MIflyer
Captain
That's why the F-106A had an automatic fuel transfer system, activated when you hit Mach 1.05, to change the CG.I've always thought the center of pressure moves aft when you go supersonic while the center of gravity doesn't move
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That's why the F-106A had an automatic fuel transfer system, activated when you hit Mach 1.05, to change the CG.I've always thought the center of pressure moves aft when you go supersonic while the center of gravity doesn't move
Greg, I mistakenly believed the same cause and effect. What actually happens is that lift in a dive is Near zero to slighty negative at -2degrees AoA with occasional forward pressure on stick required to maintain sufficient negative lift to remain neutral in the dive. The Moment Coefficient for a NACA 2015 airfoil is slightly negative pitch down throughout the angle of attack range until the stall break where it goes severely negative. In normal flight slightly up elevator trim is required.Hi Bill,
I've always thought the center of pressure moves aft when you go supersonic while the center of gravity doesn't move, thereby causing a nose-down pitching moment.
If the tail gets blanked by the shock wave, it becomes impossible to pull up until the airflow reattaches.
If you aren't supersonic, and you speed up, a stable aircraft will nose up in order to maintained trim airspeed.
Knew it. Folks, all those diagrams, charts and formulae are really just incantations. There is no science.I think it is, overall, due to the FM Effect (Freaking Magic).
Or my brain has been irreparably addled by drink and Wolfhound slobber.
Although I'm new to this discussion, I agree with Frog on the Lightning's conception and its ultimate use. We need to realize that the plane was developed in the mid-1930s, when the possibility of Germany developing a long range bomber was feared. A fast climbing, heavily armed interceptor was needed and the P-38, although not needed in its original role, was used wherever it was needed until better planes were built.The trouble with the P-38 is it was initially conceived as an interceptor, used as a long range fighter and then switched to the fighter bomber role in the ETO...
All its imperfections, coupled with the pilots inexperience notwithstanding, it could fly at heights inconceivable for the P-39 and P-40, farther than both and the P-47, at a time when the Merlin P-51 was yet to be.
By the Way, in the rough climates of PTO or Aleutians, it did not met the troubles it had in the ETO.
By the way, my father was almost strafed by a P-38 in 1944...
Mixed blessing. Being easily identified meant it was far less likely to be shot down by "friendly fire". IIRC it was the only fighter that flew over the D-Day landing beaches for that very reason. How much quicker could a gunner on a bomber differentiate a P-38 from a Bf-109, vs a P-51? And of course-once we realized how much friendly fire was impacting our fighters, particularly singe-engine ones-we painted great big honking black and white stripes on them-so they could be identified quickly at long range anyway, negating that disadvantage.One thing about the P-38 is that it was recognizable at long distance due to its distinctive layout. And this was a war where fighter pilots' ability to distinguish friend from foe, at the limits of their vision, was important.
Built-in, can't be fixed.
But the Lightning was (obviously) an excellent fighter plane; its record proves that. And the USAAF found ways to use its superior characteristics, and fix its issues, so that it was effective. Remember that everyone was using what they had and modifying their aircraft, strategy, and tactics as the campaigns wore on… Kelly Johnson didn't know in 1939 what combat conditions would be, in different theaters, five years hence. He had an idea, it was a good one, and combat experience helped them improve it.
This hindsight stuff… in 1950 every Allied air commander, if asked, would have preferred to have had F-86 Sabres in 1943. But they fought and won with what they had. And certainly the P-38 did its job well.
But they really looked cool...-we painted great big honking black and white stripes on them...
That they did.But they really looked cool.
You can't have used up both your drop tanks and your leading edge tanks and still have enough fuel to get home.Another point to discuss-the wing leading edge fuel tanks in the outer wings (replacing the intercoolers) of later (J and L models) did add to the polar moment of inertia-impacting roll rate. But like the rear fuselage tanks on the P-51, they were intended to be burned first and would be empty by the time they (were planned to) engage in combat, so it was somewhat of a moot point.
Easy. You come in really high, drop tanks, fight, and dive to catch the tanks before they hit the ground ...You can't have used up both your drop tanks and your leading edge tanks and still have enough fuel to get home.
Main fuel tanks = 300 gallons
Leading edge tanks =110 gallons
Drop tanks =330 gallons
You used 440 gallons to get to the target and have only 300 gallons of fuel to fight at maximum power and still get get home.
Now that's an interesting topic, if a bit O.T. in the context of this thread. I read Anthony Cooper's excellent, forensic examination of this last year. To say there was a bit more to it would be something of an understatement but you are on the right track. In fact, this was the best book I read last year and that's saying a lot. Highly recommended:Spitfire didn't do very well in Australia over Darwin, either versus Zeros. That didn't mean Spitfires were bad fighters. It meant the Spitfire pilots were unfamiliar with their Japanese opponents, their mounts, and their tactics.
The spec was written for both the XP-38 and XP-39 on the basis of meeting Interceptor as you state, but the Circular Proposal CP37-608 for the future twin engine interceptor which resulted in the P-38 was truly for an interceptor anticipating an enemy capability equivalent to the fast high-altitude B-17. With the internal fuel that remained constant until the 55 gal leading edge tanks were installed in the P-38J in mid 1943, the combat radius was approximately 140mi - more than the XP-39 but nothing to plan long range escort around. Kelsey as Lt. was subordinate to Cpt. Schlatter Fighter Projects officer, reporting to Echols, reporting to Brett at Mat.Cmd. Wright Field. I have zero knowledge regarding Kelsey's inputs to the design, but have a reaallly hard time seeing him a a 'prime influencer' at the bottom of the totem pole of the money decisions.That they did.
