McDonnell F3H Demon
Product code WS-99
McDonnell
Series Warpaint Series No 99
Publisher/Brand Hall Park
Author Tony Butler
Format a4
No. Pages 70
Version Soft cover
Language English
Category Aviationbooks
Subcategory US » US Jet Aircraft
Availability only 2 remaining
This product was added to our database on Friday 21 November 2014.
Your reliable Aviation Book Source since 1989
Also in this series:
| Product | Publisher/Brand | Series/scale | Price € | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Armstrong Whitworth Whitley MK1 to MKVII | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 21 | € 15.55 | |
![]() | Avro Lancaster | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 89 | € 18.30 | |
![]() | Bristol Blenheim | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 26 | € 14.63 | |
![]() | Gloster Gladiator | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 37 | € 17.39 | |
![]() | Hawker Siddeley HS748 & AndoverTemporarily Out of Stock. | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 151 | € 20.14 | |
![]() | Hawker Typhoon | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 5 | € 14.63 | |
![]() | Junkers Ju88 | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 7 | € 12.80 | |
![]() | Lockheed F117 Nighthawk | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 138 | € 20.14 | |
![]() | McDonnell Douglas F4K and F4M Phantom | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 31 | € 17.39 | |
![]() | Westland Scout & Wasp | Hall Park | Warpaint Series No 110 | € 16.47 |
The McDonnell F3H Demon naval fighter is chiefly remembered for the controversial delays and troubles suffered by its jet engine powerplants. The original J40 was a failure and brought the end of the original F3H-1 series but the J71 engine in the revised F3H-2, although not perfect, did help in the development of a decent service aircraft. Begun as an interceptor, Demon was a large and heavy single-seat fighter, it could reach supersonic speed in a dive with ease and one of the later versions became the Navy's first all-weather missile-firing fighter. In the air the Demon handled beautifully. The aircraft never took part in a major conflict but was on hand aboard US Navy carriers between 1958 and 1965 in case any of the crisis situations of that period turned into a major conflict. In fact by 1965 the Demon had been present in the front line for longer than any previous US Navy jet fighter. Despite such a shaky start and the 'dark days' of its early versions, the Demon was ultimately a success.











