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Clay_Allison
Staff Sergeant
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- Dec 24, 2008
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See the idea of installing a V-1710 with an auxillary stage supercharger has been discussed already.
To save weight I suggest removing two of the six .50 guns. Each gun weighs 70lb, one round 0.3lb. With 235 rounds per gun that saves a total of 280lb. What about laminar flow wings? C&W had designed some for the XP-60.
What effect do you think the undercart arrangement is going to have on this? Or are we re-doing that as well?
What´s one more modification for a P-40 among friends?Fun aside, they turned her into the XP-40Q eventually. If C&W had decided to cancel the four different XP-60 versions and improve the well selling P-40 they would have had the P-40Q sooner.
That goes for the XP-46 as well.
They had the XP-46 soon enough and IIRC the USAAF found nothing wrong with it.
It wasn´t put in production because the US had joined the war by this time and disrupting C&W fighter production by switching to a very different plane was not tolerable any more.
And this was the reason for the rejection of the cancellation of the P-60. Thus C&W deciding to give No.1 priority to a step by step improvement program for the then all-important P-40.
P-40E->P-40F->P-40K->P-40L(early 1943: V-1710+aux. stage SC)->P-40N(mid-43: a K with laminar flow wings)
Seems like we really only had the resources to make one great V-Engine. It's a shame we thought the Merlin was obsolete. We could have killed the Allison V-1710 in its infancy and gone with a V-1650 from multiple sources. Merlin P-40s, Merlin P-39s, Merlin P-38s, that would have been awesome.
It was history that hamstrung the V-1710, not technical deficiencies, at least, not in a sense. The V-1710 was having problems even at the C15 model for the P-40, resulting in it losing it's hp rating until much later that year (I'm guessing hp of 1,140 and a de-rated hp of 860 - I'll check when I get home) when the issues were finally resolved but you need to remember that the V-1710 was company funded and Allison wasn't a big company; the Merlin enjoyed the luxury of government funding....We could have killed the Allison V-1710 in its infancy and gone with a V-1650 from multiple sources...
I didn't reasearch this, so maybe you're already aware of something I'm not, but I know the Allison dates back to either 1929 or 1931 (don't recall, off-hand, exactly at the moment).Seems like we really only had the resources to make one great V-Engine. It's a shame we thought the Merlin was obsolete. We could have killed the Allison V-1710 in its infancy and gone with a V-1650 from multiple sources. Merlin P-40s, Merlin P-39s, Merlin P-38s, that would have been awesome.
Curtis and Wright, IIRC.I didn't reasearch this, so maybe you're already aware of something I'm not, but I know the Allison dates back to either 1929 or 1931 (don't recall, off-hand, exactly at the moment).
Doesn't that make it an older engine than the Merlin?...maybe even the Kestrel?
...also, "C&W"? Could I get a definition on that, please?
Elvis
Re: Allison vs. Merlin.
I see what you guys are saying now. Didn't realize production was that low up 'til that time.
Also, concerning your comments about a Merlin-powered P-51A...that is exactly what happened, except we called it the P-51B/C.
Elvis
Approximately 10 years of development up until the C15 and still with power and reliability issues, against 4 years for the Merlin. This harks back principally to the issue of funding that I pointed out earlier and just as significantly to the USAAC's late acceptance of supercharging over turbocharging, which by 1938 still wasn't doing what it was supposed to be doing as well as it should have been doing it....the Allison dates back to either 1929 or 1931 (don't recall, off-hand, exactly at the moment).
Doesn't that make it an older engine than the Merlin?...maybe even the Kestrel?
C15 1,040hp: this could not be maintained owing to low mechanical strength, so in mid-1940 the powerplant was de-rated to 900hp. The original rating was not restored until the end of the same year, after further development....The V-1710 was having problems even at the C15 model for the P-40, resulting in it losing it's hp rating until much later that year (I'm guessing hp of 1,140 and a de-rated hp of 860 - I'll check when I get home) when the issues were finally resolved...
Except that it wasn't as fast as a P-40 using the same engine.
Since the P-63 with production model Allisons with 2 stage superchargers don't start to be delivered until Oct of 1943 I would think that early 1943 is a bit optimistic. Contracts for the XP-39E and the P-63 were signed in Jan of 1941.
Seems like we really only had the resources to make one great V-Engine. It's a shame we thought the Merlin was obsolete. We could have killed the Allison V-1710 in its infancy and gone with a V-1650 from multiple sources. Merlin P-40s, Merlin P-39s, Merlin P-38s, that would have been awesome.
Approximately 10 years of development up until the C15 and still with power and reliability issues, against 4 years for the Merlin.
There is the fact that the USAAC were gearing up for a different kind of war than the one the ETO would throw at them but that doesn't explain the long development cycle of the Allison quite so directly.
Thank God they didn't ask for Napier Sabres...Stricter US standards. A UK engine had to pass a 100 hour test before being put into production, a US engine had to survive 150 hours...
A UK engine had to pass a 100 hour test before being put into production, a US engine had to survive 150 hours. The V-1710 usually failed a few hours short of the 150-mark.