wuzak
Captain
2. The XP-40Q used about 1700hp at 20,500ft to reach 422mph. This required over speeding the engine to 3200rpm.
Wasn't 3,200 rpm the normal maximum rpm for late model V-1710s with 12 counterweight crankshaft? I.e., not overspeeding?
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2. The XP-40Q used about 1700hp at 20,500ft to reach 422mph. This required over speeding the engine to 3200rpm.
2. The XP-40Q used about 1700hp at 20,500ft to reach 422mph. This required over speeding the engine to 3200rpm.
3. A P-51B needed about 1400hp at 22,000ft to reach 417mph. It could go faster high up, The XP-40Q could not. They had no inter cooler and were using water injection for charge cooling and power was fading slightly at 22,000ft.
The Allison engine was supposed to weigh about 1515lbs but trying to figure out how much coolant and oil was needed for various engines does get tricky. Trying to squeeze in a 2 stage Griffon was probably out of the question. The single stage Griffon was not going to make the power needed at over 20,000ft.
So the D-9 was quite a bit deficient in performance and not equal to the Spitfire Mk XIV and P-51 at all as often propageted?
The single stage Griffon went around 1790lbs
A two stage Griffon went over 2000lbs. Two stage needs a bigger intercooler than the Merlin.
The Spit had two 20mm and two .50 instead of four .50 cal (or ballast).
A MK XII was about the same weight as a MK IX. They were both lighter than a P-40N-1 (without electric starter and normal battery and without 3rd fuel tank) by about 300lbs.
So the D-9 was quite a bit deficient in performance and not equal to the Spitfire Mk XIV and P-51 at all as often propageted?
Could the supercharger used to make the Allison superlative on the P-38 have been used on the P-40 with similar, albeit single engined effect?Is there a problem that P-38K solves, for Allies in general, and for P-38s in particular?
You need a different plane, to build in a set up like the P-47. This was a consideration when RR were thinking about the two stage Merlin, If they went down the supercharger route, it would go in a Wellington without a problem but what about a Spitfire Hurricane or other.Could the supercharger used to make the Allison superlative on the P-38 have been used on the P-40 with similar, albeit single engined effect?
Could the supercharger used to make the Allison superlative on the P-38 have been used on the P-40 with similar, albeit single engined effect?
Interesting. How much of that plumbing and cooling could they omit with a Merlin or Griffon powered Lightning? The DH Hornet seems very aerodynamically clean in comparison, with P-38 performance to boot.The is most of the extra stuff the P-38 supercharger needed. A few things, like oil coolers were common to both engine set ups.
it was clean, but then they stuck the radiators and intercoolers in the wing leading edge.Interesting. How much of that plumping and cooling could they omit with a Merlin or Griffon powered Lightning?
The DH Hornet seems very aerodynamically clean in comparison.
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it was clean, but then they stuck the radiators and intercoolers in the wing leading edge.
It wasn't that the Merlins could do away with all the lumps and bumps. It was that the P-38 was designed several years earlier and it was designed for 1100hp engines. The intercoolers and radiators designed for 1100hp engines weren't big enough for 1425-1600hp engines and they had to just do minimum changes to get the engines to work.
The ONLY hope for Curtiss to upgrade performance on P-40 airframe was the two stage Allison installed on the P-40Q.
The P-40 maxed out internal fuel at 161 gallons, with growth limitations in aft fuse 62 gal tank (CG), and further increases in wing storage due to landing gear and gun arrangements. That would have yielded perhaps 170 mi combat radius with external drop tanks under ETO escort planning guidelines
All about GW compared to Design weight. ALL fighters grew in GW as missions dictated changes and new equipment. IIRC the Spit (original) was designed to 7G Limit and 10.5 G Ultimate to its original design GW. Comparably the P-40 original Empty Weight was 5367/Combat GW = 6807 designed to 8G Limit and 12G Ultimate. As Combat Weight of the P-40F was 7069 pounds, reducing Limit load to 7.7 G.Overweight,
Or overbuilt?
How many Gs in multi-axes was say the Spitfire able to take (or even rated for) compared to the P40?
