But then, probably the 170 gallon tank could and I am quite sure it was used. That would give 290 gallon fuel, in optimal case, enough for 2900 miles on the Spit Mk VIII.
The mpg would go down with the extra weight and drag of the 170 gallon tank, and you have to allow about 25 gallons for warming up and climbing to altitude.
Why would they ship Mk VIIIs abroad, and buy US Mustangs instead of them at high price,
Britain wasn't buying Mustangs by this stage of the war, they were getting them free under Lend Lease.
The site above says the Mustang`s range was 2055 miles at 280 mph cruise speed at 20k ft.
Is that IAS or TAS? Does it include an allowance for combat, a safety reserve?
Joe Baugher quotes 950 miles for a P-51D on internal fuel at 395 mph at 25,000ft.
Allowing for about 30 gallons to get to 25,000ft, that's about 5 mpg for the Mustang at 395 mph.
That test shows 5.8 mpg for the Spit at 314 mph, which I think is pretty consistent with Baugher's figures. Certainly the Mustang will have much better economy at high speeds because of it's lower drag.
But even regardless of the Mustang, your data shows the Spit VIII had no problem reaching Berlin. So why wasn`t they over there, I ask ?
It was, as a recce aircraft.
The RAF did not go in for long range daylight bombing. Why would they build a long range escort?
Actually I don`t say it, and find it rather hard to believe.
You find it hard to believe that with the same amount of fuel, the same engine, the Spitfire could have had the same range as the Mustang at low speeds?
Parasitic drag dominates at high speed. No-one is going to argue, the Mustang had lower drag at high speeds.
At low speeds, induced drag is far more important, parasitic drag less so. At low speeds, I'd expect the Spit with it's lower weight and lower wingloading, to have less drag, although I don't think there'd be much in it either way.
I don`t know if using both was possible or not, but there`s nothing that says it was impossible.
170 gallons in a drop tank and 70 in a rear tank equals 240 gallons, which is 1728 lbs of extra fuel alone, without the weight of the tanks. I think we can safely assume it's going to be over 2000 lbs extra.
That's going to push a Spit VIII over 10,000 lbs. It might be possible, but I doubt the RAF would allow it.
Don't forget, the RAF didn't even like the rear tanks on the Mustang, and didn't always allow their use.