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I shove pineapples up my butt
Stona can give a more detailed description but 11 Group squadrons were rotated out to less hectic areas and squadrons from there were rotated into 11Group.
Corsning I completely concur, it depends on what you need it to do. The thing I think people don't consider is that yes, at similar combat weights the Fw-190 has an advantage (as well as the Me-109). That is to be expected, However, the Mustang flew 3 hours to get to the fight, and is very close in performance, will fight for 30 minutes, then fly 3 hours home. The weight penalty the Mustang has to carry the amount of fuel, oil, O2, etc, to stay airborne for up to 7 hours is huge, yet it hung with best prop fighters the Axis could come up with.
Cheers,
Biff
I am so glad you made that statement grampi. I have done a little researching the last couple of days.Can you imagine the advantage the Mustang would've had if it didn't have to be able to fly so far to reach the combat area, and then fly back?
The thing I think people don't consider is that yes, at similar combat weights the Fw-190 has an advantage (as well as the Me-109). That is to be expected, "
Biff, once again that all depends. In the comparison I made in Post # 485 the Mustang in
question was tested at 9,760 lb. That was take-off weight. By the time the P-51D actually
would come in contact with the 190 it may be down to 9,200 lb. or even lighter. If you
notice the Mustang was actually holding its own around 6,000 m. and began showing its
edge above that altitude at the higher loaded levels.
And as I noted that was at engine boosting levels of 67"Hg (~+17.8 lbs.). By the time the
Dora-9 showed up the fuel (44-1) octane for the 8th Air Force had increased, and so did
boosting levels of the Packard and Merlin engines.
I have limited time tonight. The wife is dragging me to Wal Mart for grocery shopping.
Woopee Ding-Dong.
I have started a post on some interesting figure which I hope to post tonight or tomorrow.
Jeff
Mustang III No.F.X.858, Operation Crossbow: February - May 1944
Engine: Merlin 100 (modified Merlin 66 to +25 lbs. [80.8"Hg] boost)
Horse Power: 1,940-1,970+ at sea level, 2,020 hp./4,100 ft.
Altitude...Speed / Climb / Time to height.
Meters....mph / fpm / minutes to altitude.
S.L.........393 / 4500 /
1,000...409 / 4150 /-.85
2,000...419 / 3965 /-1.6
3,000...420 / 3970 /-2.35
4,000...435 / 3960 /-3.2
5,000...450 / 3510 /-4.05
6,000...454 / 3025 /-5.1
7,000...452 / 2560 /-6.3
8,000...449 / 2065 /-7.8
9,000...444 / 1600 /-9.4
10,000...436 / 1135 /11.95
11,000...425 /---650 /15.5
12,000...NG. /--NG. /23.25
Combat Ceiling: 33.660 ft.
Armament:4 x 0.5 in.
Combat Weights: 8,800 lb. for speed runs and 9,260 lb. for climb trials.
Wing Loadings 8,800 lb. / 9,260 lb. (lbs./sq.ft.): 37.77 / 39.74.
Power Loading at 1,940 hp. same as above (lbs./ hp.): 4.536 / 4.773.
In another brief test aircraft No. F.B.377 with a V-1650-7 using +25 lbs. boosting:
Speed trial results: 405 mph./S.L., 413 mph. @ 1,000 m., 5,000 ft. 412.5 mph./
2,000 m. and 412 mph at 8,000 ft.
I am just going to have to say the Mustang could more than hold its own.
Just an opinion and void where prohibited by law... and them some.