NAS Pensacola

Nine photos from the Naval Air Station museum in Pensacola, Florida.

F6C-1 Hawk side
The museum's example of the F6C-1 Hawk was acquired from Roy Reagan of Chico, California, in 1986. It is restored in the markings of Bureau Number A-6969. Notes The Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company's famous Hawk-series fighters were a mainstay in Army Air Corps and naval squadrons during the late-1920s and early-1930s. Four versions of the aircraft appeared during its production run, the configurations including the installation of tail hooks for carrier operations, floats for service as seaplanes, and conversion from the water cooled Curtiss D-12 engine to the more easily maintained Pratt & Whitney R-1340 radial engine. The F6C was the last Navy aircraft to employ liquid cooled engines. The U.S. Navy procured the F6C-1, the type displayed in the museum, beginning in March 1925, the same month that USS Langley (CV-1), the Navy's first aircraft carrier, first participated in the annual fleet exercises. Though the contract called for delivery of ten examples of the F6C-1, only seven were actually flown in that configuration, the others being modified with tailhooks and designated F6C-2s. However, though their ranks were small, the first Hawks participated in early experimentation with the tactic of dive-bombing, the sturdier metal construction on the leading edge of their wings allowing pilots to dive at angles as great as 70 degrees. On 13 December 1926, personnel of Fighting Squadron (VF) 2 employed F6C-1/2 and FB-5 airplanes in official exercises, scoring 19 hits out of 45 attempts on a 100 x 45 ft. target from an altitude of 1,000 ft. In addition to its performance in bombing, an F6C-1 also captured the 1926 Curtiss Marine Trophy Race, achieving a top speed of 130.94 M.P.H. Specifications for F6C-1 Manufacturer: Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company Dimensions: Length: 22 ft., 7 7/16 in.; Height: 8 ft., 10 in.; Wingspan: 31 ft., 6 in. Weights: Empty: 2,177 lb.; Gross: 2,920 lb. Power plant: One 410 horsepower D12 engine Performance: Maximum Speed: 164 M.P.H.; Service Ceiling: 22,700 ft.; Range: 350 miles Armament: Two fixed forward-firing .30-in. guns Crew: Pilot Aircraft in the Museum Collection F6C-1 (In markings of BuNo A-6969) - On indoor static display
AdamAriganello