Different time, buddy.
Yes it is, but you seem to imply that there was less "do it yourself" and more government supported development. I am pretty sure it was the opposite. These days military hardware is more complicated and expensive, private companies are less likely to gamble so big.
With purse strings as tight as they were at the time do you really think North American was going to build a new fighter without even a bid to compete for?
Yes I do. It was a sellers market. They were confident they had a "better" aircraft and they proved it.
Great. Why didn't North American do that? They didn't approach anybody about this great idea,
I don't know, but the most obvious and likely choice given the evidence, the Brits just so happened to show up while they were still churning out the details.
Don't you think it a bit odd that a company so confidently declared they would make a new, better aircraft in less time than it would take to put an existing design into production? AND succeeded? That's a huge promise. Especially considering it was a desperately needed war machine. They gambled with the outcome of the war to some extent here.
I don't believe they were THAT talented. I am absolutely certain they already had part of this design hammered out even if it was only in their heads and the Brits coincidentally showed up looking for fighters.
most likely given how tight things were at the time, and occupied with the production of P-40s, they wouldn't have done so at all.
You and Brooke seem to ignore two realities. EVERYONE in the defense business was scrambling to design better weapons because it was a sellers market. No company with any common sense would wait to clear the bureaucratic red tape if they have a good product. They would make it and then go on a marketing campaign until they proved it's worth or someone proved them wrong. If you could build a better weapon, there would be a buyer.
Second, aviation companies don't stop designing or selling aircraft just because they are producing another.
You seem to be bending over backwards to eliminate British involvement with the creation of the P-51.
Not really, I don't deny they had a role in it. I'm just saying, the Mustang didn't depend on them and I don't believe that NAA would have let the idea/design die if the Brits had said no.
Muzik, you seem, like me, to enjoy the history of WWII aircraft, including how they came to be. If you haven't read it already, you might very much enjoy "The Lockheed P-38 Lightning," by Bodie. It is a marvelous book that goes into the whole history of the plane, including all of the early aspects of how it came to be, thoughts on design, the government process, the development process, etc.
Thank you, love the 38 so I will look into it.