Hi Widewing,
>Actually, the Do 335 weighs nearly a ton more than the P-82, even if the Twin Mustang has full internal tanks (it would not need external tanks to operate anywhere over Germany).
Do 335A: 10200 kg (1150 kg fuel)
P-82G: 9080 kg (1630 kg fuel) => 7930 kg (1150 kg fuel)
>Either way, the P-82 has a lower wing loading
Do 335A: 265 kg/m^2, 0.36 kg/HP
P-82G (1150 kg fuel): 204 kg/m^2, 0.49 kg/HP
(Power loading based on maximum power.)
>North American Aviation test pilot George Welch (who flew the P-38 against the Japanese) found the Twin Mustang to be, and quote, "considerably superior to the P-51D in every aspect of air combat."
Well, there should be a difference between the 1945 Merlin-powered P-82B and the late-1946 Allison-powered versions like the F-82G I listed above.
>What we have here is an interceptor designed to kill high altitude bombers vs. a high altitude fighter designed to kill interceptors.
The Do 335 actually didn't follow any special fighter concept but was rather a high-speed bomber adapted for the fighter role (similar to the Mosquito).
With regard to the P-82B comparison, I'd say that the Do 335B held the speed, firepower and roll rate advantages, while the P-82B held the turn rate, visibility and range advantages.
(The climb rate comparison depends on the exact DB603 variant used and of course on the power of the V-1650-22/23, so I can't comment on that yet.)
>I lean towards the Do 335 being far less effective than the Me 262, and far more vunerable to boot.
Well, I'm afraid I don't know what you mean by "far more vulnerable".
With regard to the Me 262 comparison, the Do 335's main strengths was the long endurance and rough field capability (due to propeller power) so that they wouldn't have had to scramble from and land back on bases that were under constant attack.
Performance-wise, the Me 262 of course was superior to the Do 335, just as it was to any other piston fighter of the era.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)