiles 16 built Later redesignated P2V 6M then MP 2F in 1962 42 46 P2V 6F P2V 6 refitted with J34 jet engines Redesignated P 2G in 1962 42 P2V 6T Crew trainer conversion with armament deleted wingtip tanks often deleted Redesignated TP 2F in 1962 42 47 P2V 7 Last Neptune variant produced by Lockheed powered by R 3350 32W and J 34 engines Fitted with lower drag wingtip tanks AN APS 20 search radar in a revised radome and a bulged cockpit canopy Early aircraft were fitted with defensive gun turrets but these were removed as for the P2V 5 48 287 were built including 48 assembled by Kawasaki in Japan 42 Redesignated P 2H in 1962 49 nbsp P2V 7B of the Royal Netherlands NavyP2V 7B 15 aircraft with non glazed nose fitted with four fixed 20 mm cannon for Royal Netherlands Naval Air Service Subsequently fitted with glazed nose and modified to SP 2H standard 42 Supplemented by four SP 2H from France 50 P2V 7LP Four aircraft built with wheel ski landing gear and JATO gear for Antarctic operations Redesignated LP 2J in 1962 42 No relation to Kawasaki P 2J P2V 7S Additional ASW ECM equipment including Julie Jezebel gear Redesignated SP 2H in 1962 45 P2V 7U Naval designation of the RB 69A variant 46 AP 2H Specialized night and all weather ground attack variant fitted with FLIR and Low Light TV systems tail turret fuselage mounted grenade launchers and downwards firing miniguns Bombs and napalm carried on underwing pylons Four converted in 1968 for Heavy Attack Squadron 21 VAH 21 for operation over South Vietnam 48 DP 2H P 2H converted for drone launch and control 51 EP 2H Single P 2H modified with UHF telemetry equipment instead of ASW systems 51 NP 2H Testbed conversion of P2V H 51 RB 69A Five new built and two converted from P2V 7s 45 for CIA covert operations obtained with USAF help and operated by ROCAF 34th Squadron Aerial reconnaissance ELINT platform modular sensor packages fitted depended on the mission needs Originally fitted with Westinghouse APQ 56 Side Looking Airborne Radar SLAR the APQ 24 search radar the Fairchild Mark IIIA cameras the APR 9 13 radar intercept receiver the QRC 15 DF system the APA 69A DF display the APA 74 pulse analyser the Ampex tape recorder the System 3 receiver to intercept enemy communications the APS 54 RWR a noise jammer the RADAN system doppler radar navigation and others In May 1959 an upgrade program known as Phase VI was approved and added the ATIR air to air radar jammer replacing APR 9 13 with ALQ 28 ferret system the QRC 15 3 14 channel recorders and 1 7 channel high speed recorder to record ELINT systems the K band receiver the ASN 7 navigation computer replacing RADAN and Fulton Skyhook system 52 verification needed Neptune MR 1 British designation of P2V 5 52 delivered 53 CP 122 Neptune RCAF designation of P2V 7 jet pod not initially fitted to 25 P2V 7 aircraft delivered to RCAF but subsequently retrofitted 54 Kawasaki P 2J P2V Kai Japanese variant produced by Kawasaki for JMSDF with T64 turboprop engines various other improvements 82 built 51 Production numbers Aircraft NumberP2V 1 14P2V 2 80P2V 3 53P2V 3W 30P2V 4 52P2V 5 424P2V 6 P 2F 67P2V 6B 16P2V 7 P 2H 287P2V 7B 15RB 69A 5Neptune MR 1 52P 2J 82Operators edit nbsp A RAAF SP 2H with a USN P 5 and a RNZAF Sunderland in 1963 nbsp A Neptune MR 1 of 217 Sqn Coastal Command RAF in 1953 nbsp SP 2H Neptune of Flotille 25 Aeronavale French Navy in 1973 nbsp Aero Union P 2 Tanker 16 at Fox Field in 2003 without jet engines nbsp Neptune Aviation Services Tanker 44 takes off from Fox Field to fight the California wildfires of October 2007Military operators edit nbsp ArgentinaArgentine Navy Argentine Naval Aviation eight units Escuadrilla Aeronaval de Exploracion 55 nbsp AustraliaRoyal Australian Air Force No 10 Squadron RAAF No 11 Squadron RAAF nbsp BrazilBrazilian Air Force 14 units 1 7 Grupo de Aviacao nbsp CanadaRoyal Canadian Air Force No 404 Squadron RCAF No 405 Squadron RCAF No 407 Squadron RCAF nbsp FranceFrench Navy French Naval Aviation 21F Squadron French Naval Aviation 23F Squadron nbsp JapanJapan Maritime Self Defense Force Air Patrol Squadron 3 JMSDF Air Patrol Squadron 2 JMSDF Air Development Squadron 51 JMSDF nbsp NetherlandsDutch Naval Aviation Service nbsp PortugalPortuguese Air Force 12 units Esquadra 61 Montijo Air Base Detachment 61 Bissalanca Air Base Portuguese Guinea and Sal Air Base Cape Verde Detachment 62 Luanda Air Base Angola Detachment 63 Beira Air Base Mozambique nbsp Republic of ChinaRepublic of China Air Force 34th Black Bat Squadron nbsp United KingdomRoyal Air Force No 36 Squadron RAF No 203 