"No, not possible. Leading up to the barrier is an entire layer (multiple layers?) of boundary pressure that can have all sorts of effects. All those effects and more that were attributed to "the speed of sound" or "mach1" in WW2 times were rarely ever close to Mach1. I think it is safe to say no WW2 vehicle broke the speed of sound, ever..."
Interesting. Do you have a further insight on this or just guesswork? It sure sounds like that.
AFAIK the practical sound barrier is nothing like you described. The multiple "boundary layers" can be induced
on the object that accelerates towards the speed of sound causing the speed of sound to be exceeded
locally on eg. wingprofiles (compressibility). That is probably something you are referring to with "all sorts of effects".
Theoretical calculations have indicated that it was possible for 262 to achieve Mach 1.2 in a dive, although it is suspected that while the structure can take it upon acceleration it possibly cannot hold together on deceleration. My guess is that fuselage is OK in this kind of stress but it is probably wings that are under an incredible stress due to too shallow sweep-back angle.
So any pilot who survived the event were more of less quite lucky to live the feat. Eg. Mr Mutke who has claimed to have broken the sound barrier in a 262 told that he started his dive from about 40k feet so the atmospheric conditions changed all the time during his dive as the temperature and altitude changed, and as such also the conditions to exceed the speed of sound also changed. In that sense I don't think it is all that impossible as you suggest.
http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question/atmosphere/q0112.shtmlStructurally the 262 was not too flimsy either. In comparison if 109 had 0.75mm aluminum on tip of its wing, the thickness was 2mm in 262. The net effect on structural strength is considerable.
"And there were a few other amusing design quirks of the 262."
That is interesting too. What are the design quirks in 262 to begin with?
The nose wheel hardly qualifies as one -P38 and P39 actually had the same kind of arrangement.
Building a working axial turbofan engine out of non-optimal materials hardly qualifies as another. Maybe an engineer could have said: "We don't have proper materials so we won't build it. Of course we could build it from high grade steel but it would mean that the fans would be need to be changed quite frequently but that is not the proper way to do it so we won't do it at all."
Now that would have qualified as idiotic, wouldn't it?
-C+