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Marshalls avatar is the logo of the St. Louis Blues hockey team.
YES!Ivan1GFP said:I believe Elvis commented that "the early 51's COULD'VE been a very effective aircraft at a lighter weight than the Merlin versions". I believe that it WAS quite effective, just not at the higher altitudes. Seems to me that the lack of engine power was more of an issue than the lack of a good propeller.
North American could've also mandated that fuzzy pink slippers were manditory footwear for all production staff.Hi Elvis,
>The prop listed for the P-51A, at the MustangsMustangs site shows its also a 3-bladed Curtiss Electric, although the text lists the diameter at 10'6", yet the specs shown at the bottom of the page lists the same prop but with a 10' 9" diameter.
>Small differences in size, so I'm speculating that all props mentioned are most likely the same one.
Might be ... but on the other hand, North American might have deliberately chosen a slightly smaller diameter propeller for the same engine because they built a faster plane, so the propeller tip Mach numbers they'd experience would be higher, decreasing efficiency more seriously than it would happen with the slower P-40.
You're researching an important parameter here!
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)
No apologies needed, although I did get a nice chuckle out of the "Canadian" comment.It figures that it had to be someone from Canada that had to point this out....
Elvis, the logo is the "blue note" (a musical note). It is based on an old song entitled "The St. Louis Blues".
Sorry for the digression in this thread.
GO BLUES!
I agree. If it had been a simple matter then Allison would have installed a license built copy of the RR Merlin supercharger on their own engine, vastly improving performance of the P-39 and P-40 plus the early model Mustangs.Regarding differences between the Allison and the Merlin, I don't think they are that directly comparable. Yes, the Allison is lighter, but there are MANY more differences than that. Displacement, Compression, modular design, issues with the intake manifold, etc.
Not seen that beforeThose dreaming of the P-51 with a Griffon...
Ivan,..........I'd forgotten about this, but the Allison's were actually supposed to be turbosupercharged units......Elvis
1425 HP on take-off, and rated @ 1100HP @ 2600 RPM, but still retaining the full 1425HP when the engine's sped up to 3000 RPM, and all at an altitude of 30,000 feet , yet listed weight is only 1350 lbs.