Shortround6
Major General
Because the Corsair couldn't do it in 1941-42. Things were changing quickly then and what was possible in 1944 was not possible in 1942 in production aircraft.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
Perhaps it was more like the actually fast and short-legged Zero?
And tail and landing gear and many internalsThe Beaufighter was originally ordered as a cannon fighter. It was, in effect, a back up to the Whirlwind, which was taking rather longer than the Air Ministry would have liked.
To speed up development, the Beaufighter used the wings from the Beaufort mated to a new fuselage.
Night fighting was not part of its original specification.
The A6M2's range shown is ferry range, it's combat radius was between 5 and 6 hundred miles.short-legged Zero? From wiki so not 100% reliable but not THAT far off either
Spitfire
• Range: 771 km (479 mi, 416 nmi)
• Combat range: 399 km (248 mi, 216 nmi)
P-40E
• Range: 1,152 km (716 mi, 622 nmi) at 70% power
F4F
• Range: 1,360 km (845 mi, 734 nmi)
A6M2
• Range: 1,870 km (1,160 mi, 1,010 nmi)
[h3][/h3]
You have misunderstood me. I was refering to the He 100 after some tweaks being equivalent of a Zero (in sense that featured no protection ) but faster and with a bit shorter range.short-legged Zero? From wiki so not 100% reliable but not THAT far off either
Spitfire
• Range: 771 km (479 mi, 416 nmi)
• Combat range: 399 km (248 mi, 216 nmi)
P-40E
• Range: 1,152 km (716 mi, 622 nmi) at 70% power
F4F
• Range: 1,360 km (845 mi, 734 nmi)
A6M2
• Range: 1,870 km (1,160 mi, 1,010 nmi)
[h3][/h3]
The A6M2's range shown is ferry range, it's combat radius was between 5 and 6 hundred miles.