Squadron RAF No 210 Squadron RAF No 217 Squadron RAF No 236 Operational Conversion Unit RAF nbsp United StatesUnited States Army United States Marine Corps United States Navy Central Intelligence Agency operated seven RB 69A in USAF colors Civilian operators edit Aero UnionAccidents and incidents editOn 27 November 1950 a P2V 2 crashed while conducting a test run with rockets near Kaena Point in Hawaii The starboard wing separated from the aircraft The crew of five died on impact 56 On 6 November 1951 a P2V of VP 6 carrying out a weather reconnaissance mission over international waters off Vladivostok was attacked and shot down by a number of MiG 15s All ten crew were killed N 2 On 5 January 1952 a Lockheed P2V 2 Neptune 122443 operated by the United States Navy undershot the runway at RAF Burtonwood and collided with a USAF Douglas C 47 42 100912 One crew member on the Neptune and six others on the C 47 were killed Fifteen others were injured eleven on the Neptune and four on the C 47 58 On 18 January 1953 a P2V of VP 22 was shot down off Swatow in the Formosa Straits by Chinese anti aircraft fire Eleven of thirteen crewmen were rescued by a US Coast Guard PBM 5 under fire from shore batteries on Nan Ao Tao island Attempting to takeoff in 8 to 12 foot swell the PBM crashed Ten survivors out of nineteen total including five from the P2V were rescued by USS Halsey Powell During the search effort a PBM 5 from VP 40 received fire from a small caliber machine gun and USS Gregory received fire from shore batteries N 3 On December 17 1953 P2V 5 Neptune S N BUN 12388 of VP 3 with a nine men crew disappeared on a patrol flight from Keflavik Airport an airfield near Iceland capital of Reykjavik The wreck was sighted on Myrdalsjokull glacier and at least three of the nine men crew were reported alive A United States air rescue plane spotted the wreckage Descried as badly broken up The Neptune took off from Keflavik at 2 pm Thursday for routine patrol over North Atlantic waters It was circling back thru the storm toward that base when it radioed its last position Helicopter lift recovered one body but bodies of 8 men remain in the frozen wreck until spring 1954 On October 14 1982 the remains of American crewmen was found 28 years after the crash into the glacier The wreck was discovered by farmers rounding up sheep apparently the glacier movement uncovered the wreck The Crew LT Henry Cason LT Ishmuel M Blum ENS Sven Shieff AD2 Eddie L Cater AN Everett Humbert AT3 Amos W Jones AL2 Robert B Whale AO3 Marvin L Baker ATAN William A Ward The Aircraft P2V 5 Neptune S N 12388On 4 September 1954 a P2V 5 of VP 19 operating from NAS Atsugi ditched in the Sea of Japan 40 miles 64 km off the coast of Siberia after an attack by two Soviet Air Forces MiG 15s One crewmen was killed and the other nine were rescued by a USAF SA 16 Grumman Albatross amphibian On 22 June 1955 a P2V 5 of VP 9 flying a patrol mission from NAS Kodiak Alaska was attacked over the Bering Straits by two Soviet Air Forces MiG 15s The P2V crash landed on St Lawrence Island after an engine was set afire Of the eleven crew members four sustained injuries due to gunfire and six were injured during the landing The US government demanded 724 947 in compensation the USSR finally paid half this amount N 4 N 5 On 10 October 1956 a P2V 5 of No 36 Squadron RAF WX545 crashed into the side of Beinn na Lice Mull of Kintyre southwest Scotland killing all nine crew members WX545 was returning from an anti submarine exercise off Derry Northern Ireland to its base at RAF Topcliffe in North Yorkshire England Beinn na Lice was hidden by fog 62 63 and a member of 36 Squadron alleges that the aircraft in the exercise had been ordered not to use radar in inshore waters 64 On 12 April 1957 a P2V 5F of VP 26 crashed on takeoff during a short takeoff practice exercise at NAS Brunswick Maine The apparent cause was a runaway varicam elevator control which caused a hammerhead stall at very low altitude The aircraft did an overhead loop reversing its direction but crashed into the woods near the departure end of the runway next to the base golf course There were no survivors 65 On 21 July 1957 a US Navy Neptune searching for a sister P2V Neptune crashed near Mount Pra Italy near the French border killing nine airmen The other P2V for had disappeared two days earlier 19 July with 11 on board on a flight from Casablanca to Treviso 66 On 1 February 1958 USAF C 118A 53 3277 collided in mid air with a US Navy Lockheed P2V Neptune 127723 over Norwalk California killing 47 of 49 on board