Italy VS USA: Different ways to improve the P-35

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Airborne2001

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Jun 17, 2024
One lesser known aviation story that fascinates me is how Reggiane and Seversky/Republic both evolved the P-35 into fearsome fighters through different means.

We start with the P-35:
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One of the first of the new generation of modern monoplane fighters with retractable landing gear.

Then the divergence happens; Reggiane copies and improves it as the Re.2000 and Seversky tries the XP-41:
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XP-41 Re.2000

Both aircraft have improved aerodynamics, and other modifications to the P-35. Both were (mostly) dropped in favor of other designs, but the Re.2000 did get some work with Italy and was exported to Hungary and Sweden.

Then differences become more apparent with the P-43 vs the Re.2001*:
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P-43 Re.2001

The XP-41 was dropped in favor of the P-43 with its high altitude capabilities, and the latter was relatively fast for its first flight in 1940. The Re.2001 was more for medium/low altitudes), and the aircraft became different from Seversky/Republic in that the design now had an inline engine in place of a radial.

Finally the two developments couldn't feel more different with the P-47 and the Re.2005:
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P-47 Re.2005

The P-47 emphasized high speed at high altitude in the form of a rather heavy aircraft design. The Re.2005, on the other hand, was a significantly lighter design that put an emphasis on mobility. The P-47 was a strong multi-role aircraft. The Re.2005 also could be used as a ground attack aircraft but it truly was a regular fighter at heart.

I've been interested in this for a bit, so I figured I would make this my first thread aside from my intro :). This is a brief run through of how the Seversky P-35 took notably different developments through the lenses of Reggiane and Seversky/Republic. Being in the US resulted in a rugged, fast, and heavy multi-role fighter, whereas being in Italy resulted in an elegant and maneuverable fighter.

Thoughts?

(I take no credit for any pictures in this post.)

*The Re.2002 is yes integral to the Reggiane fighter development, BUT it was made as a dedicated ground attack aircraft. Therefore I left it out of the comparison.
 
The answer from Captain Obvious: the Italians needed a maneuverable fighter and the Americans needed a heavy multi-role aircraft that could escort bombers and attack ground targets. :cool:

PS. Why only Italy and the U.S.? There was a "third way". Not exactly a direct descendant, but a very close relative.
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Interesting! I can see some similarities for sure.

Though for me the PZL P-50 felt a bit more like an NA-50 to me:
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(Not related but similar looks.)

Or perhaps a boomerang with the more similar wings:
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One of several of the major factors to be considered in this divergence in the paths will have to be the relative power from the available powerplants. Italy never domestically had the R-2600/R-2800/Merlin class of aero engines. The home-grown engines never rose to this level, and the license-built German ones were not what the Italian design philosophy would find a decent slot for.
My humble opinion, YMMV.
 
One of several of the major factors to be considered in this divergence in the paths will have to be the relative power from the available powerplants. Italy never domestically had the R-2600/R-2800/Merlin class of aero engines. The home-grown engines never rose to this level,

Well put.
Engine - at least in the days of gunfighters - was a heart of a fighter aircraft.

and the license-built German ones were not what the Italian design philosophy would find a decent slot for.
Italians found very quickly the good slots for the licence-built German engines, talk a few months between the engine being made available and the flight of a prototype (several of them, actually). Problem for Italy was that the production of the said engines was meager, leaving the Italians between the rock and the hard place.
Germans shipped engines and whole aircraft in the attempt to bulk up the numbers required.
 
I meant that the Italians generally hewed to roughly the same sort of fighter philosophy the Japanese did. Lighter, more maneuverable airframes were preferred over heavier, but more ultimately versatile designs. The rigidity of thought of the separation of fighter v. light attack v. heavy bomber was also clung to long after the Allies were seeing the utilities of powerful fighters being multi-role. Big, heavy engines that were needed to generate the power wanted had a difficult time being shoehorned into smaller, lighter airframes designed for lower power, lighter engines, and more emphasis on maneuverability over utility. An R-2800 could not be put in a P-35 airframe.
 
Well put.
Engine - at least in the days of gunfighters - was a heart of a fighter aircraft.


Italians found very quickly the good slots for the licence-built German engines, talk a few months between the engine being made available and the flight of a prototype (several of them, actually). Problem for Italy was that the production of the said engines was meager, leaving the Italians between the rock and the hard place.
Germans shipped engines and whole aircraft in the attempt to bulk up the numbers required.
I meant that the Italians generally hewed to roughly the same sort of fighter philosophy the Japanese did. Lighter, more maneuverable airframes were preferred over heavier, but more ultimately versatile designs. The rigidity of thought of the separation of fighter v. light attack v. heavy bomber was also clung to long after the Allies were seeing the utilities of powerful fighters being multi-role. Big, heavy engines that were needed to generate the power wanted had a difficult time being shoehorned into smaller, lighter airframes designed for lower power, lighter engines, and more emphasis on maneuverability over utility. An R-2800 could not be put in a P-35 airframe.
Not with that attitude.
I made a post back in March talking about Reggiane's Re 10X engine series. Had they been able to produce these engines in a more industrialized Italy with better access to resources, then this series would have been their Merlin/DB 60X equivalent.
 
I meant that the Italians generally hewed to roughly the same sort of fighter philosophy the Japanese did. Lighter, more maneuverable airframes were preferred over heavier, but more ultimately versatile designs. The rigidity of thought of the separation of fighter v. light attack v. heavy bomber was also clung to long after the Allies were seeing the utilities of powerful fighters being multi-role. Big, heavy engines that were needed to generate the power wanted had a difficult time being shoehorned into smaller, lighter airframes designed for lower power, lighter engines, and more emphasis on maneuverability over utility. An R-2800 could not be put in a P-35 airframe.

I'd say that Allied heavy bombers were still the very different beasts when compared with their light attack aircraft, let alone the fighters. Neither the Spitfire nor Mustang were any good when it was the time to drop 4000 lb cookies above Germany, while neither A-20, SBD nor Mosquito were any good to take off with the 12000 lb cookie, let alone to deliver it where needed. Allied powerful fighters in multi-role happened mostly after Italy signed armistice.
We can note that Italians had no problems in outfitting their light aircraft (including these with fighter A/C genes) with good-sized bombs, and even torpedoes.

Italy have had no heavy, 2000+ lb/2000 HP class engines anyway. The 1300-1500 HP engines were good for the Italian fighters, once available (1943 and on), making the up-engining a pretty easy job, while giving an useful boost in performance vs. their legacy fighters. Again, making handful of these engines in 1943-44 will not going to cut it.

Italian airframe designers were realistic - there is no point in designing a fighter for a 2000 HP engine, when the 850-1000 HP engines were all that was available from the engine companies in the late 1930s. Trying to hand-wave the big and powerful engine is all fine and dandy, but it will not make anything in reality.
The R-2800 will not fit on the P-35; installing the V-1710 on a P-36 airframe was a good job however.
 

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