Flying Tigercats: And Then There Were Five
A couple of strays join the prowl, and the world’s supply of flyable Grumman F7Fs increases by two-thirds.
- By Michael Klesius
- AirSpaceMag.com, October 24, 2008
What could possibly get your juices flowing again once you’ve flown 1,000 mph at treetop level in a Lockheed F-104 Starfighter? For legendary test pilot Darryl Greenamyer, the answer was a straight-wing, propeller-driven, downright dowdy-by-comparison airplane that exited the Grumman factory during World War II.
That plane, the F7F Tigercat, was anything but dowdy in its day. Sleek and slender, with two brawny radial engines churning out 2,100 horsepower each, the Tigercat was Grumman’s cheetah, outrunning the company’s other portly felines: the Wildcat, Bearcat, and Hellcat. Of the 364 Tigercats built over three years starting in 1943, only three were flying by the summer of 2008 (look for a photo in the “Sightings” department of our December 2008/January 2009 issue). But two more have just joined their ranks.
Greenamyer still boasts the low-altitude speed record that he set in that F-104 in 1977 (996 mph, 80 feet above the Nevada desert). “Nothing was as fun as that,” he admits. He was a Lockheed test pilot in the company’s heyday, and flew the SR-71 Blackbird beyond 2,000 mph. He’s also one of the most winning—and most enduring—of pilots to compete at the Reno Air Races.
But for the past couple of years, Greenamyer’s been content in the hangar rebuilding his Tigercat, whose top speed doesn’t quite exceed 450 mph. And yes, he says, it’s a thrill to fly. “I can’t remember the projected takeoff roll, but I think on a cool day it’s about 900 feet. That’ll really squash you back in the seat.”
In 1990, Greenamyer traded four airplanes, including a World War II-era B-25 Mitchell bomber, for a flyable Tigercat owned by the U.S. Marine Corps Museum. “I remember flying it out of Quantico [Virginia] on a handheld radio, and just wandering across the country,” he says. He brought it to Ramona, California, just northeast of San Diego, where he kept it for a year. Then he flew it to a small landing strip at his ranch about 10 miles away, where he kept it for several more years parked under a large oak tree. Concerned about corrosion, he took it apart and trucked it up to Mariposa, a small town on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada Mountains outside Yosemite National Park, and stored it in a warehouse.
Fast forward a decade. Greenamyer got the itch to put it back together, this time in Thermal, California, minutes down the road from his current home in Indio, both a short drive southeast of Palm Springs. He hopes to sell the restored Tigercat for $975,000. “I’m gettin’ up in years, and I might as well get rid of it,” he says. “That warehouse is full of what some call junk and others call treasure, and I just don’t need it. I’m gonna kick the bucket some day, and my kids will walk in there and say, ‘What’s this?’ and put a match to it.”
He used a forklift for many of the parts, including the one-ton engines. He used existing steel frames for supports, built a few more, and used chain hoists to get parts off the ground and move them around. He borrowed a set of jacks from a friend at Aerotrader in Chino, California.
“I trailered it down here in three or four loads and began putting it together,” he says. “I guess the hardest part was getting the pieces out of the barn and getting them here.”





Comments (6)
The pix in the mag was really great, than I went to the web and looked at the story about getting two more in the air.
In Sep 52, I was assigned to VMF-542 at ElToro and we had half the Sqdn in F7F3n aircraft and the other half in F3D-2 type aircraft. As an Ordinance man I had the opportunity to work both prop and jet. A highlite of my tour was the chance to go to NAS Fallon NV for winter Manuvers. For an 18 year old kid it doesn,t get any better than that.
Posted by Jon H Richarson on November 21,2008 | 04:57 PM
I very much enjoy reading about aircraft. Yours are a good selection.
I am gone from home a lot. But would enjoy all I could receive. I was in the USAF from 1960-1965 as a recip engine mech. My afsc was a 43251
I am 69 years old and retired.
Thank you. Lester Newingham
Posted by Lester Newingham on December 3,2008 | 12:28 PM
I hover-taxied past a hangar (AHA next to Landmark FBO?) at San Antonio Airport last Monday and saw a Tigercat and another Cat tucked into the back. Were they Rod's cats I saw?
Posted by Greg Gaunt on September 19,2009 | 02:03 PM
I had the opportunity to meet Steve Hinton when he flew the tigercat into SA that afternoon. Rod's collection is truly remarkable and I am trilled to be able to watch his collection grow...
Posted by eddie on September 13,2010 | 02:11 PM
I remember circa 1974-1975 taking a tour at
California Division Of Forestry now Cal Fire located in one of the Sonoma California airports.
They had a few F7F Tigercats being converted
to airtankers with a propane like tank on the fuselage belly-holding 600 gallons of retardent.
Always wanted to own one and enjoy the incredible flight experience flights of a lifetime.
What a beautiful aircraft visually and audibly.
Posted by Tim Carman on August 23,2012 | 11:06 PM
I dunno if anyone will ever see this, but as a kid i grew up watching the Tigercat that Mr. Lewis bought from our local air museum. I never knew that it was sold, and when i found out I was heartbroken. I miss hearing it buzz over my house and miss watching it cruise by the air field. I hope someday this guy will bring it back to Kalamazoo just so I can see it one more time!
Posted by Scott on October 6,2012 | 10:22 PM