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We'll have to disagree on the acceleration, Tomo, and I believe it has been clearly established that the F8F was a great fighter up to about 20,000 feet, so any meaningful comparions would have to come where you would FIND an F8F flying about, and that is not much above 20,000 feet in any case.
It COULD have been made into a high altitude fighter with a 2-stage supercharger or a turbocharger, but that Navy didn't need that capability and never developed it. I see a lot of things attributed in here to the P-51H that, in my own experience, weren't necessarily that way. We have several pilots at the museum who flew P-51H models and they have never expressed any great preference for it over a D. I get the feeling that it COULD be faster and but they really didn't spend much time doing it. It would be nice to see a dedicated thread on the benefits of the H from people who FLEW them, not from paper specifications.
Of interest to me would be the real-world performance and the real-world reliability. It also might be of interest to know the earliest time at which the H COULD have been fielded had it been deemed very important to do so. We KNOW it got to the war late, but COULD it habe gotten there a lot sooner?
That's the part of what-ifs I don't like. Anything is possible to the person suggesting it, but if the premise were have been done in real life, what would have been affected that could produce a negative that would outweigh any potential positive gains?
Let's put this P-51H myth to bed once and for all.
The V-1650-9 that powered the P-51H (and a few V-1650-11s, too) was rated at 1380 HP at full military power at sea level and about 1380 at 19500 feet while the P-51D's V-1650-7 was rated at 1490 HP at full military power at 19400 feet. Both of these ratings were at about 67 inches of Mercury or close to +16 psi boost. So the P-51H didn't make more HP more than the V-1650-7 engine up to full throttle at normal boost pressures at 19400 feet or so. The 2200 HP WEP that the V-1650-9 and -11s were capable of was at 81 inches of mercury or about +25 psi boost, WITH water-methanol ADI injection. The ADI usually lasted about 4.5 – 5.0 minutes and then the Merlin had to be throttled back to 67 inches of Mercury, where it basically equal to the -1, -3, and -7 engines of the D models. The WEP setting for the P-51D didn't use water-methanol injection and was available for 15 minutes or however long the pilot wanted to gamble his engine.
The P-51D was 7125 pounds empty and 10,100 pounds normal weight. The P-51H was 6585 empty and 9500 pounds normal weight. That means both are full internal fuel and armament, but clean. Let's say the weight for comparison purposes is the empty weight plus 65% of the difference between empty and normal weights to allow for takeoff, climb, and cruise to some arbitray point.
That puts the P-515D at 9059 pounds and the P-51H at 8480 pounds. At 19500 feet the P-51D had 1490 HP available and the P-51H had about 1350 HP available at that same height using normal manifold pressures. If the P-51H went to 81 inches, then he had the 2200 HP and was a VERY sprightly performer for about 4.5 – 5.0 minutes, after which he was back to normal manifold pressure and normal rates of climb.
That means the P-51D had a weight to power ratio of 6.08 pounds per HP while the P-51H had a ratio of 6.14 pounds per HP at the same manifold pressure. Pretty damned equal if you ask me, and I know you didn't. The P-51D could get to 1700 HP WER without ADI and sustain that for three times or more longer than the finicky P-51H could.
So, YES, the P-51H could get some sparkling numbers, but not for very long. When it was out of ADI the two planes were VERY equal with the P-51D still having a non-ADI WEP available.
The Bearcat's empty weight (F8F-1) was 7070 pounds and 9600 loaded. If we use the same 65% of the difference, the test weight is 8714 pounds with 2300 HP on tap. The comparative weight to power ratio is 3.79 pounds per HP and the Bearcat is still climbing at 3060 feet per minute at 20000 feet even though it isn't a "high altitude" fighter.
You can favor the P-51H all day; I'll stick with the Bearcat, especially since it's great big HP advantage was NOT using ADI and was avilable as long as you had fuel. Admittedly, that wouldn't be for too long relative to the P-51H, but it also wasn't restricted to only a few minutes of high power.
Hi Tomo,
we'll have to disagree, but that's OK. I got my weight numbers from multiple sources, including Boeing (who bought and owns what used to be North American Aviation some time back).
Tell you what, do a comparion atfer the P-51D and P-51H have both been airborne and in cruise for 3 - 4 hours or so and see what you come up with. The HP numbers for the V-1650-9 come from Graham WHite's excellent book. The source you use won't matter, it'll be close even if slightly different. The -7 and -11 were not cleared for elevated WEP MAP without ADI. Without the ADI they were to be run at 65 - 67 inches of MAP ... close to +16 psi of boost. At that level of boost they were VERY equal to the V-1650-1, 3, 7 engines.
Whether or not the R-2800 required ADI was largely dependent on the myriad dash number. I have the R-2800 book and will gladly look up the HP for any dash number if anyone is interested. Some WEP powers were wet (ADI) and and some were dry (no ADI). Several had two WEP number for both wet and dry.
The 3000 feet per minute climb at 20000 feet for the F8F-1 came from a flight report and I doubt if very many Bearcats ever got that high except as an exercise. The flight report was for a clean airplane with pilot, fuel, and ammunition and no drop tanks or external ordnance.
The Bearcat could get that way by taking off with drop tanks, using them and dropping them. I was trying to do some figuring under similar conditions ... full internal load, clean airplane, and fuel about 1/2 to 3/4 full at some point in the flight. What I didn't do was to figure it by fuel flow. Instead I chose to take empty weight and use 65% of the normal loaded weight number.
The F8F-2 used the straight -30.
The -22W and -34W used water injection, not water-methanol, and the -30 made 2250 HP without water.
That doesn't change the fact that I read a flight test report that said a clean Bearcat could still climb at 3000 feet per minute at 20000 feet.