DOA,
Did you ask those pilots what the planes weighed in their restored conditions?
Prop drag only comes into effect when you throttle back. Then cycle the RPM to see the effect of prop drag.
Your 80% prop efficiency theory...
You should hope that that's what they're doing!

80% efficiency @ 340 mph = 1765 lbs thrust from 2000 hp, right? Since 340 is the top speed with that power, drag is also 1765 lbs, comprised of 92 lbs induced and 1673 lbs parasite. Since parasite varies with the square of the speed and induced varies inversely with the square of the speed, we get 505 lbs induced and 304 lbs parasite at a climbspeed of 145 mph. Thrust with 80% efficiency is 4138 lbs. Climb rate would be 3540 fpm!
Even if my own calculations predict a 3100 fpm climb rate, AHT and other sources say it's much lower, around 2700 fpm. The same formulas applied to other aircraft such as the P-51 and 190 seem to predict climb rates almost bang on (within 100 fpm), so why the discrepency?? I know I've hashed this out a bit with Pyro but I think I have a new theory....cowl flaps! I was thinking that there had to be some kindof major source of extra drag to lower the climb rate so significantly and having the propwash with added velocity going right over the cowl flaps, would amplify the drag created. The problem with that is that the cowl flaps aren't directly modelled in the sim, so that drag is always present at slower speeds, such as in a sustained turn. Just a theory...
[This message has been edited by wells (edited 06-25-2000).]