Originally posted by -ammo-
Actually in the book JG-26, top guns of the Luftwaffe, the author made not of the fact that the pilots of JG-26 didnt fear the P-38, but had a deep respect of the P-47. They enjoyed being able to distringuish the P-38 from long distances. This may have been because the sheer number of P-47 units around in mid to late 43 in the ETO. The 56 FG, 4 FG, 368 FG, all were hammering away at the LW but with losses themselves. Galland himself stated the P-51 was a fine AC.
Well it may have been his opinion, but it is certainly founded. The P-47 is twice the AC as any model P-40 was. It is better in all catregories, at all altitudes too.
I have read plenty of German accounts. For every account saying one aircraft was the worst threat, you can find another that names a competing aircraft.
The P-38 was the fork-tailed devil to some. There were plenty of German pilots that feared the P-38 more than anything else they had fought. Likewise, others hated the Mustangs more. One generalized quote of the LW aces' opinions does not make a historical fact that P-47s were more of a threat than P-38s. But I am certain I have never read any German accounts that conveyed any fear of P-40s

Gabreski did not exactly have an unbiased opinion when it came to the P-47. It served him well, so of course he loved it and promoted it, not unlike yourself

But your support for the P-47 and Gabreski's opinion of the P-40 is not supported by the combat record of the P-40. It was historically a rugged reliable plane that repeatedly got the job done when there were no other planes to do it. Where was the P-47 when Pearl Harbor was attacked and Japan was overrunning China? It would take dramatic differences in kill, loss, and sortie rates against the same threat level in the same theater to convince me otherwise that the P-40 "wasn't much of a plane" compared to the P-47.
As better planes became available, the "obsolete" P-40 was relegated to ground support. That should sound familiar to P-38 and P-47 fanatics

If the P-51 had not appeared, it is entirely possible that P-40 development might have been given the same push that other early war fighters got. As it was, regardless of your opinion or anyone elses, after WW2, all USAAF/USAF propellor fighters were junked except for the P-51, which had been steadily replacing all of them anyway. All of these aircraft arose out of the desire for fighters with the best speed at altitude with the longest range, which the Mustang clearly won in terms of production and service life compared to the P-38, P-40, and P-47 it replaced.
edit: Interesting note, my grandfather bought a P-47 after the war for $50. Unfortunately, he couldn't afford to store and maintain it, so he eventually got rid of it
