Hi Hilts,
>Documentation of 64" of manifold pressure can be found in the Lockheed charts in the article "Der Gabelschwanz Tuefel" by Dr. Carlo Kopp, on C.C Jordan's website "Planes and Pilots of World War II".
Thanks, I found it. I had thought you might have a primary source, though, like the manufacturer's engine power charts we have seen posted here for the Jumo 213 or BMW801 engines.
Here's a quote from Kopp's article:
"The two Allison V-1710F-30 V-12s had a 5.5 in. bore and 6.0 in stroke, providing a compression ratio of 6.5. These drove Curtiss Electric constant speed props via a 2:1 reduction gear, delivering 1,475 HP military and takeoff ratings at 3,000 RPM, or 1,612 HP maximum rating at 3,000 RPM and 60 in. of manifold pressure. Some later engines are described as delivering up to 1,725 HP WEP rating."
His statement regarding the 1725 HP engines - which would indicate the 64" Hg manifold pressure according to the graphs - seems very cautious to me. "Later" could imply that these were engines that weren't incorporated into series production, for example, or even that the quoted top speed graph was only a calculated projection.
>As far as how to deal with the German fighter in a dive while flying the P-38, Lowell said you could roll and pull a G or two and follow any prop fighter in a dive. Heiden never mentioned his maneuver, but said he could tailgate any German plane in a dive flying a P-38J with dive flaps. Heiden also said the the P-38L could do anything as well as the P-51 could, and he flew both of them.
Lowell's tactics limit the speed build-up during a dive, which is a useful manoeuvre of course. If attacking a Luftwaffe pilot who just dives away without having to care about excessive speed build-up, the P-38 will be left behind anyway. That's what Gerald Brown meant by his statement
"Early on the German, like a street bully, could pick a fight and then break it off against the P-38. He couldn’t do that with a P-51."
Heiden's general statement doesn't mention operational altitude. Guppy's P-38 pilot quotes (from Corky Smith and Stan Richardson) are more specific, and both give the high-altitude advantage to the P-51, agreeing with Gerald Brown in that respect.
>You also state that in YOUR opinion, critical Mach is the reason the 8th AF abandoned the P-38. I don't buy that either. Although the compression problem was a factor, it was the other problems that the 8th complained about. Cold cockpits, engine problems, difficulty with maintenance, level of difficulty for the pilots, and the continual lack of planes and spare parts.
The problems you describe certainly played an important role in the 8th Air Force's disappointment with the P-38. However, both the P-47 and the P-51 had teething problems, too, but they were fixed without abandoning the aircraft.
The reason I'm convinced critical Mach number was the decisive factor is that its problems were considered insurmountable by the 8th Air Force's leadership (according to an 1996 USAF research paper by LtCol Daneu). The problems you have described could have been fixed - in fact, it's a central point of your argument that they could! - but the low critical Mach number would have required the design of a completely new airframe.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)
>12-07-2001 12:47 AM