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One of the things that is not well discussed. US and British used 100 octane as the prime fuel because of availability. However the Brits used their 100/130 octane on US aircraft like the P51 and P40. Describing them as different beasts. Which is where you hear of the 70 inchesmanifold pressure used on the Mustangs.
I wonder what fuel was used most in Africa and CBI. Burma Oil controlled by the Brits refined fuel. If so created different blends. Africa the fuel was shipped in from the US and Britain or Egypt. General Montgomery and Alexander always had a 4 to1 ratio of troops vs the Axis. Most of them were to protect the Suez Canal. They also took over Syria and Iran oil from the Italians. Had Hitler by passed Moscow and headed for Iran there would have been a different conversation.
The P40 with an extra 100/200 hp would have give the Me109 fits. Especially at combat weight!
The added boost does impact higher altitudes! Figure a few more thousand feet of useful performance. Interesting that performance tables were not developed using Combat operations Boost levels. The P40 should have hit the 380mph mark. The impact was in climb and sustained turn performance.And P-40s too.
Well they rated the P-40K for 60" Hg manifold pressure for 1580 hp 'officially' for both V-1710-39 and V-1710-73, apparently due to pressure from combat units, so I think that actually did happen. From what I gather so far it only really worked at very low altitude. Unofficially per the memo I linked above you'll notice that Allison acknowledges that they (Australians and and unnamed US Fighter Group in the Middle East) were running P-40s at 70" or 66" of mercury too for what they estimated was ~1700 hp (again only down low).
The P-51 memo you are probably referring to noted that the English were running P-51A / Mustang I and II at 70" mercury for up to 20 minutes without problems, and that is on the V-1710-39 I believe, whereas the -73 was much stronger.
The memo also specifically mentions that it was safer to do this using "amendment 5" fuel (item 4 on the memo). So I assume that is higher octane
Overboosting was also of course done with Merlins, both on Spitfires and Mustangs and P-40s too. And Hurricanes no doubt.
S
The added boost does impact higher altitudes! Figure a few more thousand feet of useful performance. Interesting that performance tables were not developed using Combat operations Boost levels. The P40 should have hit the 380mph mark. The impact was in climb and sustained turn performance.
The early Allison supercharger was redesigned. Allowing for higher boost performance as it wore out the gears on earlier models.
Again was DAF using British 130 octane or US 100 octane?
This test gives an example of climbing at higher boost. They took a P-40N-1CU and climbed at 57" mercury (nominal WEP rating)
Climb rates were
Sea Level
1000 ft / 57" / 3100
2000 ft / 57" / 3140
3000 ft / 57" / 3180
5000 ft / 57" / 3220
6800 ft* / 57" / 3370
7500 ft / 55.5" / 3270
10000 ft / 50.5" / 2930
12500 ft / 46.25 / 2610
15000 ft / 42.25 / 2300
*6800 ft was the 'critical full throttle height' ,meaning after that the boost started gradually declining.
Note that in the test - the plane got to 15,000 feet in 5 minutes flat. Rate of climb actually increased until the plane got to 6800 ft. but then declined sharply. Without boost the initial climb rate (in another test also posted to wwiiaircraftperformance.org) for the same plane was 2,300 fpm and it took 6 and a half minutes to get to 15,000 ft.
I wasn't aware the supercharger was redesigned, unless you mean the change in gear ratio. I know they strengthened the crankshaft considerably on the V-1710-73
More of a redesign upgrade using larger bearings to prevent gears galling at high pressure! Field reports from CBI where the Early Tomahawks we're losing power after a few hundred hours. Again coming from snipit comments from field reports. Russians experienced the same issues. Later model Allison SC were able to overboost without failing.
Not to mention there were no oil or air filters. Plus their oil quality was poor. They quickly caught up. But maintenance in minus 20 degree weather did not help.The Russians had all kinds of maintenance problems with P-40s but in part that was due to their not realizing the importance of keeping dust out of the oil etc., not having spare parts and being forced to drill holes in all kinds of systems to drain out all the fluids every night during Winter.
S
Found an interesting example of overboosting in combat.
The incident occurred on Oct 9 1942 at 10:20 AM as 6 P-40Fs from 64th Sqn / 57th FG were escorting 18 Boston Bombers in a raid on "El Daba", an Axis base used by both Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica Fighters.
Spitfires flying high cover were diverted to help Hurricane squadrons in big trouble at another airfield so the P-40s were on on their own, though 250 Sqn RAF (flying Kittyhawk III) and 3 RAAF (flying Kittyhawk I) were operating in the same area at the same time.
Incident to follow in the next post.
Uh, If he was flying a P-40F then he had a Merlin engine.
So a lot of this thread lately (and a few others) has been about how good the Allison powered P-40s were when over boosted.
The P-40F had a lot more power higher up and didn't lack much (if any) unless very, very low compared to the P-40E/K.
so please note that 12lbs boost (54.3in?) was the normal take-off rating for the Merlin V-1650-1 used in the P-40F and that 61in was the WEP power setting listed in the pilot's manual. 48.2in was the military rating and 44.2in was the max continuous.
It doesn't sound like this pilot was exceeding the recommended limits (or what would become the official limits?) by very much.
There is little argument from me that the P-40 could pull above it's weight in certain circumstances. Sometimes well above.
For the Generals however those circumstances were too limiting. The same "investment" in ground crew(and supplies) airfield space ( dispersal points) and fuel/ammo supplies) could be used by more "all round" aircraft.
Even in your example the P-40Fs were initially given top cover by Spitfires until the Spits were called away to cover the Hurricanes.
what the starting set up ( no plan survives first contact with the enemy) would have been with P-40Es instead P-40Fs I don't know.