Originally posted by Serenity
P-40E Tommohawk is a good turner with flaps down.
Well generally, the P-40D thru N were called the Kittyhawk (commonwealth) or Warhawk (AAF). Tomahawk was bestowed upon the export P-40B/C types.
As to flying the P-40s, flaps can greatly tighten the turn radius, but prolonged flaps use can be detrimental.
In a stall fight, either P-40 can surprise with their agility. However, excellent E management is required to excel in the type. Full flaps will eat speed rapidly and the lack of horsepower (which means lack of acceleration) means that you will not be able to replace that speed anytime soon without trading altitude.
Within the plane set, there are several aircraft that require some altitude to obtain maximum effectiveness. P-40s are two of those types. Altitude means that you can generate speed. Moreover, despite having only marginal power, the P-40s can dive as fast as any prop fighter and faster than most. Either can exceed 600 mph TAS with relative ease. To retain a reasonable measure of the control at that velocity, you will have to adjust trim a little during the dive. Elevator trim is quite powerful, so trimming it to neutral (center of scale) is more than enough to allow an undramatic pull-out. I have dive tested the P-40s, diving straight down from 30,000 feet. Virtually nothing can catch the P-40 in vertical dive like this. Some fighters can keep up, but once below 5,000 feet and doing better than 595 mph, no other fighter has better control authority than the P-40s. I've watched 190s and Spitfires shed wings trying to follow my P-40 through maneuvers at high Mach speeds (Mach .75). P-40s are extremely strong and can take much abuse.
We have been running a Thursday night clinic in the Training Arena this month (June), Fighting Multiple Enemies. We are practicing 3 on 1 combat. We start out with the group being divided into sub-groups of three. A Trainer takes each sub-group and flies as the lone fighter for the first engagement, with each pilot getting opportunities to fight the other three. My primary rides for these clinics has been the P-40B and P-40E. It has proven to be up to the task. A reasonably skilled pilot flying a P-40 should fear nothing.
Furballing in the P-40B...
P-40E landing. One of Fester's beautiful skins...
My regards,
Widewing