The other point to make-about the P-38 being DESIGNED as an interceptor. I've read Bodie's book a few times (granted it's been a while) and I recall a discussion about this-don't remember if it quoted Johnson or (then Lt) Kelsey. Ben Kelsey wrote the specification package for what became the P-38, knew what he wanted in a fighter, in terms of firepower (a gun and ammo loadout unheard of in "pursuits" of the time), range, rate of climb and straight line speed.
See above and perhaps re-think the politics. "Kelsey wanted' is irrelevant to what Westover/Arnold/Andrews and Emmons visualized in 1937, but there is no dispute that he was very important as the Lockheed projects officer. But to assign Kelsey as a leader in 'marketing' the P-38 as a multi-role fighter seems to be a stretch. IMO Kelsey's influence did materialize in 1940 when he was assigned along with Spaatz, Brett as US 'Observers' to the Brit/France war with Germany and carried back to Republic and Lockheed to 'prepare for long range ferry requirement' as the U-Boat threat escalated. He did, indeed successfully prod Lockheed to modify the P-38 to carry both ordnance and fuel tanks beginning in late summer of 1940. He was unsuccessful with Republic. That is the genesis of P-38 multi-role capability as the B-10 racks were capable of 2000 pound bomb/torpedo/165-gal drop tank.But what he felt was necessary flew in face of conventional USAAC thinking at the time (tied in with the "bomber mafia"-they didn't want anyone thinking bombers needed a fighter escort), and he understood he'd never push it through as a fighter. Fighter (pursuit) production was also a low priority at a time when so much focus was on bombers. So they built a plane that did everything he felt a fighter needed to do (and the only way to do so in 1937 when he wrote the spec was with a twin engined plane). And the only way to get that through procurement was to "market" it as an "interceptor", not a "fighter". So Kelsey wanted/spec'd a fighter, Kelly designed and built a fighter-but called it an interceptor as a marketing tool. Of course-if you're going to "market an interceptor" it better do interceptor sh*t too-fast climb rate, heavy firepower to take out bombers, decent range-which of course it did. Part of the reason the "money guys" were more willing to fund an interceptor than a fighter came back to the bomber mafia-they proclaimed the capability of the heavy bomber so much that Congress (and USAAC brass) understood that they probably should have some way of addressing a potential enemy bomber threat against the US.
See above. Lockheed began studies for both P-49 and P-38 in 1940, delivering in December 1941. First with 75-gal tanks developed for P-40 and P-39. What is true, however, is that the conflict in AAF domestic policy regarding flying with pressurized external tanks was in effect in 1941 and hindered Lockheed's development of pressurization scheme for external drop tanks until the delivery of the P-38Js in early 1944. They were field modified with same scheme as P-47 and P-51 by VIII ATS led by Cass Hough.The other feature and example of Kelsey's and Johnson's forward thinking. They had a pretty good idea that bombers WOULD need fighter escort and understood the range implications. So in addition to a big internal fuel load (for the day) they anticipated a future need for drop tanks (effectively "banned" at the time by USAAC leadership, for the very reason of not producing an "escort fighter") and "blocked in" a provision for them in the design.
P-38E/F-4 kits were installed in December 1941, in production for P-38F in January 1942' in time for Arnold's "Increase range of all tactical aircraft in March 1942. The 75-gal tanks were ready for initial Bolero migration and the 150/165-gal were first delivered to UK in September 1942.In early 1942, the question of self deploying from the US to England was posed (by Arnold IIRC, perhaps partly in jest) and the answer came back sure, we can do that. Drop tank plumbing and hardware was quickly installed and tanks developed, IIRC by around May 1942, in support of Operation Bolero. 165 gallon tanks initially (and most commonly used throughout the war) along with some 310 gallon "ferry" tanks.
Not really - internal fuel remaining after combat is the God of surviving the trip home. The 55-gal tanks, unlike the P-51B fuse tank, was located pretty close to the CG and within the forward cg limit. Boosted ailerons were the solution to roll rate beginning with the J-25. The P-51B instruction from Mat.Cmd. was to burn 40 gal to achieve normal maneuver cg limit. That was an operational decision at the tactical level and depended on the mission range requirement. Standard SOP was either take off with 65-gal and burn during climb before switching to external tanks, or take off with 85-gal and burn down to 45 before switching.Another point to discuss-the wing leading edge fuel tanks in the outer wings (replacing the intercoolers) of later (J and L models) did add to the polar moment of inertia-impacting roll rate. But like the rear fuselage tanks on the P-51, they were intended to be burned first and would be empty by the time they (were planned to) engage in combat, so it was somewhat of a moot point.
Highly recommend that you obtain Reel A2069 from USAHRC. It contains both the Case History Droppable Fuel Tanks and FAREP. It was the key source for Boylon's USAF Study 136 Development of the Long Range Escort Fighter.Now-I'm getting older and the brain cells ain't a firin' like they used to, I'll try to check this out in the book in the next few days.
From what I remember the fundamental difference between the two original requirements was that the twin engine had twice the endurance that the single engine requirement wanted.The spec was written for both the XP-38 and XP-39 on the basis of meeting Interceptor as you state, but the Circular Proposal CP37-608 for the future twin engine interceptor which resulted in the P-38 was truly for an interceptor anticipating an enemy capability equivalent to the fast high-altitude B-17.
This is a minor quibble but the XP-38, YP-38s and the 30 (?) P-38s had 400-410 gal of internal fuel. When the P-38Ds got self-sealing tanks the internal fuel went down to the 300 gal where it stayed until the P-38J as you have stated.With the internal fuel that remained constant until the 55 gal leading edge tanks were installed in the P-38J in mid 1943