davparlr
Senior Master Sergeant
- jack of all trades, master of none.
Master of none? The P-51 was a superlative long range escort fighter, a superlative high altitude fighter, an excellent long range interdiction fighter, and, a very good low altitude fighter.
Ratsel said:Nobody can deny that P-51 by themselves or B-17 by themselves not much threat against Luftwaffe.
Hard to imagine that an aircraft, available in quantity, that could fly 600 miles, out fly prevalent enemy aircraft over their own airfields from ceiling to SL during the most critical period of the war, strafe transportation vehicles on the way out and fly 600 miles back home, could be considered not much of a threat to the Luftwaffe.
As for the best dogfighter, for yanking and banking, I would guess the Spit XIV, however the Bf-109K is pretty impressive in speed and climb from SL to 30k+. I don't about the turning part. The F4U-4 was certainly a good performer but I don't think it played enough of a role in WW2.
As for the best fighter, well, with carrier capability required, the only answer is the superb F4U. With the carrier capability removed, in my opinion, the P-51 was the best fighter for the following reasons:
1) It was the most advance aerodynamically efficient piston aircraft of WW2, with only the equally impressive, but later and much fewer, Fw-190D-9 coming close. The P-51A, with 1150 hp was capable of 342 mph, with racks, at SL, with 1170 hp, the Bf-109F was capable of 326 mph (no racks?), and, with much more hp the Spitfire V was capable of 324 mph (no racks?). All models of the P-51 were very fast.
2) Due to its aerodynamic efficiency and plentiful internal fuel load, it had great range, able to support long range bombing raids and interdiction or extended on-station time.
3) As stated above, it had great combat capability from high altitude to SL. Its airspeed was faster at all altitudes than any prevalent enemy aircraft and at fighter weight; it could also climb and turn with good authority at all altitudes, commandingly so at high altitudes. And, it had great dive speed. Not until late in the war was their an enemy aircraft capable of such a broad range of excellent performance, and allied aircraft that had this, e.g., Spitfire XIV, did not have the range or endurance.
4) It was a good flying aircraft with few flying vices.
5) It was designed for manufacturing efficiency without compromising performance. Units were cheap and could be produced in great quantity. This allowed overpowering forces to be available when the enemy did develop a counter.
6) It had significant impact on the war in Europe for an extended time.