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From:
cdb100620@aol.com (CDB100620)
Subject: re: p-40
Date: 26 Sep 1997
Newsgroups: alt.history.what-if
>Wasn't the p-40 the design upon which the later p-51 was based?
>
The P-40 was the starting point for the P-51 design: North American set
out to design a fighter with superior performance than the P-40 that would
use the same engine (Allison V-1710) and be more or less the same size.
The prompt was a British Purchasing Commission request for North American
to build P-40s under license, as it wanted to order more of them than
Curtiss could build. Britishers often say that the Mustang was built to
British specifications. That's oversimplifying. The design was essentially
North American's, but the BPC did specify that NA buy the wind tunnel and
flight test reports of the Curtiss XP-46 fighter to be used to help develop
the NA fighter. NA engineers claim that although the company acquired this
material, it was not used in the development of the P-51.
The P-51 design used a boundary layer gutter that separated the cooling
air intake from the fuselage, preventing the intake from ingesting the
boundary layer (the layer of turbulent air close to the skin of the plane.
It was a brilliant idea, and folks are still squabbling over who suggested
the idea. Some say it was Irving Ashkenas, an NAA aerodynamics engineer.
(He is also credited with moving the radiator air duct from the nose to the
belly of the plane.) Others say D.B. Shenstone, a Rolls-Royce engineer,
suggested it.
The P-51 also used a laminar flow wing, which greatly reduced drag. The
wing design was based on work done by NACA (predecessor of NASA). The
square wingtips were based on pre-war work done by German researchers (Bf
109 had square wingtips). The laminar wing greatly reduced drag, but it
gave no warning of an impending stall, making the airplane a tricky one to fly.
It was British input that replaced the Allison engine with a Merlin. The
Allison was a smoother engine than the Merlin, but it only had a
single-stage, single-speed mechanical supercharger, thus limiting engine
performance at altitude. The Merlin version put in the P-51 had a
two-stage, two-speed mechanical supercharger, which allowed the engine to
perform well to high altitudes.
The shift from first to second speed in the first stage of the
supercharger was barely noticeably, a mild kick at about 8,000 ft., sort of
like downshifting your car from 4th to 3rd at 30 mph. But the shift from
the first stage to the second stage of the supercharger, which occurred at
about 17,000 feet, was an abrupt lurch, like downshifting your car from 4th
to 3rd at 60 mph. Sometimes the supercharger would hang up and not shift
when it should, which could be a real problem in combat.
The best solution to high-altitude performance in a piston engine was the
exhaust-gas-driven turbo-supercharger such as was used in the P-38 and P-47
(plus the bombers and transport aircraft, including postwar piston jobs
like the Constellation and DC-6). It maintained sea level horsepower right
up to 35,000 ft. and more. But it took up a lot of space and I doubt the
P-51 had room for it. Then again, the XP-37 variant of the P-40 airframe
was equipped with a turbo-supercharger. It was mounted under the engine.
And the P-39, a smaller plane than the P-51, was originally equipped with a
turbo-supercharger. The go-ahead to equip the P-51 with the Merlin may
have been a logistical one. Packard had built a factory to produce Merlin
engines and there was no airplane to put them in. The Allison was being
used by the P-38, P-39 and P-40, and GE was at capacity producing
turbo-superchargers, so the suggestion to put the Packard-built Merlin with
its associated mechanical supercharger into the Mustang, where it fit
neatly with no major re-engineering needed, must have been a very welcome
one merely from a production point of view. The boost in performance the
Merlin gave the Mustang was an unlooked for plus.
The P-40F was equipped with a Packard Merlin, mainly because of a shortage
of Allisons. It's performance was about the same as Allison-powered P-40s,
suggesting that the airframe was the limiting factor in improving the
Curtiss fighter's performance. That the P-51's performance jumped so much
when the Merlin was installed is an indication of just how advanced its
airframe was.
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From:
C.C.Jordan@Worldnet.att.net (C.C. Jordan)
Newsgroups: rec.aviation.military
Subject: Re: P38 vs P-51 vs 109 vs 190 (was Re: Lindbergh in a Mustang Over
Date: 8 Dec 1998 23:58:22 GMT
On 8 Dec 1998 06:07:50 GMT,
mlenoch@aol.com (MLenoch) wrote:
>Carlo asks:
>
>> maximum control input speed,
>
>>BTW what is this speed for the P-51D ?
>
>This speed is approximately near the cornering speed of 270 kts/ 310 mph. Now
>granted, cornering speed allows maximum turn performance; it not a structuraly
>safe speed for max turn performance COMBINED with maximum roll performance. To
>put in max pull plus max roll would probably damage the wings. (I understand
>that the F-16 has a flight control computer that limits max roll against max
>pull and vica- versa to prevent exceeding the wing loads due to control
>inputs).
>
>
>>BTW what are the control forces like at 200 kt, 250 kt, 300 kt etc in
>>the P-51 ?
>
>I dont have numbers to quote this. I would enjoy doing a test flight program
>with the Mustang such as done by the EAA for some of the homebuilt aircraft as
>flown usually by Dave Moruss(sp?).
>
>My guesses are:
>
> full aileron 3G pull
>200kt 20 lb 20 lb
>250kt 25 lb 30 lb
>300kt ? high! 45 lb
>
>These numbers would be interesting to research and verify.
>
>V. Lenoch
& here is part 2.
Your figures are remarkably accurate. I have data that indicates that the
P-51D, at corner speed, measures 48 lbs in a 3g pull. Up to 86 Lbs at
5g's. The P-47D, OTOH, requires just 16 lbs at 3g and 27 lbs at 5g's.
The testers state that the Mustang was a true "two hander".
My regards,
C.C. Jordan
Now online - The P-38: Was its size and shape a disadvantage?
http://home.att.net/~C.C.Jordan/index.htmlhttp://www.geocities.com/pentagon/quarters/9485/index.htmlThe "Planes and Pilots of WWII" website.
An online WWII aviation history magazine.
A member of the WWII Web-ring.
Honor and remember the WWII vets.
"In reality, there exists only fact and fiction. Opinions result from
a lack of the former and a reliance on the latter."
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