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Hmm I cant really vote for anyone, its a tough call.
Best Radials in my opinion were built by the US with the PW series and followed by Germany with the BMW 800s.
Inlines is a toss up between German and England in my opinion.
renrich said:What hurts US is no really successful inline engines. Had to use RR in fighters and PT boats.
PACKARD V-12 MARINE ENGINE
The Packard 4M-2500 engine was utilized in all U.S. Navy World War II PT boats. This engine was based on the 1925 Liberty aircraft engine which was earlier converted for marine use in racing boats. During the war the Packard engine went through various performance updates and modifications. With early engines rated at 1100 h.p. and progressing to 1500 h.p. during the war. The Packard 4M-2500 engine was a supercharged, water cooled, gasoline powered V-12 engine, weighing approximately 2900 pounds.
The Packard 4M-2500 marine engine was not the Rolls-Royce Merlin, nor did U.S. Navy PT boats use the R.R. Merlin engines, which is sometimes misstated. However, Packard did built a version of Merlin Engine under contract by Britain for British aircraft use
We're at cross purposes in referring to max economical sfc and that at full power. Its no surprise that the Merlin's fuel consumption was poor when running at full power as the engine ran rich to suppress detonation. The Germans got around this in one way by adopting MW system which cooled the charge. The figure of 0.42 was for a Merlin X at 2280rpm, other conditions not given.
I think I'm going to trust a RR report rather than some obscure German one with regards to Merlin weights.
I`d like to see the source wheter it makes the same claims as you do. Reminder, you claimed that
'Merlin 61 weight of 1640lb includes two stage supercharger, intercooler and carbs.'
Maybe I'll just pop over to Derby and weigh one of things, its not far.
The Metrovick F.2/4 Beryl is not the same as the F.2. It was a larger service engine for the SRA.1 with a zero stage added to pass more airflow.
The F.2 ran in 1941, passed its tests in 1942 and went up to 2500lbf in 1943. The flight test program ran for 210hours.
Also developed were the F.3 and F.5 turbofan and UDF respectively, using the F.2 as a gas generator. The F.3 developed 3900lbf on initial tests in 1943, rising to 4600lbf. The F.5 ran a bit later and gave 4710lbf. Fuel consumption was 40% less than anything else running at 0.66lb/lbf-hr
I'm still rather convinced that the engine weight in P-51B/C weights table incl. the 2nd stage of supercharger and intercooler, because I'm sure that the empty and basic weights of P-51B/C incl. them and of course also the carbs. I checked the table adding all subweights and all added up to given empty and basic weights. But let's agree to disagree with that.
"The later Spitfires however, despite having increased their fuel capacity by 50%, had only 2/3s the range compared to the early Spitfires."
What's your source of that? Because for ex. Morgan's and Shacklady's Spitfire The History gives clearly greater range to Mk VII and VIII than to Mk I and Mk V. And Mks VII and VIII were the fighter types which had almost 50% more fuel than the early types.
Juha
But please answer the question, why LW was unable to neutralize Malta in Oct 42, if 109s were easily capable of dealing with it in combat, with fatal consequences to the 5th Panzer Army?
Juha
Its a very big stretch to assert, or even suggest that the Spitfires on Malta were outmanouvred or outclassed. Quite the contrary. In the period March to october 1942, the Malta Defenders shot down over 600 LW attackers, whilst losing less than 300 of their own, the majority of these on the ground, with a lesser number also lost to ambushes as the Spitfires arrived at malta from their fery flights. This 600 is exclusively German, the italian losses are not included in this total
The 15 May was the decisive day of the campaign, where the RAF caused the Axis to stop its bombardments which became too expensive in crews and in material.