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Would those engines work properly with just an aftercooler or did they need an intercooler too?
I believe they had an intercooler, but not an aftercooler.
I cannot confirm at the moment, as I am away from my books.
It's late so just three quick points.
- P-60 development may have started in 1941 but it continued until 1944. The P-60A flew on Nov 1942, the P60C flew on January 1943, and the P-60E flew in January 1944, and the complete version not until July 1944. Even Curtiss thought that was a waste of time and asked the War Dept to be let out of their contract.
- You mentioned the P-40Q weight was 9,000 lbs and you try to nudge it up from there, but the P-60Chad a gross weight of 11,835 lbs! With four .50 cal guns.
- It also had a 41' wingspan, vs. the 35' span of the P-40Q. (the latter was heading in the right direction)
P-60E, they all looked radically different
It may have been impossible to have gotten it working early enough to matter due to the trouble with the two stage Allison, but I think you can look at that, and compare it to the P-40Q I posted, and tell which one was a more viable design.
So what I mean by saying they shouldn't have wasted their time with it is they should have gone in that design direction (longer, slimmer, more streamlined, shorter wings, and yes a two stage or at least two speed supercharger but not a turbo) earlier instead of wasting their time for three years with the P-60.
XP-60 (Merlin 28, first flight September 1941)
XP-60A (V-1710 + turbo, first flight November 1942)
XP-60B (V-1710 + different turbo - completed as XP-60E)
XP-60C (originally to be Chrysler IV-2220 but ended up with R-2800 and contra-props, first flight January 1943)
XP-60D (XP-60 was changed to fit the V-1650-3) - this crashed in May 1943, still before the XP-40Q was a thing.
XP-60E (XP-60B airframe completed with R-2800 and single rotation propeller, first flight May 1943).
Curtiss had been a main supplier of Army fighters since the late 20s, if it wanted to remain in that position it could not offer fighters almost as good as the other companies, they had to better, more innovative.
The P-40Q was not a change in design in direction... Cutting a few feet of wing tip off the old P-36 wing was not an example of innovation or modern thinking.
Unfortunately for Curtiss the basic design talent seemed to be lacking, the P-60 series dropped to six guns and then to four guns in an attempt to get the planes lighter to keep the performance up even as they got the more powerful engine (the R-2800).
You do know that P-51s were being licence built in Australia from 1943 or 1944?
Be that as it may, if you look at the Australian victory claims for 1944, you'll notice that the majority of their victory claims were still by P-40s. I don't see any by Mustangs. By my count it's 17 from P-40s, 4 from Beaufighters, and 9 from Spitfires. So clearly there was still a need and a role for the P-40s.
The point is they were going to get P-51s from Australian production before they got P-40Qs.
Not even Italy, especially not Burma as its range that everyone wants. It's only the USSR that's uninterested in range.The genuine usefulness of the Q hinges entirely on it's being available earlier. I agree (and stipulated from the beginning of this segue) that by 1944 there wasn't much of a market for it. I think the War Dept might have accepted it anyway if not for the prototype crashes (the first one may have happened in 1943, but there were three more in March, April and July of 44) which don't bode well for production aircraft, but sometimes are just purely accidents.
But to reiterate, the plane was at least a year too late. The only way it could have been viable is if Allison had been able to sort out the two-stage engine by late 42 or early 43, that way it could have been (arguably) in the field by mid 1944. If so it probably could have played a useful role in Burma and Italy among other places.
Not even Italy, especially not Burma as its range that everyone wants. It's only the USSR that's uninterested in range.
I've seen various estimates for the P-40Q range but with an external tank it appears to be 994 miles. Not as good as a Mustang but considerably better than any Spitfire (most marks around 430 miles, VIII seems to have been best at about 660 miles), Tempest (420 miles - with an extra fuel tank), or P-47 (best I've seen is 800 miles, most were realistically more like 500*) all of which were still in use in 1944 and 1945.
The main point though is that they were using P-40K, M and N from 1943 through early 1945 in many places including Italy and Burma, and also in the South Pacific. P-40s were still scoring victories in late 1944. If you had replaced those aging P-40N with P-40Q in say, early or mid 1944, that probably would have been a useful improvement. Given A) there aren't enough P-51s and B) there aren't enough P-38s either, the latter still experiencing teething problems into 1944... and the P-47 never really excelled in the CBI where the P-40 scored more victories than all other US types combined. For that matter P-40 units scored more than twice as many victories in the MTO as P-47s did too.
You could make the same argument for the Hurricane - an incrementally improved (say clip winged, two stage supercharger) Hurricane would have been very helpful in 1943 or 1944, IMO. If you could improve the top level speed to over 350 or 360 mph and increase the maximum dive speed and acceleration by about 20% each you would have put it back into a viable place.
*The special long range P-47N with an extra 100 gallons of gas in the wings, apparently could fly 2,300 miles ferry range, but it didn't see action until 1945 as far as I could determine googling it just now.
