drgondog
Major
The P-38 groups that went operational in the spring of 1944 were not exclusively equipped with J-15 and newer Lightnings.
Didn't say that they were Exclusively operational. I cited the presences and the loss date to prove the existence of the P-38J and successive evolution in arrival into 8th and 9th AF fighter groups
IMHO, a P-38J-25/L flown by a well trained and experienced pilot would hold its own or more against most Luftwaffe piston-engined fighters. If those models had been available in late 43, early 44, they may have earned the P-38 a great reputation in the ETO. I do believe however, that by 1945, the Lightning had reached the end of its development potential, unlike the P-51D which morphed into the H, or the P-47D which could be developed into the M/N.
You could as easily say that there were no innovations of importance after the dive flap, intercooler, boosted ailerons and maneuver flap mods were introduced in the J-25 Production block - meaning early 1944 at Lockheed with deliveries to the ETO in February through August, 1944
Eagledad
As to the other question.. this is what I stated
Each was equipped with P-38J-15 with leading edge fuel tanks when they started combat ops in April and early May, 1944. I haven't yet found out whether P-38L's were delivered but all the J's received the filed modifications for both the boosted ailerons and the Dive flaps by late June when all the ETO P-38s were upgraded to the P-38J-25
What I meant, and should have clarified, is that all the P-38J's were scheduled to be upgraded with Field kits to install the dive flaps and boosted ailerons and bring them to the J-25 capability.Retrofit capability to redesign the intercooler and install the leading edge fuel cells would have been impossible at Service centers in England. However, AFAIK it would not have been impossible to retrofit the earlier J-5 or -10 because I'm not as familiar with the internal design features of the P-38J blocks.
As to the sources - multiple conversations with both John Landers and Robin Olds, curiously on this subject of "what if". Landers was certain that he had both dive flaps and boosted ailerons on his June 25, 1944 fight with 109s and 190s near Paris. He was equally certain that he was flying the -15. The last of those conversations were in the mid 80's. In the only conversation with Olds on this subject, Zemke (and Loisel and Landers) were also in it... either 1984 0r 1986 AFA Reunion in Tuscon. Zemke, Olds and Loisel recall flying the 'modified' J-15 also in the summer of 1944. Neither Olds nor Zemke recall a P-38L-1 at 479th but the first P-38L-1's were rolling into USAAF inventories in June, 1944.
As an aside to frame the P-38L-1 combat arrival discussion - PTO aces Bong, McGuire and McDonald all scored in L-1s in October/November 1944. Two aces of the 474FG in ETO scored with J-25s in August (Kirkland - two 109s 8/25) and Milliken - 2-0-3 FW 190s on 9/12/44)
EDIT - 9/27 I haven't found the source(s) yet that cite Lockheed producing several hundred dive flap kits in late 1943 to March 1944 and dispatch them to ETO/PTO and MTO. A friendly fire incident took down a AAF transport carrying 200 en route to England in early March, 1944. It is in one of Ethell's and one of Bodie's books but I'm looking for a Ben Kelsey memo dated April 1943 citing his satisfaction with the dive flap mod on one of the very early -5's
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