What you must do to compare is to a.) Understand Brit vs US structure limits standards, b.) the original Gross Weight of the aircraft for which the Design Limit Load existed, and c.) The growth of the GW overtime and how that reduced allowable Limit Loads.Increased airframe strength costs,
And that is in weight.
Additionally range costs weight,
And the P40 had much more than the Spit.
Compare it to the P51, and it is lighter.
More advanced Aerodynamics and two stage supercharger are what was lacking. But compared to fighters of similar design age, aerodynamics were fine. Maybe not as superlative aero as the Spitfire.
Tomo - yes. Brainfart. It would have been comparable to P-38 with 300gal internal fuel and external 300 gals.Yes, going with a 2-stage engine from Allison is the only plausible way.
I'm sure that a P-40 cannot fulfil the ETO escort planing guidelines, the engine as-is does not give enough of power for cruising at 310+- mph TAS at 25000 ft. The 2-stage V-1710 should be capable for that. I'd try and nick the drop tank from the P-38, but that's just me.
Bill - we'd probably get a lot more than 170 miles with 160 + 150 gals of fuel? P-51B was good for 460 mile radius with 180 + 150 gals under the 'ETO rules'.
The Spitfire was around 2 years before the P-40 in development (based on first flights of prototype and production machines), I dont think there was any issue with what it could do as regards "G" forces in multi axes in flight was there? There were issues on landing loads. The late war Griffon versions were very heavy machines, but the wings were substantially modified, though they looked pretty similar.Overweight,
Or overbuilt?
How many Gs in multi-axes was say the Spitfire able to take (or even rated for) compared to the P40?
Increased airframe strength costs,
And that is in weight.
Additionally range costs weight,
And the P40 had much more than the Spit.
Compare it to the P51, and it is lighter.
More advanced Aerodynamics and two stage supercharger are what was lacking. But compared to fighters of similar design age, aerodynamics were fine. Maybe not as superlative aero as the Spitfire.
Bill,I would argue the point "P-51D was not a good climber when compared to Fw 190 and Bf 109". It was, at 67" vs 1.42 ata for Bf 109G-6 and 1.42 ata vs Fw 190A-7 and A-8 at Combat Weight GW at T.O. Only (USAAF) the P-47M and P-38J with FULLY functional engines outclimbed the P-51B/D through 25K, After 25K the P-51B/D caught up and passed. With 75" the P-51B/D easily outclimbed the 109 as medium altitudes were reached with 1650-7 engine and continued to increase at higher altitudes. The Spit IX and XIV easily outclimbed every Mustang save XP-51F/G and P-51H.
In "Bastard Stepchild" II presented the comparative data and graphics at full combat gross weight (internal) and included wing racks for the P-51B/D. I had Kurfurst (Dr. Millei Adam) check my data to make sure I wasn't understating the 109 and 190 values. BTW the P-51D with new cleaner bomb racks at Same GW as P-51B outclimbed and out ran the P-51B at any Boost. Note - when I say 'Same' I mean both at 9600 pounds with 1650-7, 67", 3000 RPM. That P-51D TO was 500 pounds less than full internal loading of fuel, oil and ammo.
To the question of P-40 combined with 1650-3 or -7, it would certainly enabled better performance in both climb and straight away speed, climb comparable or better to P-51B/D due to lower W/L but the P-40 Parasite Drag was more than 30% greater than P-51B/D which would kill much of the speed potential to be gained with the heavier more powerful engine.
That said, Packard could not come close to production quantities committed for RAF/RCAF and the Mustang - which also impacted the projected spares commitment in 1944. Echols in a huge brainfart (malice?) approved a thousand 1650-1 spares (in Summer 1943) for Q1 1944, and if read between the lines - got his ass kicked because P-51B- airframes were complete save engines into August 1943. The ONLY hope for Curtiss to upgrade performance on P-40 airframe was the two stage Allison installed on the P-40Q.
The P-40 maxed out internal fuel at 161 gallons, with growth limitations in aft fuse 62 gal tank (CG), and further increases in wing storage due to landing gear and gun arrangements. That would have yielded perhaps 170 mi combat radius with external drop tanks under ETO escort planning guidelines