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Quite true and it turns out that larger, heavier planes can be adapted to lives (roles) better (easier) than smaller aircraft can.If a fighter turned out to be successful, it was going to have lives far beyond what the original planners theorized about.
The Forum has already established, in multiple threads, that applying Balkankreuz to any aircraft will immediately improve performance.
Quite true and it turns out that larger, heavier planes can be adapted to lives (roles) better (easier) than smaller aircraft can.
Also sort of depends on how far the designers are willing to go with it.
I love the Curtiss 75-81-87 from a design history standpoint. I don't believe any fighter (or aircraft?) went through so many different engines or design variations.
All while keeping original wing dimensions and airfoil except for the P-40Q.
There will possibly be some argument from the Spitfire fans.
The Hawk family was on the 4th engine by the time they got to the P-36.
My own engine count is going differ from some others as I am going to only credit the Spitfire with 4 basic engines. Single stage Merlin, two stage Merlin, single stage Griffon and two stage Griffon.
Hawk Family got the turbo Allison (P-37), the single speed/single stage Allison, 1 two stage P&W R-1830, the Merlin and the 2 stage geared Allison in the P-40Q. I am lumping all of the single stage R-1830s and R-1820s together in the first 4 engines regardless of power, supercharger gears.
Obviously some combinations were more successful than others.
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Getting back the "light weight" I do not know what the airframe weight of the original Hawk 75 was. We do know that the Fixed gear Hawk 75H
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used a 780lb wing. The later P-40s used a wing just over 1100lbs, weight gain of 145kg just in the wing. Partially to address wing strength issues, partially to allow for more armament and partially to accommodate higher gross weight. Change in powerplant from the 9 cylinder cyclone to the Allison used in the early P-40s was over 640lbs. (290kg). So when does the Hawk go from light fighter to standard fighter?
The P-40 (no letter) Gained about 1500lbs over the Hawk 75H but doubled the firepower (two .50s in the cowl with 200rpg and two .30s in the wings with 500rpg).
Very few people are going to say that 6800lb P-40 is a light fighter. The early P-40 carried no protection and no underwing/fuselage load.
Now with aid of history we can see that the Curtiss design was sort of past it's prime in the fall of 1940 (NA-73) but that took a while to realize. The US also didn't want to screw with the production lines as the US Army only had two fighters in large scale production in 1941-42 since the other one was the P-39 things were not looking good.
Dec 1940 production 0 P-38s, 10 P-39s, 165 P-40s
June 1941 production 4 P-38s, 37 P-39s, 125 P-40s (change over from P-40C to P-40D/E
Dec 1941 production 54 P-38s, 191 P-39s, 285 P-40s.
Republic was working on the XP-47 "light fighter"
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Using the same engine (?) as the early P-40s and a similar armament. Two .50s to start and four (?) .30s added in the wings later.
Details as to wing size and weight are very sketchy. Initially a 4900lb aircraft with a 115sq ft wing with no wing guns (Aug 1939). With a 2500lb powerplant one wonders how they planned to do that? Rapidly grew to a 6150lb plane with a 165 sq ft wing that did include the wing guns. And we are no longer in the light fighter catagory.
One does wonder how such a plane would have faired in NA or in the Pacific. Fast but without changing the engine/supercharger getting to 20,000ft to fight may have been tricky and range/ground attack would have been not as good. Very French looking though
It was upgraded, it was called the P-40.The P-36 as I noted, was never upgraded after 1940
It was upgraded, it was called the P-40.
The XP-40 was the 10th P-36 pulled off the production lines and given the engine swap.
They were built on the same production lines using the same tooling.
There was a radial engined P-40 that used by P&W for development work using a modified version of the engine used in the F4F-4.
P&W purchased a Hawk 81A airframe (MSN 17816) in Sept 1940. but it seems to have taken until some time in 1942 to get it flying. They were still flying it (and tweaking it) in late 1943 with some rather startling results. Like 388mph at 25,000ft.
Before anybody gets too excited by this, the plane was being operated at 7107lbs with no guns (space in the wings for the original four .30 cal guns) and no armor or protected fuel tanks. It was estimated to need a gross weight of 8300lbs to bring the plane up to late 1942/early 1943 standards/equipment. Perhaps some weight could have been saved as the equipment standard was not given (standard P-40F armament?)
Ok, I showed where the XP-40 came from and I showed you the data for the radial P-40.
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And I gave you the serial number of this 2nd aircraft. There are 4 photos of this aircraft on pages 276-280 of "Curtiss Fighter Aircraft" by Francis Dean and Dan Hagedorn but if you don't want to think that this Happened I guess that is up to you.
By the way, I do not believe that Spitfire Mk XXI is the same aircraft as a Spitfire Mk 1, or that a Fw 190D9 is the same as a Fw 190A3, or that a MC. 205 is the same as an MC. 200
and I am rather insulted that you would imply that.
The XX-40 was the 10th P-36 on the production line. Serial 38-10 (MSN 12424). It did go through a number of changes to the engine cowl and radiator, so you can find several different configurations in the photos. The Wing, tail, cockpit are not mentioned as having any changes. Most photos of the XP-40 show P-36 landing gear doors.
