Originally posted by Captain Virgil Hilts
And the Allison used in the P-82 was a really nice piece.
From the "Mustang Designer" buy Ray Wagner:
Schmued describes the central problem:
"The engine we had intended for this design [P-82] was a Merlin. The United States Air Force was tired of paying a $6,000 royalty to England for each Merlin engine built in this country for Packard, on a royalty basis. So they decided, then, to substitute an Allison V-1710 for the Merlin.
Now the Merlin engine had a very high rating, 2,270 hp with 90-inch manifold pressure, and the Air Force told the Allison people they had to duplicate this performance. It was obvious that the way their engine was built was not suitable for these high manifold pressures. The British built a backfire screen into their engine, which made it run properly . But the Allison people refused to do that.
To help the situation along, we actually modified an Allison engine with a backfire screen that worked fine. But then, the secretary of defence was powerful enough to override the Air Force and told Allison not to do anything. Which, of course, left the F-82 with a rating far below that of a good trainer. The manifold pressure was reduced to 60 inches to keep this thing from backfiring into the blower case and damaging the engines. This was a very sad situation, because it really ruined the project. The secretary of defence [James Forrestal] favored General Motors and, I think, he had a good idea to protect the Allison people.
The Allison people were already on the way to build jet engines and did not really like to go back and build reciprocating engines. That very nearly ended the project. We flew these airplanes with the Allison engine at high manifold pressure and pretty nearly every flight, we lost the engine for sure and sometimes it was dangerous enough to lose the airplane and the pilot. It was really pathetic to see a good design simply ruined by politics and the lack of cooperation by the Allison people in building a good engine.
We had demonstrated the Allison engine with backfire screens, but it didn't make any difference, because Allison never agreed to install them. We just couldn't get any support form the Department Of Defence. The secretary completely failed to support us in this particular endeavor, and therefore the airplane didn't meet expectations. It was a great airplane and it was ruined by personal interests. It was pathetic."