both aircraft and 1 person on the ground On 4 February 1959 RAAF A89 308 crashed at RAAF Richmond NSW Australia All eight crew died The port engine began to disintegrate causing a fuel leak in the wheel well The resulting fire severed the magnesium wing spar and the aircraft fell from the sky before the crew could bail out On 25 March 1960 an ROCAF RB 69A P2V 7U 7101 140442 54 4040 crashed into a hill near Kunsan Air Base South Korea during a low level ferry flight from Hsinchu Taiwan to a staging area in Kunsan South Korea All 14 aircrew on board were killed 12 On 6 November 1961 an ROCAF RB 69A P2V 7U 7099 140440 54 4039 conducting a low level penetration flight over mainland China was shot down by ground fire over Liaodong peninsula All 14 aircrew on board were killed in action 12 On 9 November 1961 an P2V 7LP of VX 6 crashed on takeoff from Wilkes Station Antarctica where it had refuelled en route to McMurdo Station Four aircrew and one passenger were killed with four aircrew surviving 67 On 8 January 1962 a ROCAF RB 69A P2V 7U 7097 140438 54 4038 crashed into the Korea Bay while conducting ELINT and leaflet dropping missions All 14 aircrew on board were killed in action 12 On 12 January 1962 a P2V 5 designation LA 9 of VP 5 flew off course during a patrol over the Denmark Strait and crashed on the Kronborg Glacier in eastern Greenland All 12 crew were killed The wreckage was discovered by a party of British geologists in 1966 68 On 19 June 1963 an ROCAF RB 69A P2V 7U 7105 141233 54 4041 was conducting an ELINT mission over mainland China and was shot down by PLAAF MiG 17PF over Linchuan Jiangxi after being intercepted repeatedly by multiple MiG 17PFs and Tu 4Ps All 14 aircrew on board were killed in action 12 On 11 June 1964 a RB 69A P2V 7U 7047 135612 54 4037 was conducting an ELINT mission over mainland China and was shot down by a PLAN AF MiG 15 over Shandong peninsula after being intercepted by MiG 15s and Il 28s All 13 aircrew on board were killed in action 12 On 22 January 1965 an RCAF P2V 7 24115 crashed short of the runway at CFB Summerside Prince Edward Island when it ran out of battery power to run the fuel pumps to the J 34 jet engines The aircraft had lost one reciprocating engine and the generator failed on the other Also because Canadian Neptunes had no other generators these failures led to the loss of all thrust and the subsequent crash 69 On 22 January 1965 just before midnight an MLD SP 2H 212 was taken from Vliegkamp Valkenburg near The Hague by two young aircraft mechanics lacking any flying experience They managed to get the plane airborne but stalled shortly after takeoff It crashed into the North Sea a few hundred metres offshore of the fishing town of Katwijk The investigation report concluded that it was a drunken prank 70 71 On 3 December 1967 a Lockheed P 2E aircraft departed Naval Air Station Brunswick for a routine patrol flight At some point the aircraft developed mechanical problems and received clearance to land at Otis Air Force Base As the aircraft was making its final approach it crashed a half mile short of the runway All twelve men aboard escaped four of them suffered minor injuries 72 On 15 September 1976 an Argentine Navy Lockheed Neptune aircraft flew on a reconnaissance mission from Rio Gallegos to survey the sea ice conditions in Drake Passage at the beginning of the summer navigation season The plane crashed in poor weather on the then uninhabited Livingston Island Antarctica killing all 10 aircrew and a civilian television cameraman 73 On 5 September 2008 a Neptune Aviation Services Lockheed Neptune registered N4235T crashed soon after takeoff from Reno Stead Airport Reno Nevada The left engine and then left wing were seen to catch fire before the aircraft crashed All three crew members on board were killed 74 On 3 June 2012 while engaged in firefighting operations in Utah a Neptune Aviation Services Lockheed Neptune registered N14447 crashed Two crew members were killed 75 Surviving aircraft editThere are a few Neptunes that have been restored and are on display in museums and parks 76 Argentina edit On displaySP 2H2 P 112 Museo Aeronaval MUAN of Argentine Naval Aviation This is the Neptune that tracked HMS Sheffield 77 Australia edit AirworthySP 2H149073 Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Illawarra Regional Airport New South Wales Australia Ex A89 273 of No 10 Squadron RAAF now civil registered VH IOY 78 79 147566 Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Illawarra Regional Airport New South Wales Australia Delivered to