XP-39 II - The Groundhog Day Thread

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How many P-39s were lost to spinning/tumbling?
A quick glance at Joe Baugher's site shows that six P-39s out of the production batch 41-6722/41-7115 (P-39D-BE) crashed due to spin.
There's many more out of the batch that indicate wrecking with no specifics - those could be crossed with the USAAF MACR reports for details.

There's more, but I don't have all day to look the rest up.
 
With reference to post #527 above and the P-39 doing a "snap and spin" at anything below 250 mph:

1) You take off and land well below 250 mph.
2) You climb at 158 - 162 knots, well below 250 mph.
3) Approach speed is 130 mph.
4) The airplane cruises around 250 mph in high-speed cruise.

In general, go look at a pilot's handbook. Almost ALL speeds given are below 250 mph except the very high speed stuff. I doubt they'd have bought something that was a coffin in most of its operating envelope. It would "snap" only if you stall it.

So, I'm not too sure what is being said. Stall speed is about 105 mph flaps up and about 90 mph flaps down, and the stall is relatively benign unless you are aft of the aft CG limit.
 
 

Please expand above.
 
The Bell P-39 Airacobra & P-63 Kingcobra

Another reason was that the Red Air Force thoroughly evaluated the Airacobra before putting it into service, finding out the hard way about its vicious spin characteristics, with several test pilots killed. The faults were documented, however, with rules for flying the aircraft written up for operational pilots -- they were warned to never perform aerobatics if they had expended their ammunition -- and training implemented to make sure P-39 pilots knew how to avoid spins and, when possible, head them off before the point of no return. Procedures had to be devised for maintenance in extreme cold conditions. Bell engineers went to the USSR to assist the Soviets in qualifying the P-39, obtaining feedback for refinements to the design
Sources include:


  • US AIRCRAFT IN THE SOVIET UNION & RUSSIA by Yefim Gordon, Sergey Komissarov, and Dmitriy Komissarov, Midland Publishing, 2008.

  • "Bell P-39 / P-63 Variant Briefing" by Robert F. Dorr, WINGS OF FAME, Volume 10, 1998.

EDIT: added sources for above
 
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"One normally returned to base instead of doing acrobatics".



Sorry, I have been trying hard to give you the benefit of the doubt, but with that comment you have lost me.

No one is saying the P-39 was un-flyable, and no one is talking extremes here but you. It is clear you don't actually understand what you are talking about. You have great "book" knowledge, but you don't know how to put the pieces together.

You don't have to be flying acrobatics to be in a deadly situation with a tail heavy rear CG aircraft. Any aircraft may have issues, especially when landing, or recovering from a stall. Any aircraft type can get into a stall, at any speed, and at any mode of flight just by exceeding the angle of attack. If your CG is out of balance or even very close to it, the risk is higher.

The aircraft I fly is not permitted to perform spins or acrobatics, and is a slow little single engine monoplane. Guess what? If I get out of CG, or really close to my limit, I am going to possibly experience problems with control and stability. That includes your beloved P-39.

So please stop, just stop...

Stop with the heresay, and listen to the people trying to help you.
 
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Hello GregP,

Consider the context of those comments by the pilot.
The P-39 certainly has a CoG either close or behind its aft limits to be able to be tumbled.
It is NOT stable and its ability to weathervane is somewhat lacking.
Its tendency to enter a flat spin is much higher than if the CoG is in a reasonable range.
The recovery from the tumble is a vertical dive which needs some control input to avoid becoming a lawn dart.
It may be quite reasonable to carry a bit extra speed to be able to pull out safely under those conditions without entering an accelerated stall.

- Ivan.
 
Hello P-39 Expert,


You MIGHT be correct if your squadron operated a single aircraft with nothing else competing for the same runways.
That is not how fighters are used operationally. They are typically flown in groups. Having an aircraft idle a bit longer than expected and then suffering an engine failure on take-off is not an acceptable outcome. Pilots who flew the P-39 comment on its tendency to overheat. What makes you so much more knowledgeable than the men who flew the actual aircraft that you can declare this not to be a problem when it has been extensively documented to be a problem with the type?


The P-38 actually carried twice that amount of internal fuel, but since it had two engines, that is reasonably comparable.
The difference though is that it could also carry two drop tanks of either 150 or 300 Gallons each.
There is no argument that the P-40 carried a pretty comparable fuel load to your hypothetical P-39.
As for the P-51, what you are forgetting is that even with an engine comparable to the P-39D, it was hitting speeds that were about the same as a P-39Q with a much later engine. The Mustang Mk.II still with the single stage Allison was also able to achieve over 400 MPH at 10,000 -12,000 feet which is well beyond what any P-39 could do.

Although you can argue that the fuel loads are comparable, the P-39 has to sacrifice a substantial portion of its armament to get this increased fuel load which was already standard in the other fighters.


37 mm T9 / M4 cannon. Rate of Fire: 140-150 rounds per minute
Muzzle Velocity: 610 Meters / second -- 2000 feet per second.

