JoblinTheGoblin
Airman
- 61
- May 13, 2023
I was inspired to make this post, having heard of the exemplary record of the Ki-43, and claims that the Ki-100 had similar characteristics to more advanced aircraft like the Merlin-powered P-51 in nearly all aspects of manoeuvrability except, oddly enough, level flight speed, and maybe some other metric I haven't mentioned here.
Given the apparent success of such low performance designs, were there any other great powers that could have adopted a similar aircraft design philosophy to Japan's at any point in the interwar period, and adhered to that school throughout the war or some alternate counterpart, that being:
- Smaller, weaker, but lighter engines for fighter aircraft.
-- Adding to this, a preference for air-cooled radial engines over liquid-cooled in-line engines.
--- If the P-51D was radial-engined, but still miraculously kept the same performance, 'Japanese Mustang' prototypes would be popping up around 1945, or if you prefer, on the drawing boards by then. (The Japanese knew of the lesser Airacobra design as early as 1942, when their situation was more favourable, hence why they copied that instead for otherwise unsuccessful prototypes). The A7M and Ki-87 took cues from the radial-engined P-47, for example.
- Emphasis on range and/or slow(er) speed manoeuvrability, for instance, larger, wider wings.
- Slower, more gradual evolution of aircraft, such as prolonging the production of obsolete or tried and true designs.
- Bombers with excessively long ranges but generally smaller bomb loads.
- Oddly advanced dive/torpedo bombers that have the ability to come close to or exceed the maximum level speeds of foreign counterparts.
- "Laminar flow", balloons, or some other similarly quirky side interest.
- Continuously issuing aircraft requirements that couldn't, or wouldn't, be met, especially maximum level speed.
- Specifying the top speed of an aircraft to be that achieved at a certain engine power that happened to be below the maximum achievable engine power at altitude, dash power, overboost, WEP, 'full power' or some other equivalent term.
-Producing aircraft that could neither exceed ~580kph nor ~640kph in level flight at altitude.
--Testing experimental aircraft that could neither exceed ~700kph nor ~750kph in level flight at altitude.
- Gradual transition to faster German-derived jet aircraft to both compensate for faltering traditional indigenous plane designs, similar to one interpretation of late-war German design philosophy I've heard involving 'losing the horsepower race' and increased emphasis on jet aircraft designs, and to counter the coming Allied jet threat.
I have some other aspects in mind, but they're either too dismissive or too specific to Japan to include, such as every attempt at a larger or more powerful engine being unreliable for whatever reason, leading the world in useful but somewhat redundant aircraft types like high-speed, long range reconnaissance aircraft, flying boats, or floatplanes, or big, fat, noisy carrier submarines and noisy aerial torpedoes.
Italy, perhaps? Some neutral country?
Edit: Added some other teachings of the Japanese school.
Edit #2: Minor changes for clarity.
Edit #3: Removing some unverified teachings, and adding a few more in return.
Edit #4: Added yet another teaching.
Given the apparent success of such low performance designs, were there any other great powers that could have adopted a similar aircraft design philosophy to Japan's at any point in the interwar period, and adhered to that school throughout the war or some alternate counterpart, that being:
- Smaller, weaker, but lighter engines for fighter aircraft.
-- Adding to this, a preference for air-cooled radial engines over liquid-cooled in-line engines.
--- If the P-51D was radial-engined, but still miraculously kept the same performance, 'Japanese Mustang' prototypes would be popping up around 1945, or if you prefer, on the drawing boards by then. (The Japanese knew of the lesser Airacobra design as early as 1942, when their situation was more favourable, hence why they copied that instead for otherwise unsuccessful prototypes). The A7M and Ki-87 took cues from the radial-engined P-47, for example.
- Emphasis on range and/or slow(er) speed manoeuvrability, for instance, larger, wider wings.
- Slower, more gradual evolution of aircraft, such as prolonging the production of obsolete or tried and true designs.
- Bombers with excessively long ranges but generally smaller bomb loads.
- Oddly advanced dive/torpedo bombers that have the ability to come close to or exceed the maximum level speeds of foreign counterparts.
- "Laminar flow", balloons, or some other similarly quirky side interest.
- Continuously issuing aircraft requirements that couldn't, or wouldn't, be met, especially maximum level speed.
- Specifying the top speed of an aircraft to be that achieved at a certain engine power that happened to be below the maximum achievable engine power at altitude, dash power, overboost, WEP, 'full power' or some other equivalent term.
-
--
- Gradual transition to faster German-derived jet aircraft to both compensate for faltering traditional indigenous plane designs, similar to one interpretation of late-war German design philosophy I've heard involving 'losing the horsepower race' and increased emphasis on jet aircraft designs, and to counter the coming Allied jet threat.
I have some other aspects in mind, but they're either too dismissive or too specific to Japan to include, such as every attempt at a larger or more powerful engine being unreliable for whatever reason, leading the world in useful but somewhat redundant aircraft types like high-speed, long range reconnaissance aircraft, flying boats, or floatplanes, or big, fat, noisy carrier submarines and noisy aerial torpedoes.
Italy, perhaps? Some neutral country?
Edit: Added some other teachings of the Japanese school.
Edit #2: Minor changes for clarity.
Edit #3: Removing some unverified teachings, and adding a few more in return.
Edit #4: Added yet another teaching.
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