French Aeronavale assigned to Escadrille 12 last based in Tahiti Currently displaying French Aeronavale colours now civil registered VH LRR 78 80 On DisplaySP 2H149075 RAAF Museum Point Cook Victoria Ex A89 275 of No 10 Squadron RAAF 81 149077 Queensland Air Museum Caloundra Ex A89 277 of No 10 Squadron RAAF 82 149080 RAAF Base Townsville entrance owned by RAAF Museum Ex A89 280 of No 10 Squadron RAAF 83 79 149081 Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Illawarra Regional Airport New South Wales Ex A89 281 of No 10 Squadron RAAF 79 In StorageSP 2H133640 RAAF Museum Point Cook Victoria Ex A89 302 of No 11 Squadron RAAF in storage for RAAF Museum 81 84 145921 Registered to Valerio located in Cunderdin Western Australia ex USN imported into Australia November 1988 converted to firefighting tanker civil registered VH NEP 85 81 86 87 88 Under RestorationSP 2E133640 Historic Aircraft Restoration Society Parkes Airport New South Wales Australia Ex A89 302 of No 11 Squadron RAAF The oldest Neptune in Australia it was gifted by the RAAF Museum in 2018 for static restoration 89 SP 2H149072 Historic Aircraft Restoration Society Parkes Airport New South Wales Australia Ex A89 272 of No 10 Squadron RAAF Donated to HARS by RAAF in February 2016 for restoration and display at the HARS Parkes satellite facility 81 90 91 Canada edit On displayEP 2H147969 Greenwood Military Aviation Museum in Nova Scotia Canada 92 Chile edit Under restorationSP 2H147967 To be displayed is the Neptune Firestar registered CC CHU of Heliworks Ltda Currently dismantled in Concepcion Carriel Sur airport N703AU Tanker 03 s incorporation into Chile s Museo Nacional Aeronautico y del Espacio collection at the former Los Cerrillos airport in Santiago was announced during the ceremony of the 69th Anniversary of Museum on 4 July 2013 93 France edit On DisplayP2V 7334 Musee de l air et de l espace in Paris Le Bourget Airport 94 In StorageP2V 7335 in the Musee de l air et de l espace reserve in Dugny 94 563 To be retrieved by the Musee de l air et de l espace in Paris Le Bourget Airport Currently stored on an old airbase in Brienne le Chateau Aube department 95 Netherlands edit On displaySP 2H201 on display outside at the Nationaal Militair Museum Soesterberg 96 210 on display outside at Aviodrome Lelystad AirPort This aircraft was donated to KLM engineering amp maintenance for training purposes and was painted in KLM colors Afterwards transported by barge to Aviodrome and now in partial Dark Sea grey color 216 gate guardian at the former naval airbase Valkenburg after closing it was moved to naval airbase De Kooy near Den Helder The Netherlands 97 Portugal edit nbsp Ex Portuguese Air Force P2V on display at the Museu do Ar in Sintra On displayP2V4711 Museu do Ar Sintra United Kingdom edit On displayP 2H204 Royal Air Force Museum Cosford 98 former Royal Netherlands Navy last airworthy airframe donated to the UK in 1982 after arrival of the first P 3c in the Royal Netherlands Navy United States edit AirworthyP2V 7 P 2H148360 Erickson Aircraft Collection in Madras Oregon 99 100 P2V 7S SP 2H145915 Mid Atlantic Air Museum in Reading Pennsylvania 101 102 On displayP2V 189082 Truculent Turtle National Museum of Naval Aviation NAS Pensacola Florida 103 P2V 5F P 2E128392 NAS Brunswick main gate former NAS Brunswick Maine 104 131410 NAS Jacksonville Memorial Park NAS Jacksonville Florida 105 P2V 5FS AP 2E131485 United States Army Aviation Museum at Fort Rucker Alabama 106 P2V 5FS SP 2E128402 Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo Colorado 107 P2V 5 SP2 E128402 On static display at Moffett Historical Museum Moffett Federal Airfield former NAS Moffett Field California 108 P2V 7 P 2H147957 Pima Air and Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan AFB in Tucson Arizona 109 147966 South Georgia Technical College in Americus Georgia 110 147968 Chico Air Museum in Chico California citation needed P2V 7S AP 2H135620 Pima Air and Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan AFB in Tucson Arizona 111 P2V 7S SP 2H147954 Museum of Aviation at Robins AFB Georgia The P 2 Neptune is painted to represent a USAF CIA Taiwan RB 69A 112 141234 National Museum of Naval Aviation in NAS Pensacola Florida 113 150279 Gate guard at the Marine Corps Base Hawaii former MCAS Kaneohe Bay Hawaii 114 Relocated from former NAS Barbers Point Hawaii in 1998 following that base s closure due to BRAC action Under restoration or in storageP2V 5128422 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 115 P2V 5F P 2E131502 in storage by Premier