As a guy who works in businesses that do product development, I can tell you that a customer who commissions a product (which is what the British did)
They did not commission a new product they commissioned retooling and manufacture of an existing design. NO R&D!!! They weren't looking for a new design for various reasons, not the least of which was they were broke.
Yet the Brits were willing to give this
alleged "better" design a chance even considering the grave situation they were facing. I'm assuming you already know what a huge risk they were taking in doing so. What would the difference have been between having 150 new planes by such and such date or having a broken promise and a scrap airplane?
I would say that first words out of the purchasing commissions office was "we already planned on the P40 and how much would it cost?"
NAA was in NO position to demand or even ask for any significant reimbursement for R&D so the price they paid for the Mustang was probably in the ball park of the out dated and 2nd class P40. Because that's what the purchasing commission planned on paying and they certainly wouldn't have agreed to pay what the Mustang turned out to be worth considering the success yet to be seen.
The Brits MIGHT have paid for the retooling had it been necessary, but I don't know what standard practice is for something like that. And I also don't know your business experience, but I highly doubt that comparing companies that make mp3 players to major defense procurement in ww2 is a good comparison. Even with those high dollar defense products, who pays for R&D depends on who wants what and who wants it more.
You expect the sales to more than pay for the R&D, or you wouldn't do the R&D.
Exactly, so you agree that NAA didn't get anything for R&D and like most companies struggling to build a business, did the R&D on their own because they believed in their own talent.
A customer who commissions a product isn't the creator of that product.
Exactly my point and considering they didn't commission the Mustang, they asked for a P40, even more so.
But the Mustang might not have been made if the Brits didn't commission it. There was no one else asking for it.
Everyone was asking for it. The whole world was in a race to build the best fighter that could be made. Do you think NAA had an epiphany just because England asked for a p40?
Why do you think they were so confident that they could design AND BUILD a brand new aircraft in less time than it would take to retool? Why do you think they included a brand new wing design that no one else was using?
They say the Mustang was 117 days from board to prototype. Your theory is it might not have been made, mine is they were already toying with the design, the British provided a customer and an opportunity to look like engineering gods in under 120 days. And if the British hadn't showed up, it would have been a later entry into the war.
Given the amount of engineering and technology that goes into designing and making an engine vs. an airframe, if a plane has a British engine and an American airframe, it is roughly speaking half British and half American.
I don't buy this at all. Airframes aren't only a matter of putting wings on a barrel but it's irrelevant regardless. NAA didn't set out to design an engine. They used what was available to them. In the US, that was a neutered Allison and the Brits didn't offer the Merlin.
It wasn't neutered. It just turns out that the Merlin was a better high-alt engine than the Allison.
Perhaps you didn't read the link I posted earlier. I'll paraphrase. The P-38 used a high alt Allison with no problems at all other than fuel related. When properly boosted the Allison out powered the Merlin, significantly at some altitudes.
It was neutered! The best boost was reserved for bomber engines.