P-80 Shooting Star

bgcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3" align="center" style="border-bottom:3px solid"|F-80/P-80A Shooting Star
olspan="3" align="center"|300px
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Description
ole colspan="2"|Single-seat fighter
rew colspan="2"|Pilot
irst flight colspan="2"| 8 January 1944
anufacturer colspan="2"|Lockheed
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Dimensions
ength 10.49 m 34 ft 5 in
ingspan 11.81 m 38 ft 9 in
eight 3.43 m 11 ft 3 in
ing area 22.07 m 237.6 ft
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Weights
mpty 3,819 kg 8,420 lb
oaded
aximum takeoff 7646 kg 16,856 lb
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Powerplant
ngines colspan="2"|One Allison J33-A-35 Turbojet
hrust 24.0 kN 5,400 lbf
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Performance
aximum speed 966 km/h 600 mph
ruise speed 660 km/h mph
ange 1328 km 825 miles
ervice ceiling 14,000 m 46,000 ft
ate of climb m/min ft/min
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Avionics
vionics colspan="2"|
gcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="3"|Armament
uns colspan="2"|6 x .50 cal (12.7 mm) machine guns
ombs colspan="2"|2 x 1000 lb (450 kg) bombs
ockets colspan="2"|10x to 16x rockets
The Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star was the first operational jet fighter used by the United States Army Air Force. The first USAAF jet aircraft was the P-59 Airacomet. Design work began in 1943 with the design being built around a British de Havilland H1-B turbojet. The powerplant was soon changed to a GE or Allison copy. The design was conventional, an all-metal airframe with a slim low wing and tricycle undercarriage. The first prototype, dubbed XP-80, flew on January 8, 1944 powered by a replacement Halford H1 (later named the 'Goblin') taken from the protoype de Havilland Vampire and shipped to the States after the original flight engine was accidently destroyed. Lockheed Chief Pilot Milo Burcham was killed on October 20, 1944 while flying the second production prototype. World War II ace Richard Bong was also killed test flying a P-80. The Shooting Star began to enter service in early 1945, and 45 had been delivered before the war ended. Only four actually made it to Europe, two to England and two to Italy, but when test pilot Major Fred Borsodi, demonstrating the P-80 in England, was killed in a crash caused by a fire in the jet engine, the type was grounded. As a result, the P-80 didn't see combat in World War 2. After the war production continued, although the initial order for 5,000 was quickly reduced to 2,000 at a little under $100,000 each. 1,715 single-seater P-80A, B or Cs were made up to the end of production in 1950, of which 798 were P-80Cs. A modified P-80B, designated XP-80R, set a record of 623.8 mph (1003.9 km/h) on June 19, 1947. the P-80C began production in 1948 and in June the P-80C was officially renamed the F-80C. They saw combat service in the Korean War, mainly the more powerful F-80C variant, including the first piloted jet aircraft vs. piloted jet aircraft success on November 8, 1950 when a MiG-15 was shot down. However, they were being replaced with the F-86 Sabre at this time and they were usually out-classed by the superior Russian designed aircraft. When sufficient Sabres were built the Shooting Star was soon relegated to ground attack duties. Lockheed also produced a two-seat trainer variant with a longer fuselage, the T-33A also known as the "T-bird", which remained in production until 1959 and was produced under license in Japan and Canada. The trainer was used by more than 20 different countries. Almost 7,000 T-33s were built and some are still in service.
bgcolor="#e0e0e0" colspan="2" align="center" style="border-bottom:3px solid"|Related content
b>Related development align="center"|
b>Similar aircraft align="center"|
b>Designation series align="center"| XP-77 - XP-78 - XP-79 - P-80 - XP-81 - F-82 - XP-83
b>Related lists align="center"|List of military aircraft of the United States
List of fighter aircraft
List of World War II jet aircraft

 

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