As for WMaker's troll, ignore him. He's openly expressed he has a bug up his butt about me and that he plans to follow me around and poke at anything I post.
Correcting statements that are factually incorrect is not trolling.
Radial hawks were obsolete. It's a fact.
They eventually became obsolete just like all fighters do but they certainly weren't obsolete "right out of the door".
- It's May 1938, P-36 enters service with the USAAC. In the US, Navy is still flying F3F biplane fighters as US Navy's first monoplane fighter the Brewster hasn't yet entered service. P-36 is the most modern fighter in the USAAC's arsenal.
- In Japan both air services are still flying fixed gear monoplanes (A5M, Ki-27) neither A6M nor Ki-43 has yet entered service.
- In Soviet Union I-15Bis and I-16 Type 17 enter service on the same year. None of the later inline engined fighters are yet in service.
- In Italy more than a year after P-36 has entered service, in November 1st 1939 Italian airforce has 146 Cr.42s and only 48 G.50s and 32 Macchi C.200s in service.
- In France first MS.406s enter service in the summer of 1938. First French Hawks are delivered in December 1938. Nor Bloch 152 or Dewoitine D.520 are in service in 1938.
- In Britain Hurricane Mk.I and Gladiator Mk.II are in service. Spitfire isn't in service in May 1938 but enters service in August of the same year.
- In Germany the first DB-engined 109s are built in the end of 1938 and in May only Jumo engined Cs and Ds are in service. Jumo 210D produces only 680hp at take off.
So in this context, saying that Hawk was "obsolete out of the door" is complete nonsense. It was actually fairly modern fighter at the point of its introduction.
I simply take exception to WMaker's comments (and some others') that this would be a super plane. .
Never have said anything that would suggest this.