Groundhog Thread Part Deux - P-39 Fantasy and Fetish - The Never Ending Story (Mods take no responsibility for head against wall injuries sustained) (1 Viewer)

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One test example. One. Never intended as an operational airplane.
 
If I'm reading your post correctly there were 36 operational P-40s and P-35s with 30calMGs? Out of 100000 AAF and USN fighters with 50cals and or cannons? That's .00036%.

200yds was way too short ranged. One had to get within 200yds of a fighter to have a good chance at a victory? Or within 200yds of a bomber that was returning fire? The 30s didn't have enough hitting power or range. That's why the AAF/USN used 50calMGs and the British progressed to the 20mm cannon.
 
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Shortly the British would be specifying cannon so if you dont like .303s put in the cannon. There were 6 squadrons of Mk IX Spitfires at Dieppe along with six squadrons of Mustang Is. Shortly after a Spitfire IX intercepted a Ju 86 at 42,000ft Where does your P-39 fit in here?
It didnt go "about the same top speed" as a Mustang I it was slower and the Mustang I could go prodigious distances carrying cameras, guns, cod pieces and false legs. There is no virtue in outclimbing a Typhoon or Mustang, you are climbing into your adversary's strong suite.
 
How many P-40s with 30calMGs actually got into combat with the AAF/USN? The Mustang I with the 30s was an export model for the British.

Original F4F with 30s was a prototype. No operational F4Us had 30s. Did the F2A actually see combat with the USN?

An Airacobra with 7 30calMGs is absolutely the lamest idea ever.

If you don't have radar at your base then USING IFF is down.right.stupid. Your words, not mine.
 
To validate your claim you need to find all the aircraft in US service in Nov 1940 with 0.5" and 0.3"

It was obviously the other way around, the USA themselves werent "using" anything in anger until Dec 1941, by that time all the new British fighter were or could be fitted with cannon.
 
Now let's finalize this weight discussion:
P-39K empty weight 5658lbs including voice and IFF radios, oxygen.
2x50calMGs + ammo 275lbs.
37mm cannon + ammo 300lbs
Gun sight 4 lbs
Armor plate & Glass 122lbs (as in N model without nose armor)
Pilot 200lbs
Oil 71lbs including the 2gal reduction gear box
Full internal fuel 720lbs
Gross weight 7350lbs
Deduct 50lbs for "misc. eq. for 30cal guns" from the P-39C pilot's manual. Shows 25lbs for 2x30s, K model has 4x30s. Without 30s you don't need their "misc. eq.".
Deduct 110lbs for IFF per AHT for 1942 NG
Deduct pilot 40lbs as earlier models used 160lbs incl. parachute
Gross weight 7150lbs-what I've been telling you all along.
Substitute 20mm cannon with 120rds ammo 200lbs. 20mm was more reliable in 1942, include 37mm cannon in M/N/Q models that didn't need any weight reduction.
Gross weight 7050lbs.

Straight from the Pilot's Manual. An armored warplane with self sealing fuel tanks and cannon/heavy machine gun armament. Optimal configuration for 1942.
 
To do what?
 
Wrong weights.
The IFF was 40 to 45 lbs,not 110.
140lb pilots in shoes and flight suits/ equipment are going to be scarce. And strangely, American P-39s with 20mm guns carried 70-88 lbs of ballast in addition to the gear box armor.
71lbs of oil is not enough for 120 gallons of fuel.
 
P-47D-25 didn't get to combat until mid-'44. P-39D was operational mid-'42. That's two full years.

To get combat radius go to the Flight Operation Instruction Chart in the P-47 pilot's manual. Take total fuel including 110gal drop tank 415gal. Then compute the "fooling around time" as you put it by deducting the takeoff and climb allowance 45gal, 20 minute combat reserve 90gal, and 20 minute reserve for landing 25gal. The net fuel 255gal can be used for cruising is divided by 105 gallons per hour at 25000' yielding 2.4hours cruising time. Multiply by 285mph TAS cruising speed (190 IAS) for a total of 684mi. Divide by 2 for 342mi combat radius.

Put that into perspective with Berlin being 520mi from England. P-47 came up a little (a lot) short. This computation uses the most economical setting (105gph) for the P-47 at 25000'. Most charts give the P-47 with drop tank a combat radius of 375mi but that is still way short of Berlin.
 
Lol, no it means that on 7 Dec 1941 40% of the USAAC first-line fighters in Philippines were armed with .300 mgs, Wiki says that most of USAAC fighters on Oahu were P-40Bs, I had exact numbers in my attic, but because you do not mind facts, why bother, you like to use wiki, so be it. Now that means that when the Pacific War began, most of the USAAC fighters there were armed with .300s (plus also with two 0.5s). That was over a year after the end of the BoB. You can read from the AHT that the USAAC got some 350 P-40s with .300 wing guns.

Maybe this thread gives to you some idea on air combat RAF Fighter Gunnery Analysis the main point to understand air gunnery and air combat is that to achieve a kill in 99.9% of the cases you must first hit the enemy a/c.
 

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