The problem isn't that you can't get all the guns on the P-39 to converge on a point at a distance.
That part is easy.
The problem is that as soon as you start pulling any G while firing, the trajectories don't line up any more.
A uniform battery or at least guns that have similar ballistics avoid that situation. The Hispano 20 mm cannon on some Airacobra is very similar in velocity to the .50 cals but the problem is the lack of duration of fire.

You also might want to keep in mind that bullets don't just disappear past their point of convergence.


The question here is what else do these other fighters have remaining when their cannon ammunition runs out?
These other cannon also have a much higher rate of fire that the 37 mm does not.
Switching to the 20 mm Hispano Mk.I / HS-404 option on the Airacobra only makes things worse.
The duration of fire drops to 6 seconds instead of 12.....


Your opinion and mine differ. The US Army who was paying for the weapon systems didn't seem to agree with your opinion.
The Soviets seemed to be in pretty good agreement with you but they were not the ones buying the aeroplanes.

ANYTHING can shoot down an aeroplane. That is the principle of the "Golden BB".
I just would not want to depend on it on a large scale.

- Ivan.
 
The props both turned outward so if one engine was lost the torque of the good engine wanted to bank the plane toward the heavier side of the dead engine.
And that doesn't make a difference! Apparently you never heard of a "critical engine."

Critical engine - Wikipedia

Depending who you talk to the P-38 didn't have a critical engine or both were critical. In either case the P-38 had great engine out characteristics once you were trained on how to fly a twin!
 
Ivan1GFP, I think you're typing to a brick wall.

He either is unwilling or unable to process the information so aptly put to him. He keeps up with a circular argument that has been refuted too many times to think it's not intentional.

I have learned a lot from this place, but I certainly don't claim to be an "Expert" at anydangedthing. I've often thought that self-declared "experts" are anything but that. I kinda think that he's just trolling you all. I'm moving on to other things.
 
Hi Ivan!

I fully realize the possibilities for the P-39 and agree there was an issue there, but saying it would snap out of control if the controls were moved below 250 mph is ... a bit of an exaggeration.

Below is an example of a twin-engine aircraft again running out of aispeed while climbing, stalling, being unable to recover. This is the classic "out of airspeed, altitude, amd ideas" situation. The Mosquito has the highest engine out Vmc of any twin piston aircraft I know of, at 160 mph or more, depending on load. It's a "Wooden Wonder" when flown with skill and precision, but a bit of a handful when operated without said skill, as below.



Wish we' stop seeing these basic mistakes!
 

Expand above.
 

I've been in this business for over 40 years and I'm still learning, especially when I come on here!

And the same thing for "master mechanics"
 
I think this video might have been posted on here. I've always enjoyed watching it. Some of our pilots, please comment when you see the attitude of the aircraft after some of the spin/ stall sequences. The last portion of the clip drives the point home!

I also think the commentator "sugar coats" this. I'd bet dollars to donuts all of these scenes were flown by seasoned Bell test pilots, to include the last portion!

 
I've been in this business for over 40 years and I'm still learning, especially when I come on here!

And the same thing for "master mechanics"

I've been in the aviation industry (military and civilian) for 20 years now. Mechanic, Aircrew Member, Safety, Engineering (note: I am not an engineer), and a private pilot.

The most important thing I have learned over the last 20 years is that I know exactly enough to get myself in trouble.

Seriously, in aviation you never stop learning. Every day I learn something new. You also never know everything, or you are never an absolute expert at everything. That does not mean you can't be proficient and an expert, just that there is always room for continuous growth and improvement.

The day you stop learning in aviation is the day you need to hang it up. You are dangerous, and you're going to get someone hurt or worse.
 
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That was neat!
 
P-39 Expert said:
The props both turned outward so if one engine was lost the torque of the good engine wanted to bank the plane toward the heavier side of the dead engine.

Good god man, that's normal behavior for any twin with wing mounted engines! But it's not the torque that does it; it's the asymmetric thrust. You need to study up on this before shooting your mouth off while pointing at your foot.
"
Critical engine" comes into play only in the case of twins whose engines both turn in the same direction, and then it's primarily P factor, not torque that's the culprit. I'm not going to lecture you on this; go look it up yourself.
While you're at it you might discover the meanings of things like VMCa and VMCg, VYse, Vxse, Accelerate-Stop, Balanced Field Length, and the takeoff speeds; V1, Vr, and V2.
Don't sweat it; we all get our "night in the barrel" from time to time, when every approach ends in a waveoff or a bolter and the guys in the ready room are critiquing our every clumsy move. It isn't personal, and they've all been through it too. A little ball-busting toughens the hide.
 

Hello GregP,

The situation with the Mosquito in the accident is entirely different. It was a mechanical failure that caused the accident.
The maneuver was intended to run out of airspeed in a vertical climb.
What was NOT intended was to have an engine failure with no airspeed and while both engines were running at very high power settings. At zero airspeed, the remaining engine caused an uncontrollable yaw which the pilot was able to recover from but he could not regain enough flying speed in the altitude remaining.

- Ivan.
 
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