FLYBOYJ
"THE GREAT GAZOO"
Sal Monella said:The P-47D weighs in at 14,600lbs normal load and the P-51D weighed in at 10,100 lbs normal load. That's 4,500lbs more.
Your're correct on the -47s weights. I was looking at sources that showed a max take off weight between 17,000 and 20,000 pounds for the Jug. That is very high, your numbers seem more correct.
Sal Monella said:I still don't believe that the P-40 would stand a chance against an Mc-202 where both pilots are of equal skill. The fact that P-40's may have done quite well against Mc-202's is akin in my opinion to F4F pilots doing so well against Zeros. It's attributable to group tactics that expoit the verticle.
One on one, with pilots of equal skill, I think the Zero would splash the F4F every time.
From the Smithsonian Air Space website:
"The C.202 first flew in August 1940 and the RA initially deployed the aircraft during the summer of 1941 to the 1° Stormo C.T. for conversion training. By November, this unit had transferred to Libya and engaged British forces shortly before the British blockaded Tobruk. Although it was available too late to affect the outcome in North Africa, the new Macchi C.202 proved clearly superior to both the American Curtiss P-40 and the British Hawker Hurricane. The Italian fighter outperformed all opponents except Supermarine Spitfires and North American P-51 Mustangs. Folgore pilots lauded the fighter's finger-light handling and superb agility."
I think we're looking more at tactics than skill. As far as the Smithsonian info - although a great source, I think they paint a very "status quo" picture (the P-51 was the best fighter of the war, etc.) And not denying that the MC-202 was a worthy adversary, I think we're seeing not enough credit being given to the P-40 and Hurricane, that statement being "par for the course," and a situation discussed on another thread.
Oh - GREAT PHOTOS!
Parmigiano said:I think the answer might be that Italian pilots were simply more trained and more skilled in aerobatics than the German, US and British pilots, and so able to 'squeeze' more from their mounts in the horizontal plane. (Italian pilot training was really 'old biplane' fashion, basically all centered in aerobatics and nothing in tactics and formation)
My point exactly....
Again I stand by my statement, if flown correctly with the right tactics the P-40 can (and did) defeat the MC-202 as proven by the 325th Fighter Group.....
Victories
Losses
Ratio
Known air combat 133
12
11.1/1
Effective sortie/Victory ratio 30.2/1
Probable air combat 144
24
6/1
Effective Sortie/Loss ratio 93.3/1
Overall 133
43
3.1/1