The Crusader III: The Navy Fighter That Beat the Phantom — and Still Lost

by | May 19, 2026 | History & Legends, Military Aviation | 0 comments

In late 1958, in the high Texas sky over Naval Air Station Dallas, Vought's chief test pilot John Konrad flew an aircraft that could outmanoeuvre, outclimb, outrun and outturn the future F-4 Phantom II. The aircraft had a single engine. It had no radar operator. It had a magnificently elegant, single-purpose airframe whose only job was to be a better Crusader than the Crusader. Konrad called it, in a phrase that has echoed through fifty years of Navy aviation lore, “the airplane that could fly circles around the Phantom.”

The U.S. Navy bought the Phantom anyway.

The Vought XF8U-3 Crusader III — Konrad's aircraft, Mach 2.39 in level flight, with a wing-loading and thrust-to-weight ratio that would not be matched in U.S. naval aviation until the F-14 Tomcat fifteen years later — is one of the most haunted footnotes in U.S. military procurement history. Five airframes were built. Three flew. They proved every claim the Vought design team had made for them. Then they went to NASA for high-altitude research and the programme was buried under the F-4 Phantom production line.

Quick Facts
AircraftVought XF8U-3 Crusader III
First flight2 June 1958, at Edwards Air Force Base
Test pilotJohn Konrad, Vought Chief Test Pilot
Top speedMach 2.39 (Mach 2.32 service operating)
Service ceilingAbove 95% of Earth's atmosphere
EnginePratt & Whitney J75-P-5A turbojet (29,500 lb thrust w/ AB)
CompetitorMcDonnell Douglas F4H-1 (future F-4 Phantom II)
Fly-off resultCrusader III superior in air-to-air; Phantom won contract
CancelledDecember 1958 — programme killed after Phantom selection
Aircraft built5 (3 flying, 2 static)

The Last Single-Mission Fighter

The XF8U-3 was the last great American single-mission fighter design. It existed for one purpose: air-to-air combat at long range, at high altitude, against another fast jet. It did not have a bomb bay. It did not have hardpoints for air-to-ground stores. It did not have a second crew position for a radar intercept officer. Its single Pratt & Whitney J75 turbojet produced 29,500 pounds of thrust with afterburner — almost half again the thrust-to-weight ratio of the F-4 Phantom — and its airframe was optimised, every rivet, for the kind of high-speed pure-fighter mission that had defined American naval aviation since the F4F Wildcat.

Vought XF8U-3 Crusader III
A Vought XF8U-3 Crusader III in flight. Elegant, single-engined, no second cockpit, no air-to-ground hardpoints. The last great Navy single-mission fighter design. (US Navy / Wikimedia)

Vought's designers, led by chief engineer Russell Clark, had taken the existing F-8 Crusader (then in operational service) and rebuilt it around a much larger engine, a new variable-incidence wing, an enlarged fuselage with proper area-rule shaping, and a ventral fin pair that could be deployed at supersonic speeds to maintain directional stability. The result was an aircraft that retained the Crusader's carrier-handling pedigree but operated 40% faster than the operational F-8.

The Fly-Off

The Navy ran the F8U-3 against the F4H-1 (the not-yet-Phantom-II) through 1958. Konrad's aircraft beat the Phantom in turn rate at altitude, in zoom-climb performance, in dive recovery, and in supersonic top speed. The Phantom held one consistent advantage: it could carry more, do more, and bring two crew. The Navy's analysts began the competition assuming the choice was between single-purpose excellence and multi-purpose adequacy. They ended the competition convinced that multi-purpose adequacy was the strategic answer.

John Konrad
“The Crusader III could fly circles around the Phantom II. We knew it. The Navy pilots who flew both knew it. The pilots who flew the Phantom for years afterwards never said anything different. But the Phantom carried more bombs, and that was the answer the Navy wanted.”
John Konrad — Chief Test Pilot, Vought · recounting the F-4 fly-off competition

The decision was made in December 1958. The Navy ordered the F-4 Phantom II in production quantities. The Crusader III was cancelled with five airframes built. Three of them, all flying examples, went to NASA's Wallops Island facility for upper-atmospheric and aerodynamic research — work the Crusader III was uniquely suited to perform, because it could climb above 95% of the Earth's atmosphere and operate at speeds normal aircraft could not reach.

XF8U-3 at NASA Wallops Island Research Center in 1959
XF8U-3 at NASA Wallops Island Research Center in 1959. After cancellation, the three flying airframes went to NASA for high-altitude aerodynamics research — a mission they were uniquely suited for. (NASA / Wikimedia)

Why the Navy Made the Right Call (Kind Of)

The Crusader III's defenders have argued for sixty-seven years that the Navy made the wrong choice. The Phantom was bigger, heavier, less manoeuvrable, and required two crew to fight. The Crusader III, with the same airframe-engine combination scaled and refined, could have evolved into a long-serving Navy interceptor in the same way the F-8 Crusader did. There is no question that, in pure dogfighting terms, the Crusader III was the better fighter.

The argument against the Crusader III is the one the Navy actually made. Air-to-air combat in the late 1950s was widely believed to be moving toward missile-only engagements. The age of the gun, as Vietnam would later prove embarrassingly, was thought to be over. In a missile-era air war, the radar-operator position in the F-4 Phantom, the second pair of eyes, the larger missile load and the air-to-ground capability all mattered more than turn rate. The Navy bet on multi-mission. The bet was wrong about air-to-air dogfighting — Vietnam taught a brutal lesson there — but right about almost everything else. The Phantom flew air-to-air, air-to-ground, recon, electronic warfare, fleet defence, and ground-attack missions for thirty years across two dozen air forces. The Crusader III, had it been bought instead, would have been retired by the early 1970s, like the F-8 was, because it could not do any of those secondary missions.

F-4J Phantom II at NAS Atlanta
F-4J Phantom II at NAS Atlanta. The Phantom won the 1958 fly-off, served for thirty years, and proved that multi-mission capability matters more than pure dogfighting performance — except sometimes. (US Navy / Wikimedia)

A Long Echo

The Crusader III's influence runs through every subsequent American naval fighter. The F-14 Tomcat's designers studied the XF8U-3 wing geometry. The F/A-18 Hornet's air-to-air weapons-system approach was a direct response to the lessons learned from buying the Phantom over the Crusader III. Even the F-35C's carrier-suitability work referenced the unique landing-gear and approach-handling characteristics Vought had developed for the Crusader III prototype.

The five airframes are gone. The three that flew were scrapped after their NASA careers ended in the mid-1960s. The two static airframes were dismantled. No Crusader III survives. The only physical legacy is a handful of cockpit panels, a fragmentary fuselage section in a private collection, and the photographs.

The intellectual legacy is the question every fighter designer has had to answer since: do you build the single-mission excellent fighter, or the multi-mission adequate one? The 1958 Navy answered. The pilots who flew Phantoms over North Vietnam often wished, particularly in their post-war memoirs, that the 1958 Navy had answered differently. The Crusader III is the aircraft that proved the Navy's answer was wrong, then quietly disappeared into the historical record before anyone could fix the mistake.

Sources: Wikipedia — Vought XF8U-3 Crusader III; Military Matters — Forgotten Aircraft; Defense Media Network; SilverHawkAuthor; GlobalSecurity.org; MilitaryFactory; Naval Aviation News archives.

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