Germany had raw materials problems in both world wars. So could not have aero engines equals to the western opposition
But still, in ww1 , they managed to produce fighters fully equal to the opposition despite the weaker engines(fokker dvii, dviii, Siemens suckert iv). In ww2 they failed totally to produce a reasonably competitive fighter after early 1942
The very moment that could not follow the horse power race, they kept adding armor, armament, equipment to their newer very often their fighters. Plus in mid war, ignored the most elementary laws of aerodynamics
Was possible to create better fighters with the historical engines? Certainly yes
All italian series 5 fighters were excellent on derated dB605a , and would be formidable with db605asm or d.
Or a ki84 hayate with db605asm. Would be extraordinary in low and mid altitudes.Or a ki 100 with db605asm.
Personally I feel that even the bf109 , could be close to the late war allied fighters if it was seriously developed aerodynamically
The failure to produce a competitive fighter, was in final analysis, mainly a matter of projects management failures and bad priorities. Even personal agendas of aircraft designers and rlm leaders
But still, in ww1 , they managed to produce fighters fully equal to the opposition despite the weaker engines(fokker dvii, dviii, Siemens suckert iv). In ww2 they failed totally to produce a reasonably competitive fighter after early 1942
The very moment that could not follow the horse power race, they kept adding armor, armament, equipment to their newer very often their fighters. Plus in mid war, ignored the most elementary laws of aerodynamics
Was possible to create better fighters with the historical engines? Certainly yes
All italian series 5 fighters were excellent on derated dB605a , and would be formidable with db605asm or d.
Or a ki84 hayate with db605asm. Would be extraordinary in low and mid altitudes.Or a ki 100 with db605asm.
Personally I feel that even the bf109 , could be close to the late war allied fighters if it was seriously developed aerodynamically
The failure to produce a competitive fighter, was in final analysis, mainly a matter of projects management failures and bad priorities. Even personal agendas of aircraft designers and rlm leaders