Thanks A.A.,but a Lockheed public relations pic is one thing,
& a flight plan using the USAAF mission profile manual is another..
The top picture is one of the 23 P-38s being converted to the Droop Snoot at Lockheed's Langford Lodge factory and not a P.R. picture you try to dismiss it as. The 2nd picture is of a Droop Snoot from the 474th getting ready to taxi to the flight line before a mission.
What was the D.S. max permissible take-off weight?
Effective range at speed/heights at max ordnance loading?
Not at home so I can't look it up but from what I remember, ordnance payload was the same as the standard P-38.
Was such a load practicable or just more hype - like twin torpedos?
What load? Don't know why you brought up the test with the torpedoes, no one has claimed it was done beyond a single test nor even relevant to this discussion.
Any verifiable actual historical mission data to post?
[& again, they really are starting to look like try-hard medium bombers..]
Verifiable mission data for what? Here is a video of the 430th FS in action over Germany, you'll see the use of the Droop Snoot in the mission. In the video it also explains why Droops Snoots were used, in missions "where risky, precision dive bombing was unnecessary - rail yards, dock yards - doing level bombing from higher altitudes."
430th FS in action over GermanyAFAIK, the Norden bombsight was operationally speed limited to ~180 mph too.
And?
ack-ack