Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
The Typhoon IB of March 1943 did 417 mph (TAS) at 20,400 feet with a three blade propeller, 427 mph with a four blade propeller. Climb to 20,000 feet was 7.4 or 6.9 minutes respectively with the two propellers.
It was cleared to dive in service at 500 mph at 5,000 feet carrying two 500lb bombs. Of course it was tested in significantly faster dives at Boscombe Down.
The P-40 F is not close to this performance. According to the graphs in Dean (America's Hundred Thousand) It managed just 300 mph at sea level and 365 mph at 20,000 feet. Time to 20,000 feet was 11.5 minutes!
Cheers
Steve
I am somewhat surprised that the Merlin suffered so badly due to the location of its carb intake.
There was a plate to block off the opening and presumably draw air from a filtered source.
The closed intake can be seen in quite a few photographs.
I believe the same kind of arrangement was done on later models of Allison P-40.
It was not helped by the USAAF not buying enough spare engines and/or spare parts to begin with.
I don't know what the problem was, only that a number of sources say that the Merlins were wearing out quicker and then they linked it to sand ingestion.
Allison taking in air on top of the spinner, the Merlin from underneath. Neither one ever got anything like the Vokes filter on Hurricanes or Spitfires.
I am not saying they didn't do something, only that if they did, it fit in the normal cowl contours.
Hello Stona,
Let's be fair. Those speeds are about the best results ever for the Typhoon Mk.IB.
Most of the test reports show more like 400 MPH plus or minus 5 MPH.
There are also sources that list the P-40F as hitting speeds in the low 370 MPH range.
It doesn't change the standings much but it is a bit closer than your numbers indicate.
They are Boscombe Down's figures. I don't know where Dean's figures are from, presumably the USAAF.
Both sets are for aircraft tested by their relevant research establishments and will exceed those of service aircraft, but the Typhoon, at 20,000 feet was typically 40-50 mph faster than the P-40 in question. That is a huge difference, next we'll be arguing that the Hurricane was as fast as a Bf 109 E! A 365 mph fighter, in Europe, in early 1943, was obsolescent at best.
The Typhoon far out performs the P-40 in almost every measurable criterion. It's difficult to spin that to the P-40s advantage, though it won't stop people trying.
Cheers
Steve
The Spitfire IXs that were "shared" with the British Commonwealth were based in Britain, or in the MTO.
The Spitfire V could climb better and turn better than the P-40F, and had better firepower.
By early 1943 the Spitfire V had a couple of tricks up its sleeve that the P-40 could not replicate.
A Luftwaffe pilot may have been confident in beating a Spitfire V with an Fw 190 or Bf 109F-4, but was he sure that plane he has spotted is a Mk.V? Or is it a Mk IX? Or is it a Mk XII?
I think that you'll find that most of the Spitfires being operated over Europe up until the Spitfire LFIXc was introduced in the spring of 1943
In the MTO, the P40F/L was battling the same Luftwaffe fighters as well as the later Italian ones. They still scored well.
They are Boscombe Down's figures. I don't know where Dean's figures are from, presumably the USAAF.
Both sets are for aircraft tested by their relevant research establishments and will exceed those of service aircraft, but the Typhoon, at 20,000 feet was typically 40-50 mph faster than the P-40 in question. That is a huge difference, next we'll be arguing that the Hurricane was as fast as a Bf 109 E! A 365 mph fighter, in Europe, in early 1943, was obsolescent at best.
The Typhoon far out performs the P-40 in almost every measurable criterion. It's difficult to spin that to the P-40s advantage, though it won't stop people trying.
Cheers
Steve
The point is that the Typhoon widely out performed the P-40 across the board.
Whether it was 40 mph or 50 mph faster at 20,000 feet would obviously vary from aircraft to aircraft. In broad terms, the P-40 F was a 360 mph aircraft, the Typhoon at least a 400 mph aircraft.
I actually think it is ridiculous to make comparisons between two such different aircraft.
Cheers
Steve
We're comparing the P-40 F with the Typhoon (unspecified). I couldn't care less about the rate of climb of other versions of the P-40. Remember that the P-40 was much lighter than the Typhoon. What the Americans call the 'basic' weight of the P-40 F was just 7,089 lbs, I doubt that any Typhoon ever took of without weighing 2,000lbs more than that (more than 25% heavier).
If your life depended on it, which aircraft would you choose?
Hello Stona,
I am not disputing that the Typhoon had superior performance to a Merlin P-40.
What I am disputing is whether 417 MPH and 427 MPH are representative maximum speeds for a typical Typhoon.
I believe you are cherry picking your data to prove a point.
As far as the Typhoon not being deployed to other theaters, unless you are going to deploy large numbers (more than few squadrons) you are introducing a whole new spare parts logistic problem. Not just engines or a some crash/heavy landing spare parts but brakes and tyres which are consumables (anything else?) . The British may have trialed them in the Mid east to see what problems might arise should they be needed ( and it depends when, some in the Air Ministry held onto the idea that the Typhoon was future of RAF for a time after the MK IX Spit showed up).
I have no idea what problems turned up or didn't turn up in the trials but it seems the Typhoons weren't needed.
The P-40F may very well have been a 370mph Airplane, the belly shackles and sway braces were good for about 10mph. But you can't pick and choose at times. If you want the radius of action the drop tank gives you, you have to contend with the drop in speed. Early Typhoons did not have fittings for either bombs or drop tanks.
Bringing in the Spit V really opens up a can of worms on the condition of the plane. Aside from the infamous Vokes filter we have the results of a MK Vb fitted with a Merlin 50 engine,
forgetting the actual performance we have a test plane with.
Mk. VB wings with 1 x 20 mm. gun and 2 x 0.303" guns fitted in each. No stubs for further 20 mm. guns. Muzzles of all guns sealed, ejection chutes open.
Wing tips not "clipped".
Aerial mast complete with aerial.
No I.F.F. aerials.
Balloon type hood.
External bullet-proof windscreen.
External rectangular rear-view mirror without fairing on forward side.
Temperate type air intake without ice guard.
Oil cooler exit duct not flared.
Indivdual ejector exhausts stubs of a flattened type.
This was in April of 1943 and we can see a number of variations from what might be considered "standard" at the time, some help the results, some don't.
We need to consider the condition/set up of the test plane and it's common usage.
The P-40F may have been a 370+mph plane with a clean belly but very few of them were flown that way in combat.
For the Typhoon make sure you are comparing a plane with cannon as how many had machine guns (114?). Likewise the Typhoons with 4 bladed props don't show up until many of the P-40Fs are being retired due to age.
The Typhoon started it's career in Sept of 1941 with No 56 Squadron, considering the the prototype P-40F only flew in June or July of 1941 and the first production example wasn't completed until Jan 1942 and the P-40F didn't see combat until July/Aug of 1942 there was a fair bit of time when the Tiffy was better simply because it was there and the P-40F wasn't.
The Typhoons career spanned almost 4 years *3 years 8 months) while the P-40Fs career was around two years or less. We have to be careful about picking which examples from when for our comparisons.
In the MTO, the main enemy of the P-40F/L is the Bf 109F/G, 321 of its 592 victories are against these fighters