July 1940 was the peak crossover in production with 91 Hawk 75s built and 56 Hawk 81s/P-40s. Perhaps the Hawk 81s used some different parts in the wings or heavier skin panels but they used the same dimensions and the same airfoils.
There is one report from the Philippines (?) about one aircraft (P-40 ?) flying around with one wing from a P-40 and the other side using a P-36 wing.
No, it is not and if you cannot see the difference then you are correct. Further discussion is pointless.MC.200 to an MC.202 or 205 is basically exactly what you are talking about here.
The results of a Blackburn Botha getting transsonic at Boscombe Down has only been partially suppressed.Their performance and everything else about them were so superior, it's almost as if they couldn't lose. It makes you wonder. Did they lose? Or are we all just sheeple?
No, it is not and if you cannot see the difference then you are correct. Further discussion is pointless.
The vast majority of this forum's membership are knowledgeable folks who will engage in a scholarly discussion - however, there seems to be a few, who for some reason, live to argue and will fight to the death over a lost point.This is just the sour denouement of what could and should have very easily been a light, pleasant, and dare I say, enlightening discussion? But this seems to be a pattern on this forum, for all it's virtues.
The vast majority of this forum's membership are knowledgeable folks who will engage in a scholarly discussion - however, there seems to be a few, who for some reason, live to argue and will fight to the death over a lost point.
It is what it is, I suppose.
The Ki43 certainly did shoot down later and more modern fighters and bombers but it was less an less effective until it was obsolete. However when going up against the heavy four engine B17 and B24 bombers the twin HMG was insufficient and any successes were hard fought for. All nations including Japan went as fast as possible to 4 x 20mm cannon or similar.It was a lot more than an occasional good day. In fact the speed at which Ki-43 became obsolete, (and I agree, it eventually did) arrived a lot later than many of us were led to believe.
They did prove capable, reliably and predictably, to shoot down heavy American-made bombers in Burma and India. If anything they had a little more trouble with the smaller and faster ones like the A-20s and Beaufighters etc., but they shot those down too. Along with many fighters which were allegedly (and on paper) far superior.
The Hurricane was outclassed as you stated and its my personal view always was even in the BOB against the 109E3 because of its performance. However the aircraft you mention, the Mc202, Ki43, Me109 F2, F4 and G2 all would struggle against the B24 and similar, why? because they lacked growth potential, because they were light fighters.Yes the Fw 190 with it's four 20mms was absolutely lethal. But those cannon alone didn't do the trick. The Hurricane IIC also had four 20mm cannons, and it was dead meat against the Ki-43. It was also dead meat against the MC.202 in North Africa, which had a similar armament of two heavy machine guns in the nose, (on paper they had some extra wing guns but these were apparently routinely omitted). I'm also going to point out the Bf 109F-2, which had one heavy 15mm machine gun, (albeit a good one I gather), and two 7.92 machine guns, all in the nose, but utterly annihilated those Hurricane Mk IICs and often had it's way with the (also more heavily armed) Spitfire Mk VB and VCs. The Bf 109F-4 and G-2 were typically only slightly more heavily armed with the single 20mm motorkanone instead of the 15mm.
On this part I totally agree with youGuns, in other words, are not enough. If it was that simple this would have been the best fighter in WW2
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It's also about speed, agility (climb, roll, turn rate), logistics (lighter planes use less fuel, fewer guns less ammunition), cost (lighter planes cost less to build and also to operate).
Other aircraft were also known as being pilots planes including the Spitfire, its a feature of the design, not the size. An extreme example is the Lancaster which was also lauded as a pilots aircraft. The 109 was always considered a handful until you got to gain experience when you became used to it., ease of training and flying (later model Ki-43, MC 202, Yak-3 etc. all had good reputations as being pilot's planes).
The Ki43 certainly did shoot down later and more modern fighters and bombers but it was less an less effective until it was obsolete.
However when going up against the heavy four engine B17 and B24 bombers the twin HMG was insufficient and any successes were hard fought for. All nations including Japan went as fast as possible to 4 x 20mm cannon or similar.
The Hurricane was outclassed as you stated and its my personal view always was even in the BOB against the 109E3 because of its performance.
However the aircraft you mention, the Mc202, Ki43, Me109 F2, F4 and G2 all would struggle against the B24 and similar, why? because they lacked growth potential, because they were light fighters.
Ironically, if the Hurricane IIC could be positioned to fight unescorted B24 and B17 bombers, they would be a serious threat, because they had firepower and the performance was less important.
On this part I totally agree with you
Other aircraft were also known as being pilots planes including the Spitfire, its a feature of the design, not the size. An extreme example is the Lancaster which was also lauded as a pilots aircraft. The 109 was always considered a handful until you got to gain experience when you became used to it.
If you mix time periods it gets funny. Compared to a contemporary large fighter such as the F-22, even heavy bombers like B-17/B-24/Lancaster are lightweights!As mentioned by others earlier, things moved so fast in the 1930s-1940s that it is difficult to define the Light Fighter without redefining it for each 2-3 years.
Probably, it is easier in the jet era when the progress slowed down...
Foland Gnat, Yak-23 and F-5 come to mind as very light and small compared to their contemporaries.
Early MiG-21?
If to consider multirole aircraft as "fighters": Fiat G.91 and L-39.
1990s until today: JAS-39 Grippen. Anyone else?