VX-3

Air Development Squadron 3 or VX-3 was a United States Navy air test and evaluation squadron established on 20 November 1948 and disestablished on 1 March 1960.[1]

Air Development Squadron 3
Active20 November 1948-1 March 1960
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Navy

Operational history

VX-3 F7U-3 c.1955
VX-3 F8U-1 lands on USS Saratoga c.1957

VX-3 was established by the merger of the assets of VA-1L and VF-1L and based at NAS Atlantic City, its aircraft carried the tail code "XC".[1][2]

In late 1949 VX-3 received the F6U Pirate which it operated for a short period before sending them into storage at NAS Quonset Point.[3]

In March 1953 VX-3 began operational trials of probe and drogue aerial refueling using AJ-1 Savage bombers.[3]:197

In late 1954 VX-3 carrier-qualified the F9F-8 Cougar aboard the USS Midway.[3]:135

In August 1955 VX-3 F9F-8s successfully tested the first mirror landing system aboard USS Bennington.[3]:184

VX-3 received the first F-8U-1 Crusaders in December 1956 and conducted carrier qualifications of the Crusader aboard the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt in April 1957. During testing of the Crusader two aircraft and pilots were lost. On 6 June 1957 a VX-3 Crusader set a US coast to coast speed record of three hours and twenty-eight minutes, launching from USS Bon Homme Richard on the West Coast and landing on USS Saratoga on the East Coast.[1]

Notable former members

Walter Starghill AT3

gollark: On the "I just want opencomputers to do what I want", it does not *know* what you want, and "I want it to display the RF here" is not a precise enough specification. A precise enough specification of what you want (which is also in a format the computer can understand) would be... code.
gollark: It can't interact with stuff outside the game (except internet cards), and you can edit, download, and do whatever else to it from within an OC computer.
gollark: This does *not* run "outside the game".
gollark: You can write software, in the form of Lua scripts, for OpenComputers computers.
gollark: Are you deliberately ignoring everything we have repeatedly and fairly clearly said?

See also

References

  1. Ginter, Steve (1990). Vought's F-8 Crusader - Navy Fighter Squadrons. Naval Fighters. p. 15. ISBN 9780942612196.
  2. Grossnick, Roy (1995). Dictionary of American Naval Aviation Squadrons, Volume 1, Chapter 2, Section 1: Attack Squadron Histories for VA-1E to VA-23. Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy. p. 18.
  3. Thomason, Tommy (2008). U.S. Naval Air Superiority: Development of Shipborne Jet Fighters - 1943-1962. Specialty Press. p. 45. ISBN 9781580071109.

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