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Fleet carrier usage was low early in the war (less than 75 total for 41 and 42 according to Carrier Airpower by Freidman), but was up towards 40% of all launches by the end of the war, especially as naval air assets increasingly began focusing on ground support with heavier ordnance loads. The lighter F4Fs, SBDs, and even the F6Fs could reliably launch without them, but catapults were used frequently to carrier launch P-40s, P-47s, and even P-51s during major coastal assaults - I've seen footage of both Warhawks and Thunderbolts being cat-launched during Operation Torch in the Med. I know for a fact that once F4Us began operating regularly off the fleet carriers later in the war and were commonly carrying 2+ tons of bombs plus a belly tank, cat shots were often used for the first planes spotted on the deck until enough room was clear for the rest to make running launches. Same for TBFs topped off with fuel, HVARs, and a full bomb bay. EDIT: here's a Navy article from 1995 that mentions CVLs and CVEs relying heavily on deck catapults, and how Army fighters were commonly used off them for resupply deliveries: http://www.history.navy.mil/download/ww2-36.pdf Also - this page confirms what I suspected, all Casablanca CVEs (which were a huge portion of all produced US / RN CVEs) had a deck catapult: http://www.ww2pacific.com/notecve.html http://www.navsource.org/archives/03/009.htm indicates the Bogue class had a deck catapult as well; I'm not sure if they were standard or not, but the lead ship (CVE-9) had one, so I suspect they all did as it was carried on to the Casablanca class. Last edited by Plane-Eater; 05-08-2013 at 07:19 PM. |
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