Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
To quote from a contemporary 112 Squadron song: 'the Flying Fortress flies at forty thousand feet but it only carries a teeny weeny bomb."And the Kittyhawks could carry bombs. From memory No. 112 Squadron was the first to operate the type in this secondary role around May 1942.
According to Peyton Magruder, the wing was changed in response to the USAAF desire to decrease wing loading. This was necessary due to the lower than design spec take off power of the early R-2800. But he then goes on to lament the massive increase in gross weight imposed on the design by the USAAF. The B-2 had marginally more powerful R-2800-41 engines, 1920 bhp for take off, compared to 1850 bhp for the -5s in the B-26, B-26A and the first 81 B-26Bs, but the B-26B-10 got no increase in power to offset the increase in gross weight.
A good "what if?" how much better would the B-26 have been with the same engines installed in the exalted A-26? We'll never know, because design improvements were halted in 1943. Even the canted wing of the F/G versions was snuck in and only retroactively approved.
I have followed this thread with interest.
A question,
Below 15,000', why are you all considering the Allison engined P51 as inferior to the Merlin engined P51?
The only time fighter aircraft typically climbed above this altitude was to escort or intercept high altitude bombers... before 1944 this must not have happened much, at all.
...
My understanding is that below 15,000' the Allison engined Mustang was in fact faster than the Merlin engined Mustang. Additionally it could run at lower RPM than the Merlin which extended range, was lighter, and had better overall durability, especially in the desert as has already been brought up.
So I am curious as to why the P51A gets no love? Perhaps we need a "most underrated aircraft of WW2 thread".
...
I agree the Merlin was a better performer overall due to it's more advanced supercharger.
But the basic Allison was a pretty good unit.
Tomo, I always wonder how the Marauder II is rated differently than the B-26C, which it essentially was. I suppose it has to do with the weight at which the aircraft was tested. Or was it good Martin Co. propaganda? The R-2800-43 was rated at 1920 bhp for takeoff. I'm not that well informed about the model installed in the A-26.
As far as design decisions, the route that Martin took was to build the aircraft around the bomb bay. They copied the bomb bay of the B-17, which determined the circumference of the fuselage. So in effect, they were shrinking a heavy bomber to fit the specifications of a fast medium, and in the process, retained much of the heavy bomber's baggage.
The A-26 was a bigger, more powerful A-20, and retained the compactness of the light bomber. The same could be said for the B-25, which was a bigger version of their failed NA-40.
The Allison 1710-81 in the P-51A will pull a P-51A at MP faster than the 1650-3 and -7 in the P-51B/D under 12000 feet. Both weight of airframe (induced drag), and excellent performance at low/medium altitudes for the 1710 contributed.
Tomo - the sole point I was making is that the P-51A with the 1710-81 (more powerful than -39) was faster in MP than the P-51B/D in MP under 12000 feet. The P-51B always out climbed it.