F-86 Sabre/FJ Fury (Family)
Contents
Description
The North American F-86 Sabre, sometimes called the Sabrejet, is a transonic jet fighter aircraft.
Vehicles
Rank V
Rank VI
F-86 nomenclature confusion
- F-86 variants A, B, C, D, E, F, H and J were a transonic aircraft fighter/day fighter jet referred to as Sabre or Sabrejet.
- F-86 variants D, G, K and L were a transonic all-weather fighter/interceptor jet which was referred to as Sabre Dog. This version was originally specified as the YF-95, it was loosely based off the earlier F-86 variant but only had about 25% commonality, with major differences noted as a nose radome, larger engine (resulting in a larger fuselage) and a larger afterburner. Changing the YF-95 nomenclature to the F-86 series saved the government funding dollars due to loopholes in contracts regarding the procurement of new designation aircraft.
- F-86F in JASDF service was referred to as Kyokukō (旭光, Rising Sunbeam).
- F-86D in JASDF service was referred to as Gekkō (月光, Moon Light).
- CL-13 Mk.4, Mk.5 and Mk.6 were variants of the F-86E/F fighter with two different Orenda engines.
- FJ-4 Fury was the naval final variant of the Sabre/Fury family. It was developed from the earlier FJ-3 Fury, the naval variant of the F-86E, but featured an entirely new wing and a redesigned fuselage. Much like the Sabre Dog, the FJ-4 Fury had little commonality with the standard F-86 family.
FJ-4 Fury
Development and Design
The FJ-4 was an improvement of the earlier FJ-3 Fury. The FJ-4 had wings that were thinner - with a 6% thickness-to-chord ratio, and the wings had a greater surface area. The wings also had a slight camber behind the leading edge; this increased the maneuverability at low speeds. The landing gear were redesigned so they could retract into the new wings, and the wings could only fold the outer panels.
The FJ-4 was designed as an all-weather interceptor, and had a 50% increase in fuel capacity compared to the FJ-3. In order to reduce weight, the armor was reduced and so was the ammunition capacity. Fuel tanks were located in the wings and the fuselage was deepened in order to provide for more fuel capacity. The cockpit was modified to provide more comfort for the pilot, and the tail was also modified - making it thinner. The XFJ-4 prototypes had the Wright J65-W-4 engine that the FJ-3 used, but the FJ-4 production models used the J65-W-16A engine, which was more powerful. The XFJ-4 flew for the first time on 28 October 1954, and the FJ-4 began to be delivered in February 1955.
Variants
XFJ-4
Prototype for the FJ-4 Fury, with a Wright J65-W-4 engine and redesigned fuselage; two built.
YFJ-4
Developmental testing airframe; one built.
FJ-4 Fury (F-1E)
Production model of the XFJ-4, Wright J65-W-16A engine; 150 built.
FJ-4B Fury (AF-1E)
Ground attack version, with 6 underwing hardpoints; 222 built.
FJ-4F Fury
Converted FJ-4 airframes used for testing, with auxiliary rocket motor and fuel tank; two converted.
AF-1F
Proposed attack version, TF30 engine, competed against the A-7 project; none built.