kool kitty89
Senior Master Sergeant
I'd think the loss in acceleration and climb (assuming no additional reductions in weight beyond engine/radiator) would be more significant.The power of the AM 37 should be 1450 CV for take off, 1300 CV at SL (nominal regime) and 1400 CV at ~5.8 km (also nominal). The AM 35 A was, respectively, at 1350, 1120 and 1200 CV at 6 km. The MiG 5 was a substantial aircraft, almost 39 sq m of wing area (some 30% greater than of P-38, just some 7-8% less than Mosquito), and with two AM 35A would not perform as wanted, we'd have maybe 580 km/h?
We discussed before the possible compromises between the AM35 and AM37 in terms of getting a functional engine into mass production (implementation of an intercooler similar to the AM37's on the AM35 seems to have been the best suggestion). An AM35A powered MiG 5 would perhaps mostly be useful as an interim design if production/preproduction was actually moved forward with early war (say if the Soviet industrial relocation hadn't occurred -or had been delayed) with more powerful engined versions following. (at very least if it reached production before the AM38 was available in quantity -otherwise starting production with the AM38 would make more sense followed by an intercooled AM35 derivative ... which might perform better than the AM38 at all but very low altitudes as well, albeit with some intercooler drag)
Just using a 2-speed supercharger allowing gearing switched between the speeds used on the AM35A and AM38 would probably be simpler and offer a smoother power curve. (except given Mikulin ended up sticking with single speed superchargers for so long, was already working with intercooling, and adapting an intercooler to the AM35A would mean rerouting ducting between the supercharger and carburetors but not making major changes to the engine structure, it might actually be faster/more efficient to implement that)
I suppose introducing a supercharger gear ratio intermediate from the AM35A and AM38 would also be notable and possibly the simplest and most foolproof option. A critical altitude more in the 3-4 km range would probably be quite useful.
I haven't seen figures for the airfoil thickness:chord on the MiG-5, but given the broad chord and somewhat low aspect ratio, it seems possibly they adopted a fairly thin (and thus low drag -and lower lift) airfoil section). The leading edge taper/sweepback might have some impact on that as well. I know a Clark YH airfoil section was used (so not ideal but improved from the simpler Clark Y at least), but that says nothing about the thickness.This is where the 'substantial' stature of the MiG 5 is a good thing - big wing will help out with taking off with big payload in a fighter-bomber role.
Mind you, given the existing flight testing with the AM37, the 580 km/h estimate for the AM35A seems fairly reasonable regardless. (a thinner wing would point to better potential for higher speeds in general with more power, higher critical mach number, and greater potential dive performance)