In parallel with the F8U-1s and -2s, the Crusader design team was also working on a larger aircraft with better performance, designated within Vought as the
V-401. Although externally similar to the Crusader and sharing with it the variable incidence wing, the Crusader III was larger and was powered by the
Pratt & Whitney J75-P-5A engine generating 29,500
lbf (131 kN) of afterburning thrust. The Crusader III was designed for brief excursions to Mach 2.7 and two visible features showed it had a speed capability beyond that of the earlier Crusaders, namely a
swept-forward "Ferri scoop" air inlet for the engine and two large ventral fins. Another Vought aircraft, the Mach 2 cruise missile
SSM-N-9 Regulus II would also use a Ferri scoop inlet and ventral fin. The inlet used three shock waves with external and internal supersonic compression as the air slowed before entering the engine. The final shock has to move inside the inlet, known as starting, and when the aircraft reaches the relevant speed the swept-back sides were necessary to allow the air to spill from the downstream side of the shock as it moved inside. The directional stability of an aircraft is provided by its vertical fin. This stability progressively decreases beyond Mach 1 due to a decrease in fin lift-curve slope. More vertical surface area has to be added, often with ventral fins, to maintain adequate stability. When the Crusader II was introduced, with a higher thrust engine, it also had its fin area supplemented with two ventral fins which gave it a speed limit of Mach 1.7 beyond which stability was no longer acceptable. The size of the two fins needed on the Crusader III, with a speed reaching Mach 2.7, required them to be turned horizontally when taking off and landing. To ensure sufficient performance, Vought made provisions for a
Rocketdyne XLF-40
liquid-fueled rocket motor with 8,000 lbf (35.6 kN) of thrust in addition to the turbojet. Avionics included the AN/AWG-7 fire control computer, AN/APQ-74 radar, and AN/ASQ-19 datalink. The system was expected to simultaneously track six and engage two targets. Due to extensive changes as compared to the F8U-1, the F8U-2 was labeled by some as the "Crusader II", and as a result, the XF8U-3 was officially labeled "Crusader III." ==Operational history==