North American AJ Savage (Aircraft)
Design and development
At the end of World War II, the US Navy felt the need to acquire a nuclear strike capability to maintain its political influence. In the short term, carrier-based aircraft were the ideal solution. Nuclear munitions at that time were bulky and required a large aircraft to carry them. The Navy improvised a carrier-based nuclear strike plane by modifying the
Lockheed P2V Neptune twin-prop ocean patrol aircraft for carrier takeoff using jet assisted takeoff (JATO) rocket boosters, with initial takeoff tests in 1948. But the Neptune couldn't land on a carrier, so the crew either had to make their way to a friendly land base after a strike, or ditch in the sea near a US Navy vessel.
The AJ Savage was a large composite-powered carrier-borne Attack Bomber designed to deliver
nuclear ordnance. It also performed photo reconnaissance duties and later on was used as an aerial refueling platform. The North American AJ-1/2 and AJ-1/2P Savage aircraft were in a number of USN Heavy Attack Composite squadrons from 1948–1956, as well as in several Photographic Reconnaissance squadrons. The Heavy Attack versions were the first nuclear bomb carrying bombers able to be launched from and recovered on aircraft carriers.
The date of its design inception was a time where the US Navy was faced with procuring the nascent jet engine, while still having to rely upon the simple yet well proven reciprocating engine. Jets at this time were unreliable and used large quantities of fuel; however, once they were developed, they produced performance that no piston engine could ever provide. A compromise was made to include in the Savage two
Pratt & Whitney R-2800 piston engines, with a large turbocharger fitted inside each engine nacelle. This combination made it possible for the R-2800 engines to produce rated power (2,500 hp/1,864 kW) up to 42,000 ft (12,802 m) altitude. An
Allison J33 turbojet was fitted in the rear fuselage. Interestingly, both engine types used the same fuel. The piston-turbojet arrangement was intended to give added power on take-off and extra dash speed while in combat. At high altitude, this "boxy" looking (but aerodynamically very clean) airplane was remarkably fast, reaching more than 460 mph (740 km/h), when the jets of that era were not very much faster.
The first production Savage flew in May 1949, with the first carrier landing of the type taking place on the
USS Coral Sea on 31 August 1950.
Early model Savages (
AJ-1) were converted to the air tanker role, with the bomb bay filled with all the necessary equipment, including hoses, fuel pumps, electric power drive, and the drogue. Additional fuel was provided in drop tanks. AJ-1 tankers were used to refuel
John Glenn's F8U Crusader during the Project Bullet transcontinental speed record flight.
[2]
The
AJ-2 first flew on 19 February 1953 and had uprated engines and a taller vertical stabilizer and non-dihedral tailplane.
The
AJ-2P was the photographic reconnaissance version of the Savage. It carried photo-flash bombs for night missions, with most of the plane's 18 cameras being operated automatically. It was capable of night and low-level reconnaissance. The -2P also had additional fuel capacity.
The Savage didn't remain in frontline service long because it was seen as an interim solution from the day it performed its first flight, the Navy having already put the wheels in motion for a much better successor, the all jet powered
Douglas A-3 Skywarrior.
[edit] Variants
- XAJ-1
- Prototype with two 2,300 hp (1,715 kW) Pratt & Whitney R-2800-44 radial engines and one Allison J33-A-19 turbojet, three built.
- AJ-1 (A-2A)
- Initial production version with two 2,400 hp (1,790 kW) R-2800-44W radial engines and one J33-A-10 turbojet, 55 built, survivors re-designated A-2A in 1962.
- AJ-2 (A-2B)
- Updated production version with two 2,500 hp (1,864 kW) R-2800-48 radial engines and one J33-A-10, taller fin slightly longer fuselage and increased fuel capacity, 55 built, survivors re-designated A-2B in 1962.
- AJ-2P
- Photo-reconnaissance version of the AJ-2 with array of cameras, 30 built.
[edit] Operators
An AJ-2P reconnaissance plane of VAP-61.
- United States
[edit] Survivors
Only one preserved Savage exists today: A-2B Savage, BuNo
130418, which is displayed at the
National Museum of Naval Aviation at
Naval Air Station Pensacola in
Pensacola, Florida.
[3]. However, there is at least one other known AJ Savage wreck: BuNo
134060, which ditched near
Subic Bay in January 1957 following engine failure.
[4][5]
[edit] Specifications (AJ-1)
- Source: USN[1]
General characteristics
- Crew: 3
- Length: 63 ft 1 in (19.2 m)
- Wingspan: 71 ft 5 in (21.8 m)
- Height: 20 ft 5 in (6.2 m)
- Wing area: 836 ft² (78 m²)
- Empty weight: 27,558 lb (12,500 kg)
- Loaded weight: 47,000 lb (21,363 kg)
- Max. takeoff weight: 50,954 lb (23,161 kg)
- Powerplant:
Performance
Armament
- Bombs: 12,000 lb (5,400 kg) conventional bombs, or 1× nuclear bomb
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