Carousel 1 AirCraft 6181 Grumman F4F Wildcat Diecast Model USMC VMF-121 Green Knights, "White 84", Joe Foss, 1942 | Limited Edition 1200 Pieces Worldwide |
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| 1:48 Scale | | Length | | Width |
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| Grumman F4F Wildcat | | 7.25" | | 9.5" |
Joe Foss was one of the heroes of Guadalcanal, where America halted Japan's Pacific offensive. After graduating from the University of South Dakota in 1940, Foss enlisted in Marine Aviation. The Marines landed on Guadalcanal (Code name: "Cactus") on 7 August 1942, but for months the Japanese Navy dominated the seas around Guadalcanal and shelled the Marines nightly. Foss and Marine Fighting Squadron 121 arrived in October. Handfuls of Marine F4F-4s and Army P-39/P-400s -- known as the "Cactus Air Force"-- were outnumbered every day by dozens of Japanese attackers flying from Rabaul on New Britain. The F4F-4's on Cactus typically carried a single drop tank under the right wing. Japanese troops attacked the Marine perimeter around Henderson Field, but the Japanese underestimated the fighting spirit of the Marines. Four days after landing on Guadalcanal, Foss experienced his first air combat on 13 October, when he shot down a Mitsubishi A6M2 "Zero" before three other Zeroes shot up his F4F and forced him to land with a dead engine. Foss gained his fifth victory on 18 October. He did not claim a personal aircraft, but flew several F4F-4's, including '50,' '53,' and '84.' Foss was shot down on 7 November and forced to ditch, but after a night in the ocean he was rescued, and three days later he was back in the air. On 19 November, with 23 victories in six weeks, he was evacuated to Australia with malaria. Partially recovered, Foss returned to Guadalcanal on 1 January 1943 and gained three more victories in January. His final score of 26 was widely publicized, not only because he was the top scoring American ace at the time, but also because Foss was the first to equal WW1 hero Eddie Rickenbacker's score. President Roosevelt awarded Foss the Medal of Honor on 18 May 1943. In February 1944 Foss returned to combat as commander ofVMF-115, flying F4U's on ground attack missions, without adding more aerial victories. After the war, he joined the Air National Guard and served in Korea. He was elected governor of South Dakota in the 1950's. Foss was the first president of the American Football League and played a key role in creating the Super Bowl. He hosted "American Sportsman" on ABC TV and remained active in civic life into his eighties. Joe Foss died on 1 January 2003 and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Designed to meet a US Navy requirement for a new carrier-based fighter, the F-4F was first flown on September 2nd, 1937. Originally used by the British (who called it the Martlet) against the Luftwaffe, the Wildcat also became the United States Navy's primary carrier fighter in the Pacific Theatre. The Wildcat was no match for the maneuverability of the Japanese Zero, but the two airplanes were roughly equal in speed and the F-4F was able to absorb far more damage. With its array of 6 x 12.7mm machine guns and its distinctive Thach weave maneuver, two Wildcats could handle four or five Zeros. © Copyright 2003-2026 The Flying Mule, Inc.
Carousel's 1:48 scale Wildcat series pays tribute one of the US Navy's iconic Pacific theater aircraft of WWII. The models in this series feature a solid diecast propeller that spins with almost no friction, with details of the radial engine clearly visible through the cowling. The landing gear is constructed as a subassembly and is securely locked in place with magnets. The closed main landing gear and wing mounted fuel tank (optional fuel tank available with most releases) slip in place and are also secured with magnets. The removable canopy and pilot figure allows for easy viewing of a detailed cockpit interior.
© Copyright 2003-2013 The Flying Mule, Inc.
The Carousel 1 "AirCraft" range presents highly-detailed, ready-made diecast models of military aircraft. Carousel 1 have an excellent reputation for producing superbly accurate diecast models of racing cars and their "AirCraft" range is worthy of the same praise. Aircraft in the Carousel 1 AirCraft range are carefully researched and reproduced with a level of detail that is unmatched by most other manufacturers in this scale.
Carousel 1 "AirCraft" diecast airplanes feature:
- Diecast metal construction with some plastic components.
- Realistic panel lines, antennas, access panels and surface details.
- Pad printed markings and placards that won't fade or peel like decals.
- Interchangeable extended/retracted metal landing gear with rotating wheels and rubber tires.
- Extremely detailed cockpit interiors with glazed instruments.
- Detailed removable pilot figures.
- Spinning metal propellers.
- Accurately detailed underside with concealed screwheads.
© Copyright 2003-2026 The Flying Mule, Inc.