Jorge Medina escribió:Sin duda alguna es la versión navalizada del F86 Sabre este se llamaba el Fj 4 Fury
Lo has puesto mu facil!!!
Saludines
Me parece que va a ser al revés. El Sabre es la versión terrestre del Fury.
In late 1944 and early 1945, the US Navy ordered four carrier-based jet fighters, the Vought XF6U-1 Pirate, the McDonnell XFD-1 Phantom, the McDonnell XF2D-1 Banshee, and the North American XFJ-1 Fury. It was hoped that these four fighters would be available in time for Operation Olympic/Coronet, the invasion of Japan planned for May of 1946.
The North American entry, known as NA-134 on company rolls, called for a fairly conventional low-mounted, straight-winged monoplane of rather tubby cross section. The General Electric J35 axial-flow turbojet was fed by a nose intake and exhausted through a pipe in the tail. A bubble canopy was fitted, and the wing was fitted with retractable, slatted air brakes in the upper and lower surfaces.
The USAF ordered a land-based version of the Fury under the designation XP-86, but North American was eventually to adapt the aircraft to a swept-wing configuration to produce the famed Sabre of Korean War fame. However, being constrained by the need to retain good low-speed handling capabilities for landings aboard carriers, the Navy decided to stick with the straight-winged format and went ahead with three prototypes of the XFJ-1 Fury (Bu No 39053/39055).