Jets in Hillsboro Oregon 116 131482 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 117 P2V 5FS SP 2E131542 for static display by the Historic Aircraft Restoration Project at former NAS New York Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn New York 118 P2V 7 P 2H140154 in storage by the Museum of Flight and Aerial Firefighting in Greybull Wyoming 119 140972 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 120 147949 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 121 148341 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 122 148346 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 123 148356 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 124 148359 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 125 148362 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 126 P2V 7S SP 2H147965 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 127 148339 in storage by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula Montana 128 Specifications P 2H P2V 7 edit nbsp 3 view line drawing of the Lockheed P2V 4 NeptuneData from Combat Aircraft since 1945 129 General characteristicsCrew 7 9 Length 91 ft 8 in 27 94 m Wingspan 103 ft 10 in 31 65 m Height 29 ft 4 in 8 94 m Wing area 1 000 sq ft 93 m2 Airfoil root NACA 2419 mod tip NACA 4410 5 130 Empty weight 49 935 lb 22 650 kg Max takeoff weight 79 895 lb 36 240 kg Powerplant 2 Wright R 3350 32W Duplex Cyclone 18 cylinder air cooled radial piston engine 3 700 hp 2 800 kW each turbo compound with water injection Powerplant 2 Westinghouse J34 WE 34 turbojet engines 3 400 lbf 15 kN thrust each pylon mounted Propellers 4 bladed constant speed propellersPerformance Maximum speed 363 mph 584 km h 315 kn Cruise speed 207 mph 333 km h 180 kn Range 2 157 mi 3 471 km 1 874 nmi Service ceiling 22 400 ft 6 800 m Armament Rockets 2 75 in 70 mm FFAR in removable wing mounted pods Bombs 8 000 lb 3 629 kg including free fall bombs depth charges and torpedoesSee also edit nbsp Aviation portalNeptune Mission a 1958 Canadian short documentary about a Neptune anti submarine missionRelated development Kawasaki P 2JAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Avro Shackleton Beriev Be 12 Breguet Atlantique Canadair Argus Consolidated PB4Y 2 Privateer Ilyushin Il 38 Martin P4M MercatorRelated lists List of Lockheed aircraft List of military aircraft of the United States List of US naval patrol aircraft List of non carrier aircraft flown from aircraft carriersReferences editNotes edit The Netherlands fitted its P2V 7s with the cannon armed nose of the P2V 3 because of the potential counter insurgency requirements 25 During the Korean War the US Navy operated a number of specially equipped Lockheed P2V Neptune s flying ELINT sorties against the Soviet Union 57 P2V 5 shot down by Chinese antiaircraft fire near Swatow 59 USN P2V 5 Neptune of VP 9 60 This was the only incident in which the Soviet Union admitted any responsibility 61 Citations edit IT S P2S DAY Neptune Aviation Services Facebook Archived from the original on 26 February 2022 Scutts Air International January 1995 pp 42 43 Francillon 1982 pp 258 259 a b Francillon 1982 p 259 Big Navy bomber flies from ship Spokane Daily Chronicle Washington Associated Press 19 March 1949 p 2 Third VP 22 Archived 9 July 2011 at the Library of Congress Web Archives Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons Volume 2 Retrieved 22 April 2011 Hansen 1995 Chart of Strategic Nuclear Bombs strategic air command com Swanborough and Bowers 1976 p 458 Baugher Joe U S Navy U S Marine Corps Aircraft Bureau Numbers Third Series 15 Archived 4 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine www joebaugher com Retrieved 4 October 2010 Baugher Joe U S Navy U S Marine Corps Aircraft Bureau Numbers Third Series 19 Archived 8 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine www joebaugher com Retrieved 4 October 2010 a b c d e f g Pocock Chris The Black Bats CIA Spy Flights Over China From Taiwan 1951 1969 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing 2010 ISBN 978 0 7643 3513 6 a b Mutza Air Enthusiast Twenty nine p 42 Mutza Air Enthusiast Twenty nine p 77 a b c Scutts Air International February 1995 p 82 AS Neptune Archived 28 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Historia y Arqueologia Maritima Retrieved 15 July 2010 Burden et al 1986 pp 47 48 Proc Jerry The Canadian Neptune P2V7 Archived 28 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine jproc ca 8 November 2009 Retrieved 21 February 2016 Howard Air Pictorial August 1972 p 284 Howard Air