Hi Flakbait,
>AC of WW2 gives the 109E4 using a DB601Aa engine at 1,175hp while Baugher, AC of WW2 and J-Aircraft have the A6M2 pushing out 940-950hp at takeoff.
Roger. That DB601Aa is somewhat of a mystery to me, some good experts claimed it wasn't ever used in the Emil, but a recently recovered Me 109E from Russia clearly has one.
The Battle-of-Britain Me 109E-4 had the DB601A-1 in the 4.5 km full throttle height variant, though, and it didn't get more than 1050 HP. Though often higher take-off ratings are listed for the DB601A-1, they actually are for a 60 s rating (enforced by a mechanical clockwork) that apparently didn't make it into service at all.
>The A6M3 data from J-Aircraft and Baugher gives 1,130hp from the Sake 21. Hence the reason I chose to compare the 1,175hp DB601Aa with the 1,130hp Sake 21.
I see. Going from 940 HP at sea level to 1130 HP would have boosted the A6M2 from 434 km/h to 461 km/h. That's still some way below the Me 109E-4's 480 km/h, and now it's the Emil that has less power. (Speed only increases by the cubic root of power, so you have to add a lot of power to get a worthwhile speed increase.)
>Still, no matter which way you cut it, the difference in speed between a radial engine and a hot-water 12 of similar power isn't much. Not nearly enough to account for the huge speed discrepancy of Japanese fighters after 1942, anyway.
Well, looking at the A6M2 alone, the difference was bad enough in a 1940 comparison. I think we both agree that there's not much need to discuss the Zero in the context of the original question, though, as it pretty much stagnated at a low power level.
The mid-war to late-war engines were better, and I'd agree that at least at a first glance, the Japanese aircraft weren't all power-handicapped.
Looking at the different Japanese designs, the sequence Ki-27 - Ki-43 - Ki-44 - Ki-84 seems to be especially interesting.
The Ki-27 was a very manoeuvrable aircraft, but the Ki-43 was built for performance already and almost failing the acceptance tests as a result. Still, by western standards, it was under-powered and extremely manoeuvrable. If you look closely at the Ki-84, you'll notice that it is very similar in size and shape to the Ki-43, and to me it looks like Nakajima designed the same aircraft once more, but with a much more powerful engine.
The Ki-44, on the other hand, stands out from the others in that set. It has a much smaller wing - smaller than an Emil's, actually, is very light - hardly heavier than the Emil - and yet features a 1500+ HP engine. That's a pretty unique combination - you could consider it a pocket Lavochkin ;-)
Still, even the Ki-44-II tops at 616 km/h @ 5030 m. The low altitude makes this absolute top speed seem relatively low, but at sea level, the Ki-44-II does 542 km/h which is better than the Me 109G-2 and not that far from the Fw 190A-5. In terms of climb rate, the Ki-44-II was spectacular.
It was the lack of a decent high-altitude supercharger that deprived the Ki-44 of a good top speed. I'm not sure about the reason - it may be that they were lacking two-stage superchargers, but on the other hand, the German aircraft didn't use these either and didn't fall behind that badly anyway. Maybe it was a question of a badly chosen design point - but on the other hand, why choose a design point for an interceptor that doesn't result in optimum performance at the level where the bombers are to be expected?
I'm a bit at a loss here.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)