Its predecessor, the AF-2 Guardian[?], used two aircraft for ASW, one with the detection gear, and the other with the weapons. This was very inefficient, and the Navy wanted a design that carried both. The replacement aircraft was to carry radar, a magnetic anomaly detector (MAD), ECM, acoustic equipment, and a searchlight, and be able to be armed with bombs, mines, torpedos, and rockets.
Grumman's design (model G-89) was for a large high-wing monoplane with twin radial engines.
Both the two prototypes XS2F-1 and 15 production aircraft, S2F-1 were ordered at the same time, on 30 June 1950. First flight was 4 December 1952, and production aircraft entered service, with VS-26[?], in February 1954.
Followon versions included the WF Tracer and TF Trader, which became the E-1 Tracer[?] and C-1 Trader[?] in the rationalization of 1962.
Versions of the tracker were sold to various nations, including Canada, Australia, and Taiwan.
The Tracker was eventually superseded for military use by the S-3 Viking - the last Tracker squadron was disestablished in 1976 - but a number live on as firefighting aircraft[?].
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