bitlerisvj wrote:The Panther and Cougar were heavily used from carriers during the Korean War. If you get a chance see, the movie (and read the book), "The Bridges at Toko Ri" with William Holden, Mickey Rooney, and Grace Kelly. It has some awsome jet fighter sequences. By the way, Comet made those airplanes and I built the Cougar when I was about 12 years old. I did not have a motor for it, but it really had a wonderful glide.
Regards, Vic Bitleris
kittyfritters wrote:bitlerisvj wrote:The Panther and Cougar were heavily used from carriers during the Korean War. If you get a chance see, the movie (and read the book), "The Bridges at Toko Ri" with William Holden, Mickey Rooney, and Grace Kelly. It has some awsome jet fighter sequences. By the way, Comet made those airplanes and I built the Cougar when I was about 12 years old. I did not have a motor for it, but it really had a wonderful glide.
Regards, Vic Bitleris
The Cougar did not arrive soon enough to see combat in the Korean War. If you read the book "The Bridges at Toko Ri" you will find that the pilots in the story were flying the forgotten jet fighter of the Korean War, the F2H Banshee. The Navy just happen to have Panthers available to the movie company for the flying sequences at the time. The other forgotten fighter of the Korean War was the F3D, Skyknight. As an escort for B29 night raids over North Korea F3D pilots downed 6 enemy aircraft for one loss...the highest score of any Navy fighter during the war. Guillow, briefly, had an F3D model in their catalog during the 1950s.
Mitch wrote:I do not know, but I will inquire... I was thinking of using estes rockets, but looks like you guys got this stuff figured out.
It may be a while before I start on the Cougar. I want to finish my projects that are on the work table now... Also I plan to photo copy the printed sheet parts as this kit does NOT have part pictures like Guillows. I want to be able to produce the model more than once. The plans are VERY old and delicate. So I will preserve those as well.
No decal sheet, but if there was it would be useless. I plan to make model w/o landing gear and be a glider... I'll look into those engines... Maybe start my JET AGE, collection. My new book will help me with details and markings.
This was a very basic model, the ONLY plastic is the canopy, The nose is a block of balsa wood. This is a large model for $1.00, so I believe the age of this kit is close to the copywright date of 1955. That makes it older than me! Mitch
UPDATE: Just found this info. off the internet...
The Cougar was the U.S. Navy's first swept wing, carrier-based, fighter jet. The XF9F-2/XF9F-3 Panther contract awarded in October of 1946 had included a clause calling for design data on a swept-wing version of that fighter. Grumman, worried about the poor low-speed characteristics of swept-wing aircraft, prevailed upon the U.S. Navy to postpone procurement of a swept-winged version of the Panther. Development of a swept-wing Panther became more urgent as MiG-15s appeared in the skies over Korea in November of 1950. The swept-wing version of the Panther was designated F9F-6, but it was given a different name-Cougar. This continued the tradition of assigning feline names to Grumman-built fighter aircraft. It remains something of a mystery why the navy did not renumber the Cougar as the F11F-1, which was the next numerical designation available
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