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lesofprimus said:No matter how good a combat pilot is, or how well he can fly his specific crate, combatting with dual engines is way more difficult than a single engine... There were 2 handfuls of guys that flew the -38 with the balls required to make it a superior combat aircraft.... A large % of P-38's were easy pickings for the German Aces in the ETO....
syscom3 said:Flyboy is correct. Most of the problems with flying the P38 were due to inexperienced pilots not given correct training. Once the training doctrine was figured out, it was a easy plane to fly.
Flyboy, a girl I used to date many years ago, her mom and dad grew up in Torrance/Lomita in the WW2 years. theyr emember seeing the Torrance airport full of fresh P38's right from the factory. They recalled a couple accidents involving the P38's. One had an engine failure on approach and crashed right into a home pretty much where the main runway intersects Pennsylvania Ave (in Lomita). Her dad remembers seeing a P38 in a power dive crash right off of Palos Verdes. he saw a parachute but never found out what happened to the pilot. he said the scream of that plane was a sound few people can ever forget.
wmaxt said:You know its a tough call. Jack Ilfry thought the P-51 was a better escort fighter, and in fact that was the only place the P-51 shined. Performance wise
P-51D - best climb is at 5,000ft - 3,320ft/min (7.5 min to 20,000ft)
P-38J - best climb at SL - 4,000ft ave climb to 20,000ft - 3,724ft/min I have a P-38L graph that matches this 5.37min to 20,000ft) 'Planes and Pilots of WWII' site. An AAF test puts it at 4.91min to 20,000ft, I don't have it so Its just a possible at this time.
P-51D - Top speed - 443mph
P-38L - Top Speed - 442mph (I have a Lockheed graph and have been told there is an AAF test confirming this) however I think until more solid data surfaces (the AAF report) I'll go with 431mph.
P-51D - Acceleration - 2.2mph/sec @ 15,000ft from cruise
P-38L - Acceleration - 2.8mph/sec @ 15,000ft from cruise
P-51D - range - 2,200mi
P-38L - range - 2,300 mile mission carried off in early '45 (see Smithsonian site)
P-51D - gun package - 6 .50 M2 guns - sited at 250yards
P-38L - gun package - 4 .50 M2 guns, 1 cannon 20mm - effective to 1,000yrds.
P-51D - load - 2,000lbs
P-38L - load - 4,000lbs - 5600lbs reported from the field.
Maneuvering capability. the AAF considered the F model as good from 10,000 to 15,000ft and the P-38F better that the P-40, P-47, P-39, and P-51(the best handling Mustang model) above 15,000ft.The L was reported better, and with maneuvering flaps deployed was reputed to be able to turn with anything, check the John Tilley story where he out turned a Zero at 90mph and 1,000ft. The L model had compressability slats deployable at any speed and could momentarily pop the nose up 20deg at any speed, and could dive after anything. With the aleiron boost could out roll anything above 350mph (I can post a graph) or its available at the 'Planes and Pilots of WWII' site.
The P-38 out performs the P-51D in all but top speed, and cruise speed, and cost. Cost was not an issue durring the war, they made ~18,000 P-47s which ranged from $500 less to ~$8,000 less and wasn't up to the job until the D model was introduced.
wmaxt
Jabberwocky said:Great data, but just a quibble: the USAAF Inglewood and Dayton tests show the P-51D top climb at 3600 feet/minuteat ~5000 feet and climb to 20,000 feet in around 7 minutes. Doesn't put it ahead of the P-38, but it's more than a 10% improvement.
davparlr said:....
One area where I am sure the P-51D held an edge was in reliability. The P-38L, with two engine systems had to have a lower availability rating. Reliability is a force multiplier.
syscom3 said:Once the logistics pipelines were running, availability wasnt much of an issue.
davparlr said:I am sure that there were times when availability and man hours spent were an issue.