PhantomAce08 wrote:
It wasn't really a "Super Corsair" though was it? It was more of a "Corsair that was Super"

Please correct me if I'm wrong.

I'd side with calling it a Super Corsair. It wasn't, obviously, an original one but they carried the idea to modern day standards and actually made a faster racer than the late '40s versions. With the short vertical (stock F4U) tail, it was also probably a lot harder to fly, especially with the increased prop blade area.
What was so cool about the program is that it was done "for cheap," a lot of people came together to get it done, and it enjoyed such a long career. Three different pilots raced her, and Jim Maloney also flew her before he was killed. Overall a very neat project, and it remains a lot of people's favorite racer.
One other really neat detail...
Frank Sanders, with his son Brian in back, was flying chase in their stock Sea Fury early in the test program. When Hinton put power up on the Corsair, it left the 'faster' Sea Fury like it was tied to a post. Until then, Sanders had given friendly chiding to the Chino kids that the fat-winged monster wouldn't be fast.
That gave ol' Frank an idea.... You guessed it... They put a R-4360 on the Sea Fury and we got Dreadnought. Lloyd Hamilton liked the idea, so he took the parts the Sanders had discarded and built up "Havenaught...," I mean "Furias."
The rest, as they say, is history...