davparlr
Senior Master Sergeant
davparlr.
In your assessment what weights are you using for armament? including ammo weight. what allowance did you make for weight of installation? beefing up of local structure to handle recoil loads, ammo boxes, gun mounts. empty chutes, gun heats etc.
After some research, I realized I was assuming wrong information on empty weight. I originally assumed the empty weight included armament weight. Apparently it doesn't. I decided to compare gross weight, which is always dangerous since aircraft tend to vary in fuel weight. Here's a more detailed breakdown in what I perceive as a fighter version of the H-1 in 1939.
H-1 extended wings – 4097 lbs (Aluminum wings may have weight less or more, I suspect less)
Airframe modification for military stress levels – 300 lbs
Delta R-1830 weight – 200 lbs
Instrument/radio – 100 lbs (approx. P-40B)
Armor/BP glass – 93 lbs (P-40B)
Empty weight – 4790 lbs
Armament including installation-two .50 cals, two .30 cals – 197 lbs (P-40B)
Oxygen – 20 lbs (P-40)
Miscellaneous – 100 lbs
Basic weight – 5107 lbs
Pilot – 200 lbs
Usable oil – 68 lbs (F4F-3)
Ammo (.30 cal, .50 cal) - 165 lbs (P-40B)
Fuel – 720 lbs (120 gal)
Gross weight – 6260 lbs (I think this is a conservative number.)
For a reasonableness check in comparison to gross weight of contemporary aircraft with similar engines:
P-35A – 6118 lbs
P-36C – 5800 lbs
F2A-2 – 5942 lbs (Wright R-1820)
So the weight passes the smell test.
H-1 fighter Performance calculated at this weight
Gross weight – 6260 lbs
SL 330 mph
Max speed 375-380 mph at 22k
p/w - .19 hp/lb
Wing loading – 32.8 lb/sqft
Spitfire Mark I
Gross weight – 6200 lbs
SL speed – 285-290 mph
Max speed 362 mph at 18.5k
p/w - .17 hp/lb
Wing loading – 25.6 lb/sqft
The H-1 fighter would have a significant speed advantage at all altitudes, acceleration, and, probably, dive (cleaner) over the Spit. It would probably have trouble in maneuvering and climb.
Bf-109E
Gross weight – 5520 lbs
SL speed – est. 290 mph
Max speed – 357 mph at 20k
p/w - .21 hp/lb
Wing loading – 31.3 lbs/sqft
The H-1 fighter would have a significant speed advantage at all altitudes and probably dive advantage (cleaner) over the Bf-109. Bf-109 would have acceleration and probably climb advantage.
P-40B
Gross weight – 7335 lbs
Max speed – 353 mph at 15k
p/w - .14
Wing loading 31.1 lbs/sqft
A6M model 21
Gross weight – 5314 lbs
SL speed – 277 mph
Max speed – 331 mph
p/w - .18 hp/lb
Wing loading – 22 lbs/sqft
The H-1 fighter would have a overpowering speed advantage at all altitudes and dive advantage (cleaner) over the Zero. Like all other fighters, don't dogfight or climb against a Japanese fighter.
what weight are you using for the engine? please note that the R-1839-76 was somewhat heavier than the non- 2 stage R-1830 engines and that the intercooler may not be part of the listed dry weight. What weight are you allowing for the propeller?
P&W list weight of the R-1830 as 1,162 to 1467 lbs. Wikipedia states that the weight of the R-1535 as 1087 lbs so weight can go from 75 lb increase to 380 lbs. I chose 200 lb increase and I could be wrong as I don't have detailed weight on various configurations of the R-1830. I think the fact that similar aircraft with cantilever wings, retracting landing gear and similar engine and meeting military requirements shows that the H-1 could be developed into a military aircraft within the same weight constraints. I threw in another 100 lbs miscellaneous to cover unknowns.
this may be in error. one reason the Army lost interest in the XP-34 was that it was built to an ultimate load factor of about 8.15 instead of the customary 12 that that the Army specified for pursuit type aircraft. The added weight of the beefed up structure would have further degraded performance.
The AF museum site states that the max speed of the XP-34 with the R-1830 of 308 mph did not warrant a contract.
Factsheets : Wedell-Williams XP-34
308 mph at 900 hp is slow. Since weight impact is low at high speeds, there were other problems with this design other than beefing up for military applications.
Another thought is that the AAF was switching thoughts to liquid cooled engines at this time. I would have thought they would be all over the H-1, especially after the cross country flight, in spite of the snub. In the 1939 competition, there were no air cooled designs.
The XP-34 was based off the Wedell-Williams model 45, not the model 44. The model 45 had both a cantilever wing and retractable landing gear.
Okay, just got a bit misdirected.
Shortround6 said:WE also know that there was a design study concerning turning the Wedell-Williams 44 racer into a fighter just a few years before,
Strangely enough the XP-34 was supposed to be powered by the same basic engine as the Hughes and even stranger, no production version of the engine was ever rated at more than about 900hp.
The XP-34 was supposed to have the 900 hp engine. Hughes boosted the 700 hp engine to 1000 hp by tuning it on 100 octane fuel. I think the R-1830 stopped advanced work on the R-1535, just as R-2800 development stymied advanced work on the R-1830.
That's what I was trying to say.FLYBOY said:Actually if the plane was designed to just go fast, straight and level then if anything it would have been built lighter and "weaker" as it was not going to have any stress loads applied to it
You still haven't considered military equipment, stress analysis on the current airframe and what it would take to structurally enhance the aircraft to accept the required equipment and extra weight and to perform at combat Gs. Also consider range... I think by the time you're done making the aircraft a true military aircraft, you're going to need another 500 HP to stay competitive.
I think I addressed all those issues.
You still haven't considered military equipment, stress analysis on the current airframe and what it would take to structurally enhance the aircraft to accept the required equipment and extra weight and to perform at combat Gs. Also consider range...
I think I did. I am not a stress guy nor am I a structures engineer, and I don't know what levels the H-1 was originally designed to, so I can only guess what it would take to make a plane like the H-1 into a military aircraft. However, I do have an indication that my assumptions are reasonable and that is similar aircraft, in a similar time period, were developed into military aircraft. The P-35 and P-36 both were military aircraft delivered at about the same gross weight I identified for a fighter version of the H-1. As you may well know, qualification by similarity is a accepted criteria for military hardware and, while I am not arguing about qualing an aircraft, I am claiming similarity in justifying my estimation.
I think by the time you're done making the aircraft a true military aircraft, you're going to need another 500 HP to stay competitive.
My point is that the H-1 had so much speed advantage that it could absorb a lot of modifications and still be a superior performer, certainly in airspeed. The H-1 did 352 mph at low level. The Spitfire Mark I did maybe 290 mph. I have shown that you could take the H-1, increase the weight to the same as the Spitfire I, put a big wing on it and increase fuselage diameter to fit a more powerful R-1830 and it would still be 30-40 mph faster at low level. In addition, it would maintain a speed advantage to 22k and probably higher. It was cleaner than any other aircraft of the time and, like the P-51, cleanliness in itself is a big advantage.