MIflyer
1st Lieutenant
On 13 April 1940 the British ordered 675 of the Bell Model 14, the export version of the P-39, which they named the Caribou. They specified two .50 cal nose guns, a 20MM Hispano instead of the 37MM cannon of the P-39, four .303 wing guns, and a maximum speed of of 394 mph at rated altitude, plus or minus 4%.
When the first production Caribou was tested at the Bell plant they found the top speed was only 371 mph, which did not meet the contracted speed requirement. Bell then applied some drag reduction modifications, which also lowered the aircraft weight by 200 lb. The airplane then attained 391 mph at rated altitude and the British determined that the contract requirements had been met.
But the drag reduction mods were not applied to the rest of the production run. Testing in England of a standard production Caribou, renamed Airacobra I in 1941, showed a top speed of only 359 mph.
Source: "Images of War: Fighters Under Construction In Word War Two"
When the first production Caribou was tested at the Bell plant they found the top speed was only 371 mph, which did not meet the contracted speed requirement. Bell then applied some drag reduction modifications, which also lowered the aircraft weight by 200 lb. The airplane then attained 391 mph at rated altitude and the British determined that the contract requirements had been met.
But the drag reduction mods were not applied to the rest of the production run. Testing in England of a standard production Caribou, renamed Airacobra I in 1941, showed a top speed of only 359 mph.
Source: "Images of War: Fighters Under Construction In Word War Two"