P-2 Neptune

bgcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3" align="center" style="border-bottom:3px solid"|Lockheed P-2 Neptune
olspan="3" align="center"|
P2V-7 Neptune of Patrol Squadron SEVEN (VP-7) over the Atlantic in 1954
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Description
ole colspan="2"|Maritime patrol bomber
rew colspan="2"|7-9
irst Flight colspan="2"|1945
anufacturer colspan="2"|Lockheed
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Dimensions
ength 91 ft 8 in 27.9 m
ingspan 101 ft 4 in 30.9 m
eight 29 ft 4 in 8.9 m
ing area 1000 ft² 93 m²
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Weights
mpty 49,548 lb 22,475 kg
oaded 73,139 lb 33,175 kg
aximum takeoff 79,895 lb 36,240 kg
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Powerplant
ngines colspan="2"|2 × Wright Cyclone R-3350-32W radials
2 × Westinghouse J-34-WE-36 turbojets
ower 2 × 3,700 hp 2,800 kW
hrust 2 × 3,400 lbf 15 kN
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Performance
aximum speed 403 mph 649 km/h
ombat range 2,200 miles 3,500 km
erry range 4,350 miles 7,000 km
ervice ceiling 22,000 ft 6,700 m
ate of climb 1,760 ft/min 540 m/min
ing loading lb/ft² kg/m²
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Avionics
vionics colspan="2"|APS-20 radar
MAD boom
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Armament
uns colspan="2"|
ombs 10,000 lb 4,500 kg
ther colspan="2"|
The Lockheed P-2 Neptune (until 1963 the P2V Neptune) was a naval patrol bomber and anti-submarine warfare (ASW) aircraft for the United States Navy between 1947 and 1978, replacing the PV-1 Ventura and PV-2 Harpoon and being replaced in turn with the P-3 Orion. A land-based aircraft, the Neptune never made a carrier landing. The type was successful in export, seeing service with the armed forces of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Britain, Japan, the Netherlands and Portugal. Development began early in World War II, but was considered a low priority and it was not until 1944 that things really got going. A major factor in the design was ease of manufacture and maintenance, and this can be said to have been a major factor in the type's long life and worldwide success. The first aircraft flew in 1945. Production began in 1946, and the aircraft was accepted into service in 1947. The third-built production P2V-1 was chosen for a record-setting mission, ostensibly to test crew endurance and long-range navigation but just as much for purely publicity reasons, to show off the Navy's latest expensive plane. Loaded with fuel in extra tanks fitted in practically every spare space in the aircraft, Truculent Turtle (as the airplane was named) 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 Washington, D.C zoo) the plane set off on September 9, 1946, with a JATO rocket-assisted takeoff. Two and a half days' flying later, the Turtle touched down in Columbus, Ohio, 11,236.6 miles (18,083.6 km) from its starting point - the longest unrefuelled flight ever made, and 4,000 miles (6,400 km) longer than the USAF's B-29 record. This would stand as the absolute unrefuelled distance record until 1962, and would remain as a piston-engined record until 1986 when Dick Rutan's Voyager would break it in the process of circumnavigating the globe. Its combat uses included the Vietnam War, in which it was used by the US Navy as a gunship and patrol airplane, and by Argentina in the Falklands War for reconnaissance and aiding Dassault Etendards. It was one of the first aircraft to be fitted in operational service with both piston and jet engines, several Boeing C-97 and Avro Shackleton aircraft also achieved that distinction; it leads naturally to an unusual sound during overflight. In Australia, Canada, the Netherlands and the US Navy its tasks were taken over by the much larger and more capable P-3 Orion and by the 1970s it was only in use by US reserve units. The USN naval reserve abandoned its last Neptunes in 1978. By the 1980s, it had fallen out of use in most purchasing nations, replaced by newer aircraft. A number still serve as fire-fighters in the United States. Japan built its own Neptunes, continuing their manufacture much later than Lockheed did; these remained in service until 1984.
The Neptune shares the P-2 designation (albeit under a different designation system) with the Curtiss P-2 Hawk, a much earlier biplane.

External links

  • http://www.maam.org/neptune/p2_1.html
  • http://frenchnavy.free.fr/aircraft/neptune/neptune.htm
  • http://www.vpnavy.com/aircraft_p2_history.html
  • http://www.vpnavy.com/turtle_01.html
bgcolor="#e0e0e0" colspan="2" align="center" style="border-bottom:3px solid"|Related content
b>Related Development align="center"|PV-1 Ventura - PV-2 Harpoon - P-3 Orion
b>Similar Aircraft align="center"|Avro Shackleton - PB4Y-2 Privateer - P-3 Orion - P4M Mercator
b>Designation Series align="center"|Lockheed PV - P2V Neptune - P3V Orion
b>Related Lists align="center"|List of military aircraft of the United States

 

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