but i will anyway.
was looking for comparisons of the p-38 to the p-47, and thanks to google i found the following......
P-51 Mustang vs. P-38 Lightning?
Both planes changed the course of the war but you never hear stories about p-38's being used anywhere except the pacific and vice versa for p-51's in europe. What is the reason one plane was only used in one theatre and not the other?
* 3 years agoand the best selected answer was.....
Best Answer - Chosen by Voters
They didn't change the course of the war on the western front, but the P51 did contribute hugely to the destruction of the Luftwfaffe, both because there were so many of them and because it was an extremely good plane, especially the D.
P-38 were used on the western front, mostly in the Mediterranean area, the plane had structural problems that made it not really suited to the western front, though its firepower was deadly. It was however successfully in the Pacific theater, where it proved ideally suited with its long range and high altitude performance. It could not out-maneuver most Japanese fighters but it was faster and had a firepower that made mincemeat out of the lightly armoured Japanese planes.
The P51 was used mostly on the western front because that's where there was a great need for lots and lots of fighters to escort the bombers and replace the shorter legged P38 and P47, bringing down the losses among the US bomber flights and allowing them to go deeper in Germany. The first delivery of P51 on the Pacific front wasn't done until end 1944.
Amusing notes on those two planes, both names (Lightning and Mustang) came from the British who used the planes in real fights before the US did and gave them those names. They stuck.
The P51 was a British designed plane and nearly didn't go into production because, well, it was designed by Brits, not by Americans.
so......i thought the lightning was the first fighter to take the heavy bombers all the way to berlin and back? and i thought that even the p-47 with tanks made that trip before the mustang came along?
so lets get some of the history buffs in here.........

one of the other things i had always thought(perhaps incorrectly) was that the "P" stood for "pursuit", meaning that its actual intended usage was to chase down enemy bombers, and destroy em....or if on escort duty, then to basically protect the friendly bombers by chasing away the enemy fighters, whereas the "F" designated fighters were more intended to fight it out with the enemy?