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#mccampbell #f6fhellcat #marianasturkeyshoot #ww2ace June Nineteen, Nineteen Forty-Four. Commander David McCampbell sat in an F-Six-F Hellcat with a rough engine, marginal fuel, and a radar report showing sixty Japanese aircraft inbound toward Task Force Fifty-Eight. The order was abort — his engine wasn't right, his fuel wasn't right, nothing about this sortie was right. He ignored it. What followed was forty minutes of the most calculated aerial violence in the history of American naval aviation. McCampbell climbed to twenty-two thousand feet alone, picked the lead Zero out of a sixty-plane formation, and dove. One pass. One kill. Pull up, reset altitude, pick the next leader, dive again. No wingman covering him. No second chances with that fuel gauge. Just John Browning's six fifty-caliber machine guns and a pilot who understood that killing the leader makes the formation hesitate — and hesitation at four hundred miles per hour is death. Nine Zeros. Forty minutes. One Hellcat running on fumes. By the time McCampbell nursed his fighter back to the USS Essex, his engine quit before the aircraft fully stopped rolling — the fuel crew found enough aviation gasoline left to fill a coffee thermos. His nine kills in a single sortie remains the highest ever recorded by an American pilot in the entire war. The Navy gave him the Medal of Honor. The Japanese lost over three hundred aircraft that day. They called it the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot — and McCampbell was the man who kicked it off. The Navy Ordered Him To Abort —Until He Vaporized Nine Zeros Solo ✅ In this video we cover: Why McCampbell's F-Six-F Hellcat — four tons heavier than a Zero — was actually the superior dogfighter above twenty thousand feet, and how Grumman's armor plate and self-sealing tanks kept him alive. The Thach Weave and the vertical dive-and-reset tactic McCampbell used to pick apart a sixty-plane formation solo — targeting leaders to collapse Japanese discipline. How he stretched marginal fuel through nine consecutive kills by flying with surgical precision — changing angles, controlling energy, never chasing. The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot — why the Japanese lost over three hundred aircraft against roughly thirty American losses, and how one commander's defiance set the tone. Why Commander McCampbell's single-sortie record of nine kills has never been matched by any American pilot in any conflict since. This World War 2 story proves that combat isn't won by the fastest plane or the fullest tank — it's won by the pilot who understands his machine better than the enemy understands theirs. McCampbell didn't have fuel, didn't have orders, and didn't have backup. He had a Hellcat, six guns, and forty minutes of the coldest decision-making ever recorded at twenty thousand feet. 🔔 Subscribe to Untold WW2 Stories for deep dives into forgotten military history and the tactics that changed warfare. #ww2 #worldwar2 #ww2documentary #militaryhistory #f6fhellcat #marianasturkeyshoot #medalofhonor #pacificwar #navalавиация #dogfight