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I'm glad you got rid of the turret, the shear on the fuselage as the 'plane bounces down hard on the deck would have been enormous - repeat until broken in half (I'd imagine). If things got really out of control eg the plane missing everything and disappearing over the side could have proved fateful for the turret operator, who may not be able to get out in time.
I'm not sure the twin mount m/c would have solved the firepower problem.
I think the wide cart would have lended to its unprepared landing strip capability, rather than any Naval application but the idea of underwing ordnance is a good one, supporting a pretty versatile battlefield close support role.
Hello
According to Soviet tests time to make 360deg turn at 1000m: Bf 109F-4 20,5 sec, Bf 109G-2/R6 (with 20mm underwing gun gondols) 23sec, Bf 109G-2 21sec.
Curtiss P-40C 18sec, P-40E 19,2 sec.
Juha
Hello Flyboyj
easest way probably still is Table of ftrs 1943
but I have seen the same figures also in Soviet/Russian literature.
Juha
Hello Flyboyj
easest way probably still is Table of ftrs 1943
but I have seen the same figures also in Soviet/Russian literature.
Juha
ok say a p-40 can't shake a 109 how much damage could it take?
Hi ClaideI don't think it's quite fair to say that putting the Merlin in the P-40 didn't provide much of a performance increase. Usually the comparison is made to the more dramatic increase achieved in the P-51, but the P-51 was given the V-1650-3 (2 speed 2 stage), while the P-40 only had the V-1650-1 (2 speed single stage).
Nevertheless, when comparing P-40E to P-40F, climb time to 20,000 feet was reduced from 13 minutes to 10.9. Range was increased by 145 miles, and endurance from 2.72 hours to 4 hours (on main tanks alone). Power loading went from 7.5lb/hp (at mean weight) for the P40E to 7.2lb/hp for the P-40F. Max speed went from 340 mph to 354 mph. Keep in mind the P-40F max speed is at 20,400 ft and the P-40E is at 12,500 ft and the F pretty much matches the E's speeds at low altitudes. All this was done with a slight weight gain.
Colin, I think you hit it right on the head. The P-40 was getting long in the tooth as a fighter but found a good life as a fighter-bomber like the Hurricane by 1942.
Hi Colin,
Yup I agree with you 100%. The P40 airframe just wasn't competitive against other 'cleaner' designs (and it was heavier).
The P51 on the other hand, was alreay doing around 400 mph with the Allison engine, so the installation of the Merlin gave it both altitude performance, long range, and a big speed increase. The Mustang was after all the product of North Americans claim that it could design and build a better plane than the P40 for the RAF (rather than tooling up to produce P40s), and that is exactly what they did.
Mike:
Judging from the 90 degree/sec roll rate of the P40, the Soviet tests of turn times, and historical accounts, I think the P40 has a very good chance of shaking off a 109 on it's tail. It's gonna roll into a turning bank quicker than the 109 can follow (without taking into consideration the reaction time of the 109 pilot), it's going to pull into a slightly tighter turn, and in a bounce situation the attacker is usually at a higher speed so he can't turn as tightly or as quickly.
] An anecdote concerning the 325th FG, indicates what could happen if Bf 109 pilots made the mistake of trying to out-turn the P-40. According to 325th FG historian Carol Cathcart: "on 30 July, 20 P-40s of the 317th [Fighter Squadron] ... took off on a fighter sweep ... over Sardinia. As they turned to fly south over the west part of the island, they were attacked near Sassari... The attacking force consisted of 25 to 30 Bf 109s and Macchi C.202s... In the brief, intense battle that occurred ... [the 317th claimed] 21 enemy aircraft."
Wikipedia said:For example, on one occasion in August 1941, Caldwell was attacked by two Bf 109s, one of them piloted by German Ace Werner Schröer. Although Caldwell was wounded three times, and his Tomahawk was hit by more than 100 7.92 mm bullets and five 20 mm cannon shells, during this combat Caldwell shot down Schröer's wingman and returned to base.
The strength of its 5-longeron wing became legendary after an aerial engagement on 8 April 1942 [19]. On this day, flight commander Lieutenant Aleksey Khlobystov rammed German aircraft two times in a single engagement. He cut off the tail assembly of one Messerschmitt in an overtaking maneuver and severed a portion of the wing of a second Messerschmitt. Both times he struck the enemy aircraft with the same right wing panel. Both Messerschmitts went down and the Tomahawk landed safely at its airfield, where it was repaired without any particular difficulty.
Waynos said:Why do some people put so much effort into trying to put some planes, whether reasonable (P-40) average (P-39) or poor (F2A) higher up the pecking order than they belong?
One more comment from a few pages back that I think applies to many of these kinds of threads:
Because they really were higher up in the pecking order then the slot history has aligned them. To me, the study of the under-appreciated fighters is a fascinating study in how history is so warped and distorted by false perceptions introduced years after the fact. Most of the tanks did not sink during D-Day, over 50 of them made it to the beaches and played an invaluable role in opening the passes. The assault of the 82nd Rangers up the cliff face of Point Du Hoc was NOT in vain; they located the artillery cannons some miles inland where they'd been relocated and destroyed them. Horrible misconceptions about these events dominate in the popular conciousness, to the point that the F2A Brewster Buffalo, the fighter with the best power-to-weight ratio of any fighter in the American inventory, an excellent climb, roll and turn rate, and the heaviest firepower- has been featured in TWO "worst fighter of all time" books!
This is the fascinating part of websites like this- unearthing facts that "common knowledge" is clueless of.