Aircraft Identification V

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So it was very easy - its the mockup of a twin engined P40 (only photograf I know) never built. Well Done Waynos

Hello mates,

Since I follow up on this thread already for a long time (still waiting to get lucky ) I do know that you guys are very, very knowledgeable.

The only Curtiss designation that I know of as P-40 is the P-40 Warhawk, kittyhawk, Tomahawk, so I find it very strange that a totally different aircraft from the same company uses the same designation P-40.

Regards
Kruska
 
Well done with 'Lorna'.

Next one. Designed as a "trainer-fighter", but by the time WWII arrived, it was considered a pilots "toy"...



 
Wow, that was a complete guess. I must be cleverer than I thought

I haven't forgotten the turret fighter I posted, I've just lost the book its from and can't remember the exact identity, but it is a Bristol.
 

Correct. Well done! Did it help being Swedish Grampa?

According to the article I got the front view drawing from, it mentions that Sparmann designed a "bent-wing fighter that looked like the forerunner of the F4U Corsair", somewhere around 1936. Do you have any further information on this design Grampa?

Next..a biplane fighter...

 
Looks like a Gladiator, but there's no wing guns, and the canopy seems a bit large. (the 3-blade prop is also an interesting note, used on the Mk.II, but it looks different) The canopy and prop are wrong for the Gauntlet...
And the tailplane's too high.

 
 
I am trying to find the name of an experimental failed stol prototype from ww2 which had oversized props mounted at the end of each wing. Props rotated so that airflow was forced under wings by the props. Help please.
 

Sorry Grampa, I didn't word that very well. I'm after information, if you have it, on a Sparmann project, that never left the drawing board, but it would have looked similar to a F4U Corsair. There is no name mentioned in the article for this project.


Hi Patoruzu. I found a different artist, but suspect it's a Roussel 30...


 
Late update guys, I found the book

Patoruzu was right, it was the Bristol F.11/37 'small', but no type number is recorded, as the 156 was the Beaufighter and the 155 was the rival to the Albemarle, maybe it was the 154? As the name suggests they also submitted a slightly larger version of the same design to meet the spec.
 

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