Gyrene, even the most stripped down and weight-shaved P-40, the P-40L where they removed 30 gallons of fuel 2 guns and 1/3 the ammo from the remaining guns (200rpg only), gained a mere 4mph. And then it was so ineffective in that configuration at what it did they ended up putting all that back on for most of the airframes!! Weight was not the issue with the P-40. Or, perhaps it's better to say weight savings was not the solution.
The 109G-6 was a better machine than the G-2, for example, even though it was heavier. better radio, better guns, etc, made it a better killer.
i don't fully buy that krusty. aerodynamic deficiencies that limited it's potential aside, the added weight effectively decreased the potential performance gains that could have been seen with added horsepower...power to weigh ratio.
the p-40b with 6 guns had a 7,360lbs normal combat weight with a v-1710-33 @1040 peak hp, same as the P-40 which only had a combat weight of 6,787lbs...573lbs difference and the p-40b was 5mph slower.
the p-40e had the .30 cal guns replaced with .50 cal, combat weight 8,280lbs with a more powerful v-1710-39 1150hp engine, gain of only 90hp with an additional 920lbs...only 5mph faster than the p-40 and 10mph faster than the p-40b. if the more powerful engine had been added without the extra weight, the max speed would have been much higher.
jump to the p-40n-1-cu (first production run) with 4 .50 cal guns, v-1710-81 @1200hp, combat weight of only 7400lbs...50hp gain, 880lbs lighter and 33mph faster than the p-40e at 10000 feet. not outstanding by any means but still it shows what happens when you remove weight and add horsepower. then with the p-40n-5-cu they added 2 .50 cal guns and under wing racks and the combat weight jumped to 8,350lbs...an increase of 950lbs with no increase in hp and the top speed dropped 28mph.
the 109g-2 used the db-605a-1 1475hp peak and the 109g-6 used the db-605am 1800hp peak...