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This discussion reminds me a little of the discussion about how a wing creates lift. I had always thought it was Bernoulli's Principle until I read "Stick and Rudder" Was in an airliner one day and was sitting next to a pair of(I think) young aero engineers and I mentioned that lift was created by a wing pushing down on the air and the air pushing up. They looked at me like a heretic and started talking about Bernoulli and the air having to speed up over the airfoil and creating low pressure over the top. I then asked them how a wing created lift when the airplane is inverted. We had a lot of fun.
Renrich said:Don't know where your numbers come from but I believe if you are saying the P38 had more kills than P51, you are misinformed. It was third in the PTO and way back in ETO.
According to my sourcesTO-F6F--5257 kills, F4U--2155 kills, P38--1700 kills, F4F--1408 kills. This has been discussed on other threads, specifically best Pacific fighter and these numbers seem to be authentic. In ETO-P51--4239 kills, P47--2686 kills, P38--497 kills, F6F--8 kills, F4F--2 kills. Med- P38, 1431 kills, P51--1063 kills. I am pretty sure that USN did not give credit for kills on ground, not sure about USAAF. All theatres together- P51--5944 kills, F6F--5265 kills, P38--3785 kills. Seems pretty clear from a kill point of view. The P38 in ETO had a much worse loss/sortie ratio also than P51.
According to my sourcesTO-F6F--5257 kills, F4U--2155 kills, P38--1700 kills, F4F--1408 kills. This has been discussed on other threads, specifically best Pacific fighter and these numbers seem to be authentic. In ETO-P51--4239 kills, P47--2686 kills, P38--497 kills, F6F--8 kills, F4F--2 kills. Med- P38, 1431 kills, P51--1063 kills. I am pretty sure that USN did not give credit for kills on ground, not sure about USAAF. All theatres together- P51--5944 kills, F6F--5265 kills, P38--3785 kills. Seems pretty clear from a kill point of view. The P38 in ETO had a much worse loss/sortie ratio also than P51.
The only performance advantages the P-51D had over the P-38L at any altitude was roll rate (up to about 300 mph) and diving speed. The P-38, even with dive flaps, was limited to .68 mach the P-51 about .8 mach depending on how close the pilot wants to push it.
The P-38 also had the high lift airfoil (23000 on inner wings, 4400 outer) and the twin propwash. And don't forget the fowler flaps.Interesting, and perhaps important for either landing speeds or lift calculations
And the chart doesn't show 450+ mph it shows ~440 mph at ~26,500 ft for the P-38L at 1,725 hp WEP.
At what loading, amx internal fuel.. and what does the MP and WEP Hp profile look like for all altitudes.. 'sawtooth'??
And I was wrong, the P-51 does have a small top speed advantage between 5,000 and 14,000 ft. (most pronounced at ~11,500 ft where the P-51D has a ~20 mph speed advantage)
A small advantage. the real key is an 'out' manuever' when caught by suprise. Can the P-38L intiallially out turn a pursuing 51D and say, out roll and reverse to attain a superiorior tactical positiion. Can it climb too steeply to enable a 51 to cut the corner and pull deflection?.. in other words what is its 'out manuever' to a a.) escape and b.) reverse a tactical advantage?
And iirc the trials were done with full main tanks with LE wing tanks dry. (300 US gal total).
The 51 trials were done with full internal fuel, oil and full ammo and guns plus external racks
I don't know the P-51's condition (probably fuse tank empty, 184 gal), but the charts shows a max speed of ~435 mph at 25,000 ft. And an initial climb of ~3,300 ft/min.
In service, however, the directional instability caused by the presence of a full fuel tank behind the pilot's seat was a hazard for new or inexperienced pilots, and the tank was usually restricted to 65 US gallons. This extra tank, nevertheless, still made a crucial difference in combat radius, and it was standard equipment in all future production versions.
When did I post that?Thanks for the correction.
And on the pylons, according to FLYBOYJ, the P-38's pylons were integral to the airframe.
Thanks for the correction.
But wan't it unsafe to carry much more than a 1/2 full fuse tank due to stability (CoG) problems?
Yep - but for flight tests at Eglin and Wright Pat, they carried a full combat load at take off. The tests you see on Mike Williams site are pretty explicit about the loads. The aft CG was a serious problem for turns primarily.
I haven't seen the flight plan(s) but a couple of thoughts occur to me. First, if the plan called for high altitude runs I would also be looking for climb to altitude times at MP and other throttle and RPM settings - but just one climb to say 25,000 feet would by itself would burn off 15-20 gallons.
SOP in the field was to reduce the fuse tank 'fill' level to 65 gallons. Most of the guys I talked to like to drain that tank before switching to external tanks which meant forming up and flying to the Dutch or French coast before the tank was fairly well drained - then SOP varied.. but still most like to drain it completely
And on the pylons, according to FLYBOYJ, the P-38's pylons were integral to the airframe.
I did not know that but it wouldn't make a lot of sense to have a non-removable pylon if for no other reason simple maintenance of little things like fuel lines. Photo recon versions of the L for example could perform many of their missions w/O external fuel. I would want the extra 10-20 kts instead.
Agree on the load, to compare you'd need figures with the full LE wing tanks. (2x 62 US gal) and the P-51 with the max safe fuel limit. (around 250 US gal) In which condition both would have very similar range.
And on the roll rate, the P-38's boosted ailerons meant roll rate kept increasing as speed increased. In the chart a roll rate of just over 90*/s is shown at 350 mph and ~95 degrees/s at 400 mph.
But another advantage of the P-51 is that it cruised well at high speed, making cruise speeds aproaching 400 mph practical. (and above 400 w/out drop tanks) At ~410 mph the P-51D could still manage almost 800 mi. (granted, with a full fuse tank, so practical closer to 700 mi)
Try that with the P-38 (with 425 gal) and it's down to less than 500 mi at ~380 mph.