Shortround6
Major General
Like I said, there is some subjectivity in this which is why we will probably never agree. And yes I do think an aircraft is actually a new design sometimes within a specific aircraft model type. Personally (as I said already) I'd say Fw 190D is different from the A for example, or the Spit I from the Spit XXI, and the Allison Mustang from the Merlin ones, but I wouldn't insist on it.
I guess I would draw the line when it's both substantially different in terms of capabilities and performance, and has a different official designation. Admittedly somewhat arbitrary.
Defining exactly what makes a truly different aircraft when they are clearly of the same development lineage is tricky and I don't think there is any "official" criteria we would all necessarily agree on. I would argue it was usually a combination of factors, some dramatic (new type of engine, changes in the number of crew or a substantially changed wing), some more incremental like changes in armament, pilot or fuel system protection, fuel capacity, landing gear, modified control surfaces, and so on.
In the case of the P-36 / P-40 it's the combination of substantially increased performance (esp. top speed and dive acceleration) and overall carrying capacity. At the risk of repeating myself I believe the P-36 hit a wall in the 30's.
I think most of us would agree that the Spitfire XXI is different than a Spitfire I. You do have a different wing in addition to the different engine and the somewhat different tail. Early Spitfires used three different wing tips but they were interchangeable from the last rib station out, no change to rest of the wing.
With the change from an Allison powered Mustang to a Merlin powered one things are only slightly more difficult. Pretty much the same wing but the fuselage got a splice put in it so you can't really take a P-51A airframe a put a Merlin V-1650-3 in it and get a real P-51B.
P-47D to P-47N gets a little tough. They extended the wing root area but kept the same airfoil and cord to accommodate fuel tanks. Then clipped the wing tips to reduce the wingspan to near original
New design or??????.
The basic difference between a P-36/Mohawk and a P-40/Tomahawk is the engine and the drag reduction/increased speed it provided. It came a cost in weight which affected maneuverability a bit. The majority of the plane was unchanged except to accommodate the increased weight.