Pictorial August 1972 p 285 Howard Air Pictorial September 1972 p 360 Howard Air Pictorial August 1972 pp 285 286 Service history of the Lockheed Neptune with the MLD 12 September 2018 Ullings 1982 pp 509 510 513 a b Ullings 1982 pp 510 511 Ullings 1982 pp 512 515 Chaney Rob Neptune Aviation wins contract for 2 more retardant bombers Archived 11 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Billings Gazette 14 June 2012 Retrieved 15 June 2012 Sullivan 1985 pp 7 9 a b c Scutts Air International January 1995 p 43 a b Francillon 1982 p 260 Sullivan 1985 p 12 Skis for Navy Arctic Plane Popular Mechanics February 1950 p 121 a b Francillon 1982 p 261 Scutts Air International January 1995 p 45 Sullivan 1985 p 16 a b c d Francillon 1982 p 262 Sullivan 1985 p 21 a b c Sullivan 1985 p 27 Francillon 1982 p 263 Scutts Air International January 1995 p 46 Francillon 1982 pp 263 264 a b c d e f g h i j Francillon 1982 p 264 Lockheed P2V Neptune Patrol Colour Schemes 1955 1959 Mutza Air Enthusiast Twenty nine pp 39 40 a b c Francillon 1982 p 266 a b c Scutts Air International February 1995 p 81 a b Sullivan 1985 p 70 a b Sullivan 1985 p 43 Scutts Air International February 1995 p 87 Scutts Air International February 1995 p 86 a b c d Francillon 1982 p 267 Goebel Greg The Lockheed P2V Neptune amp Martin Mercator Archived 12 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine vectorsite net 1 December 2009 Retrieved 15 July 2010 Scutts Air International February 1995 pp 80 81 Canadian Military Aircraft Designations Archived 2 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Designation systems net Retrieved 15 July 2010 Lockheed SP 2H Neptune in Spanish Archived 28 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Historia y Arqueologia Maritima website Retrieved 15 July 2010 VPNAVY VP 4 Mishap Summary Page VP Patrol Squadron vpnavy org Archived from the original on 25 March 2016 Retrieved 28 May 2014 Lockheed P2V RB69A Neptune Archived 13 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Spyflight Retrieved 22 April 2011 ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P2V 2 Neptune 122443 Burtonwood RAF Station BUT Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 3 August 2020 Cold War Incidents Involving U S Navy Aircraft Date 18 Jan 1953 Aircraft P2V 5 Squadron VP 22 American Military and Naval History Retrieved 22 April 2011 van Waarde Jan VP 9 Mishap Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine VPNAVY 24 January 2011 Retrieved 22 April 2011 Cold War Incidents Involving U S Navy Aircraft Date 22 Jun 1955 Aircraft P2V 5 Squadron VP 9 American Military and Naval History Retrieved 22 April 2011 Lockheed Neptune WX545 Air Crash Sites Scotland Gordon Lyons Archived from the original on 9 March 2016 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Lockheed Neptune M R Mk 1 WX545 of No 36 Squadron RAF crashed on the north western edge of Beinn na Lice on the 10th October 1956 Peak District Air Accident Research Archived from the original on 26 September 2015 Retrieved 19 October 2015 ASN Wikibase Occurrence 169132 Aviation Safety Network Flight Safety Foundation Archived from the original on 14 March 2008 Retrieved 19 October 2015 name Sederquist Carl A AT3 Fasron 108 by Associated Press article in New York Times 22 July 1957 The Crash of Buno 140439 Archived 9 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine radiocom net Retrieved 20 May 2012 Brooks Kent 2 December 2010 The loss discovery and rediscovery of the crew of US Navy LA 9 at Kronborg Glacier east Greenland Polar Record 47 2 181 184 doi 10 1017 S0032247410000288 S2CID 129641628 Milberry Larry 1984 SIXTY YEARS The RCAF and Air Command 1924 1984 Toronto Canada CANAV Books p 369 of 480 ISBN 0 9690703 4 9 Saturday 23 January 1965 Lockheed SP 2H Neptune MLD 212 Aviation Safety Network Neptune 212 V gekaapt en verongelukt Neptune 212 V hijacked and killed in Dutch Archived from the original on 14 November 2018 Retrieved 13 November 2018 ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed P 2H Neptune 148350 Falmouth Otis AFB MA FMH Ivanov L General Geography and History of Livingston Island Archived 8 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine In Bulgarian Antarctic Research A Synthesis Eds C Pimpirev and N Chipev Sofia St Kliment Ohridski University Press 2015 pp 17 28 ISBN 978 954 07 3939 7 ASN Wikibase Occurrence 75296 Archived 1 July 2011 at Wikiwix Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 11 January 2011 Air tanker crashes while battling Utah blaze MSNBC com Retrieved 3 June 2012 