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Erich said:go interview some ETO vets of the 8th AF smart guy. The K variant was excellent. As I said this all is wrapped in what theater. First thing you cannot even compare the two on the ETO front anyway.
We can come up with scales as some posters like to do but until you can interview a vet first hand and get his views on flying both Jug and Mustang variants you will all have your own personal opinions.
v/r E
DAVIDICUS said:Here are some points of interest. The P-47N was the first to drop napalm in combat, a P-47N was the first aircraft to destroy another, air to air, with a rocket and the very last hostile aircraft shot down in WWII fell to two P-47N's when they splashed two "renegades" on the night of August 14th, after the cease fire.
DAVIDICUS said:Roving Guns:
DAVIDICUS said:I don't see the conflict in what I wrote. (Was I self contradictory?) The information I read says that the P-47N entered service in the PTO in September of 1944 and thus:
"began service in the PTO in September of 1944."
"The first P-47N-1-RE appeared in September of 1944, and 24 were delivered by year's end."
You have indicated that they didn't actually see service until May of 1945. I didn't know this. Where does this information come from? At any rate, it did definitely see combat, shot down a lot of Jap planes and even made a number of pilots aces.
DAVIDICUS said:My information on the P-38J came from the source I cited. At any rate, what was the roll rate of the P-38J? I thought it was about 80 degrees/second. The P-47D could do 85 and the P-47N did better than 100. Do you have reliable figures for these three aircraft that say different?
DAVIDICUS said:That chart you posted lists the P-47D-10. Out of curiosity, do you have any climb figures for P-47D's with paddle blades?
DAVIDICUS said:The chart indicates a roll rate of less than 100 degrees a second for the P-38 with boosted ailerons. I believe the P-47N exceeded 100 degrees per second.
From: http://home.att.net/~historyzone/Seversky-Republic8.html
The XP-47N took to the air for the first time on July 22, 1944. Test comparisons were made with a P-47D-30-RE throughout the early portion of the evaluation period. Much to everyone's surprise, the XP-47N, with its greater wingspan and higher weight actually proved to have better roll performance than the D model. At 250 mph TAS, the N attained a maximum roll rate just over 100 degrees/second. The P-47D-30-RE could manage but 85 degrees/second at the same speed. At higher speeds, the N widened the gap further.
DAVIDICUS said:I've always been curious how much of an improvement the paddle blade props were for the P-47. Maybe someone else will know.
Erich said:OT but the Bf 109G-10 could hit well over 460 mph.......
Erich said:KK:
The G-10 had the MW 50 as standard equipment, one reason why there is a diversity in opions whether there was a G-10/AS or not............there wasn't. the G-10 variant was the fastest 109 in existance during the war
DAVIDICUS said:Somehow, I'm not following you.
"Yes, but the P-38 with boosted ailerons rolled better at high speeds. I forgot to say "high speeds" in my post above. Also, it was easier to work the ailerons quickly, a huge factor in actual combat."
Are you saying that the P-38 with boosted ailerons rolled faster than the P-47N?
The chart indicates that at 450mph (I don't think the J could go that fast), the roll rate was less than 100 degrees/second.