The Kiwis opted for the Corsair, the Aussies the Mustang, the Brits Mustangs and Thunderbolts, CBI USAAF the Mustang, USAAF Europe Mustang and Thunderbolts, Soviet VVS Kingcobra, USAAF Pacific Thunderbolts and Mustangs, Soviet PVO Spitfire and Thunderbolts, so maybe just maybe Soviet Naval Aviation to back up their Thunderbolts and P-40N's.
By late 1944, Spitfires also have rear fuselage fuel tanks. So what would you choose for the UK and USSR, Spitfire LXVI or P-40Q? When will it enter service, late 44 or early 1945?
I only see one potential customer for it, Soviet Naval Aviation.
Those picks were based on what was available, we are speculating about another plane that wasn't - presumably if it was it may have been part of the mix.
By the time the Kiwi's got their Corsairs (I think this was basically decided by the US) they weren't encountering Japanese planes. As you can see yourself their last 20 victory claims were all with P-40.
I already pointed out that similarly, the Australians got all their final victories with P-40s, Spitfires and Beaufighters. They did not seem to have any claims with the P-51 so I would say it's a safe bet they got them into combat too late. As CAS / fighter-bombers they were not ideal (they would have been better with Corsairs probably).
VVS did accept some Kingcobras but the P-40Q would have been better (fast enough to keep up with Fw 190s but also much longer range which did actually matter even to the VVS). The Soviets definitely did not care for the P-47 which they declared "not a fighter" and I believe would certainly have used P-40Q for PVO as well as VVS if available. They were still using P-40N in Naval aviation by the end of the war as you probably know.
The Brits would have accepted P-40Q in 1944 I think since they were still using Hurricanes (!) in the CBI and P-40N's in Italy, and didn't have enough Mustangs. I don't think they ever particularly loved the Thunderbolt.
USAAF was still using P-40s in the CBI into November 1944 (23rd and 51st FG). The 80th FG for example actually switched from the P-47 to the P-40 before rotating to the Theater.
So again, all I believe candidates to use any available P-40s with 40 mph faster speed, 5,000 higher ceiling, 300 miles better range, and double the rate of climb if it was available really any time in 1944.
Us Brits has better fighters to deploy in all our theatres. There's no need for the P-40Q, likewise our Commonwealth, and if we gave them to the Soviets then maybe they wouldn't have stopped in the Kuriles but marched into Hokkaido too, so not a good idea.
If that were true they wouldn't have been using P-51s and P-47s
The later Spitfire IXe's and L XVI's had 66 Imp gals more fuel than the VIII's so are a much better option.
What was their range with and without external tanks?
Best I've seen in an old book I have is Spitfire IX tested in states. 284 Imp gal total with 2 X 62 Imp gal drop tanks so 160 Imp internal so slightly more than original Mustang. You need to Google Spitfires range.Lol I find that doubtful, I'd really need to see some data on that. 1,000 miles range on internal fuel? Combat radius, combat range or ferry range?
This seems to be devolving yet again into one of those patriotic type debates.
The Spit was the best medium to high altitude interceptor and short range air superiority fighter on the Allied side, maybe for any side of the war (with the only real rival being the Bf 109). Once LF variants became available in 1941 it was also an excellent low altitude interceptor / air superioritiy fighter, though it would be challenged for supremacy in this role by the Yak-3 and some of the other Soviet types, as well as by the Fw 190. By continuous upgrading, the Spitfire stayed in dominant role in the interceptor niche through the end of the war, but it was never a good escort fighter. At best the VIII and other extended range variants seem to have given medium range.
The P-51B and later marks, once they arrived, were the ultimate escort fighter of the late war with not long but very long range and good outcomes in air to air combat. The mantle was probably owned by the A6M for the early war and maybe the P-38 for the mid-war, at least in the Pacific. But P-51s were never particularly good interceptors or ground attack planes. Neither were P-38s.
P-47s were contenders as arguably the best high altitude fighter on the Allied side. The rare Fw 190D and even rarer Ta-152 were probably the best for the Axis.
The A6M was the best carrier fighter of the early war, the F6F Hellcat was hands down the best carrier fighter of the late war, followed by the F4U.
The Soviets, as I said already, probably had the best short range, low altitude fighters of the war, but only once they were fully shaken out and developed, probably not until 1943. Before that the general purpose Bf 109, seemingly pretty good at all altitudes, was clearly dominant. By the end of the war the Tempest is also highly competitive in this specific role.
In other words there were different niches that different aircraft were good at. No one aircraft was good at doing everything - those with the greatest versatility perhaps had the most applications, but not necessarily the most important applications. The Mustang was never as important as the Spitfire because the Spitfire defended the homeland and that was the priority mission of the war.
I have, needless to say. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence Kevin.
It's out there. The Spitfire Story' by Alfred Price. Revised 2nd Edition 2002. I think it was about 160 gal max for combat for later marks. So 95 front fuselage, 33 wing, 66 rear. Rockets never used operationally in WW2. Don't think they ever used them in Burma though. War ended.