Lockheed P 2s On Display Archived 20 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine AeroWeb Retrieved 3 October 2010 SP 2H serial 2 P 112 Archived 30 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine Museo Aeronaval Retrieved 3 October 2010 a b Lockheed SP2 H P2V 7 Neptune Archived 18 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Retrieved 18 November 2017 a b c Archived copy Archived from the original on 26 May 2017 Retrieved 23 May 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link warbirdsresourcegroup org Scott Rose Lockheed P2V Neptune Registry A Warbirds Resource Group Site warbirdregistry org Archived from the original on 4 March 2017 a b c d ADF Serials Neptune Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 19 November 2017 QAM AIRCRAFT Lockheed SP 2H Neptune A89 277 qam com au Archived from the original on 11 September 2018 Retrieved 11 September 2018 A89 280 The Lockheed File adastron com Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 RAAF Museum Aircraft in Storage Lockheed Neptune A89 302 Archived from the original on 10 April 2017 Retrieved 19 November 2017 Aircraft Data VH NEP 1956 Lockheed P2V 7S Neptune C N 726 7192 airport data com Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Henniger Mike Aerial Visuals Airframe Dossier Lockheed P2V 7 Neptune s n 145921 USN c n 7192 c r VH NEP 1 www aerialvisuals ca Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Aircraft register search Civil Aviation Safety Authority Archived from the original on 11 May 2018 Retrieved 19 November 2017 Warbirds based in Western Australia aviationwa org au 29 March 2013 Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Australia s Oldest Neptune Moves to HARS Parkes Aviation Museum 2 January 2019 RAAF Gifts Neptune to HARS Parkes Historical Aircraft Restoration Society Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 19 November 2017 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 28 March 2018 Retrieved 19 November 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Neptune CP 127 Archived 1 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Greenwood Military Aviation Museum Retrieved 25 December 2014 P 2 Neptune 147976 Archived 27 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine 69th Anniversary of Chile s Air amp Space Museum in Spanish Retrieved 25 December 2014 a b 1 https www avionslegendaires net Retrieved 20 September 2023 2 France 3 Regions Retrieved 17 September 2023 SP 2 Neptune 201 Archived 15 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Nationaal Militair Museum Retrieved 14 October 2017 216 at De Kooy P2V Neptune s n 204 Archived 29 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine RAF Museum Cosford Retrieved 2 April 2012 FAA Registry N360RR FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 P2V Neptune Bu 148360 Erickson Aircraft Collection Retrieved 19 August 2014 FAA Registry N45309 FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 P2V Neptune Bu 145915 Mid Atlantic Air Museum Retrieved 19 August 2014 P2V Neptune Bu 89082 National Museum of Naval Aviation Retrieved 29 October 2019 P2V Neptune 128392 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 2 July 2015 P2V Neptune Bu 131410 Aircraft Heritage Park Retrieved 2 July 2015 P2V Neptune Bu 131485 Archived 22 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine U S Army Aviation Museum Retrieved 20 August 2014 P2V Neptune Bu 128402 Archived 31 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum Retrieved 2 April 2012 Moffet Field Historic Society moffettfieldmuseum org Archived from the original on 23 October 2018 Retrieved 3 November 2018 P2V Neptune Bu 147957 Archived 3 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Pima Air and Space Museum Retrieved 2 July 2015 P2V Neptune Bu 147966 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 2 July 2015 P2V Neptune Bu 135620 Archived 3 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Pima Air and Space Museum Retrieved 2 July 2015 P 2H Neptune Bu 147954 Archived 23 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine Museum of Aviation Robins AFB Retrieved 3 October 2010 P2V Neptune Bu 141234 National Museum of Naval Aviation Retrieved 19 August 2014 P2V Neptune Bu 150279 aerialvisuals ca Retrieved 2 July 2015 FAA Registry N1386C FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N202EV FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N410NA FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 P2V Neptune Bu 131542 williammaloney com Aviation Retrieved 19 August 