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You are fast. Remember you have at least one 150gal drop tank to knock about 40mph off your speed. Still nowhere near the range for ETO.hmmmm.
View attachment 502778
Yep, 250 gph at 22-24,000ft "Normal Power (max. Continuous)"
except.
View attachment 502779
that max continuous (Normal) power would have you "cruising" at over 380mph according to this chart.
I wonder what the fuel burn was if cruising at 310-320mph true??
hmmmm.
View attachment 502778
Yep, 250 gph at 22-24,000ft "Normal Power (max. Continuous)"
except.
View attachment 502779
that max continuous (Normal) power would have you "cruising" at over 380mph according to this chart.
I wonder what the fuel burn was if cruising at 310-320mph true??
Odd how normal power is faster then military power on that chart.
hmmmm.
View attachment 502778
Yep, 250 gph at 22-24,000ft "Normal Power (max. Continuous)"
except.
View attachment 502779
that max continuous (Normal) power would have you "cruising" at over 380mph according to this chart.
I wonder what the fuel burn was if cruising at 310-320mph true??
'AUTO RICH' consumes more fuel than 'AUTO LEAN'.
'AUTO RICH' for power or better cooling and 'AUTO LEAN' was usually used for cruising.
Eventually, Both F4U and F6F were offically cleared to use 30 minutes military power and unlimited normal rated cruise with 'AUTO LEAN'.
View attachment 502780 View attachment 502781
The F6F's handbook was 1 May 1946 version and the F4U-1's handbook was at least revised after 1 June 1944.
F4U-1 was first fighter with production model R-2800, so it suffered from various initial problems. One of them was high-altitude performance, Birdcage Corsairs just after deployment were not allowed to fly above 29,000 feet. Due to early Corsair's operational experience, the R-2800 has been improved for battle. Hellcats and rised cabin Corsairs, which were able to appear on the battlefield with most problems resolved, were lucky.
First off, that chart is for the Corsair, not the Hellcat. Here's the source for my figures:
Secondly, what pilot would elect to fly at max continuous power settings while cruising to the target area (whether ETO or otherwise)? That's a great way to run out of fuel. That's what the cruise settings are used for. As you can see with the Hellcat example, the fuel burn rate is basically cut in half by dialing down manifold pressures, RPMs, and running an auto lean mixture. Speed is still a respectable 283 mph.
But again, I'm not advocating that the Hellcat could have been used for high altitude bomber escort, you and others have already convinced me otherwise. I'm just talking range and radius in the general sense and what effects them.
Sorry Dawncaster, seems that I stepped on your toes a bit here and repeated some of what you already stated. We obviously were responding at roughly the same time...
...... Remember you have at least one 150gal drop tank to knock about 40mph off your speed.....
If only consider the range and cruise speed Corsair may be slightly better than Hellcat, even without auxiliary fuel tanks in the wing, the Corsair has equivalent range and faster cruising speeds. Well, both models were not capable at ETO as escort fighters, but they can be good low and medium altitude fighters. Tempest and Typhoon which had similar operational altitudes would fight together.
Like many confused dogfights!
the
First off, that chart is for the Corsair, not the Hellcat. P-39 Expert lumped them both together in his original post. I have three Hellcat pilot manuals and none of them show figures for that sort of fuel usage. Here's the source for my figures:
View attachment 502784
Secondly, what pilot would elect to fly at max continuous power settings while cruising to the target area (whether ETO or otherwise)? That's a great way to run out of fuel. That's what the cruise settings are used for. As you can see with the Hellcat example, the fuel burn rate is basically cut in half by dialing down manifold pressures, RPMs, and running an auto lean mixture. Speed is still a respectable 283 mph.
But again, I'm not advocating that the Hellcat could have been used for high altitude bomber escort, you and others have already convinced me otherwise. I'm just talking range and radius in the general sense and what effects them.
Same engine in Corsair and Hellcat.the
First off, that chart is for the Corsair, not the Hellcat. P-39 Expert lumped them both together in his original post. I have three Hellcat pilot manuals and none of them show figures for that sort of fuel usage. Here's the source for my figures:
View attachment 502784
Secondly, what pilot would elect to fly at max continuous power settings while cruising to the target area (whether ETO or otherwise)? That's a great way to run out of fuel. That's what the cruise settings are used for. As you can see with the Hellcat example, the fuel burn rate is basically cut in half by dialing down manifold pressures, RPMs, and running an auto lean mixture. Speed is still a respectable 283 mph.
But again, I'm not advocating that the Hellcat could have been used for high altitude bomber escort, you and others have already convinced me otherwise. I'm just talking range and radius in the general sense and what effects them.
You flew at normal/max continuous when escorting B17/B24 over Europe....
I
As to drop tanks and loss of speed. Using the loss of max speed with tank/s to compute the loss of speed when cruising is also wrong. the penalty of carrying the tanks at 300mph is going to be less than at 400mph. It will be proportional. not a flat loss of 40mph regardless of speed when clean.
Same engine in Corsair and Hellcat.
You flew at normal/max continuous when escorting B17/B24 over Europe. LW had you on radar from the time you took off and know exactly where you are. So likely they are above you, if only barely.
Now there may be times or situations where you can back off the throttle a little, but you certtainly better PLAN your mission at normal/max continuous.
Odd how normal power is faster then military power on that chart.
Bomber stream is more like 220-240mph and with drop tank you are going 340-350mph and weaving to stay with the slower bombers. Maybe after mid '44 after the LW had been beaten down you could cruise at lower than normal power, but in late '43 and the first half of '44 you better plan your mission at normal power.No. You did not. you flew at a speed that allowed you to accelerate up to combat speed in a short period of time without burning up all your fuel in the meantime.
If the bomber stream is moving at 180-200mph true and you are weaving above at 300-320mph you are actually flying over 50% further than the bombers.
If you are blasting around at 360-400mph at max cruise then you are flying twice as a far as the bombers for each mile the bombers make towards the targets in Germany and nobody had enough fuel to do that.
Usually what was wanted was max lean or close to it NOT max continuous.
Janes listed the B-17 cruising speed at 220mph and B-24 at 237mph. That's about 150mph indicated. They were slow.So about 143 IAS at 25,000ft when running at 55,000 to 60,000lbs but that is not formation flying which is slower ?
Bombers sure aren't doing 240mph true.
Janes listed the B-17 cruising speed at 220mph and B-24 at 237mph. That's about 150mph indicated. They were slow.