2014 FAA Registry N8056D FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N128HP FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N949RR FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N122HP FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N2216S FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N2218E FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N2218Q FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N362RR FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N63819 FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 FAA Registry N714AU FAA gov Retrieved 18 August 2021 Wilson 2000 p 82 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography edit Baugher Joe US Navy and US Marine Corps Aircraft Serial Numbers and Bureau Numbers 1911 to Present Cited by https aviation safety net database record php id 19520105 0 Burden Rodney A Draper Michael I Rough Douglas A Smith Colin R Wilton David Falklands The Air War British Aviation Research Group 1986 ISBN 0 906339 05 7 Donald David ed Lockheed P2V Neptune The Complete Encyclopedia of World Aircraft New York Barnes amp Noble Books 1997 ISBN 0 7607 0592 5 Eden Paul Lockheed P2V Neptune Encyclopedia of Modern Military Aircraft London Amber Books 2004 ISBN 1 904687 84 9 Fledgling Neptune A Portfolio of Early Lockheed P2Vs Air Enthusiast 84 64 65 November December 1999 ISSN 0143 5450 Francillon Rene J Lockheed Aircraft since 1913 London Putnam 1982 ISBN 0 370 30329 6 Hansen Chuck 1995 Volume V US Nuclear Weapons Histories Swords of Armageddon US Nuclear Weapons Development since 1945 Sunnyvale California Chuckelea Publications ISBN 978 0 9791915 0 3 OCLC 231585284 Howard Peter J The Lockheed Neptune in R A F Service Part 1 Air Pictorial Vol 34 No 8 August 1972 pp 284 289 294 Howard Peter J The Lockheed Neptune in R A F Service Part 2 Air Pictorial Vol 34 No 9 September 1972 pp 356 360 Mutza Wayne Army Neptunes Over South East Asia Air Enthusiast Twenty nine November 1985 February 1986 pp 35 42 73 77 ISSN 0143 5450 Scutts Jerry Tractable Turtle The Lockheed Neptune Story Part 1 Air International Vol 48 No 1 January 1995 pp 42 46 ISSN 0306 5634 Scutts Jerry Tractable Turtle The Lockheed Neptune Story Part 2 Air International Vol 48 No 2 February 1995 pp 80 87 ISSN 0306 5634 Swanborough Gordon and Peter M Bowers United States Navy Aircraft since 1911 London Putnam Second edition 1976 ISBN 0 370 10054 9 Sullivan Jim P2V Neptune in action Carrollton Texas Squadron Signal Publications 1985 ISBN 978 0 89747 160 2 Ullings Ben November 1982 Neptune Nostalgia Aircraft Illustrated Vol 15 no 11 pp 508 515 ISSN 0002 2675 Wilson Stewart Combat Aircraft since 1945 Fyshwick ACT Australia Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd 2000 ISBN 1 875671 50 1 Further reading editArbeletche Pablo Marcelo 50 ANIVERSARIO DE LA ESCUADRILLA AERONAVAL DE EXPLORACION Historia y Arqueologia Maritima Histarmar in Spanish Carlos Mey Retrieved 1 August 2014 Lefebvre Jean Michel June 1983 2600 riche retard ou la fin des P2V 7 en France 2600 Rich Retard or the End of the P2V 7 in France Le Fana de l Aviation in French 163 48 55 ISSN 0757 4169 Nunez Padin Jorge 2009 Nunez Padin Jorge Felix ed Lockheed P 2 Neptune Serie Aeronaval in Spanish Vol 23 Bahia Blanca Argentina Fuerzas Aeronavales Archived from the original on 8 August 2014 Retrieved 1 August 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lockheed P 2 Neptune Patrol Squadron 65 History with the Neptune P2 development history Mid Atlantic Air Museum Lockheed P2V Neptune French Navy Neptune US Navy Patrol Squadrons Lockheed P2 Neptune US Navy Patrol Squadrons Flight of the Truculent Turtle Aero Union Corporation Missoulian article on Neptune s P2V water bombers and their proposed replacement with Q300s permanent dead link Listing of the carrier launch conversions Archived 17 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Observation Squadron Sixty Seven Robert Fulton s Skyhook and Operation Coldfeet use of P2V aircraft Use of P2V aircraft for Operation Deep Freeze by the US Navy s squadron VX 6 AeroWeb List of P 2 Neptunes on display DND Canada s Air Force Lockheed CP 127 P2V 7 Neptune Quonset Air Museum Website Collections Tab on P 2V Neptune as direct link is not available List of Lockheed P2V 5 P 2E F H Neptune used by the Escuadrilla Aeronaval de Exploracion Argentine Naval Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lockheed P 2 Neptune amp oldid 1182291014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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