Gaston, you should show some respect for Johnson, and even Yeager (and I do not like Yeager, at all). Their accomplishments speak for themselves. Kindly describe yours. Surely you must have something to support your expertise, other than charts. Are you a pilot? A military pilot?
I knew the man, and even in his old age, I'm quite sure you lack the courage (or stupidity) to call him a liar to his face while he was alive.
You are the worst kind of wannabe. All wind, no sails.
No knows today specifically what was modified on his P-47, beyond installing a CH-5 turbo being combat tested by Pratt & Whitney and Republic. I believe a limited number of CH-5s were installed 56th and 78th FG Thunderbolts. At least, that's what Pappy Gould stated. Johnson would also tell you that only one of his P-47s was so equipped (with the CH-5). I believe that aircraft was lost in an accident while being flown by another 56th pilot.
You appear to have looked at test data using 150 octane fuel (70 in/hg) in a P-47D-22 and formed your opinion. Opinions are conclusions invariably drawn with a lack of knowledge. If we examine the P-47M data, we clearly see a substantial boost in speed with 72 in/hg at all altitudes, but especially above 30,000 feet. So, higher boost pressure doesn't always mean a reduced critical altitude. Many factors in the induction configuration determine that. Unless someone had actually tested Johnson's Jug, we're just going to have to take his word for it. You may not, but I'd rather listen to Kermit the frog's thoughts on quantum mechanics than your ramblings on combat aircraft performance.
Structural limits on
sustained turns PJ_Godzilla? That sounds really advanced...
As far as R. Johnson is concerned, he claimed in his interview to have
invented vertical fighting, and then went on to describe in detail how the Germans couldn't do anything against him they were so awed by his "innovation"... I think this is all a pretty clear and fair warning that we are dealing with a blowhard here... I think there was also talk how his extreme physical strength allowed a faster roll rate than the airframe would give other pilots... I don't know... It all says "red flag" to me but, anyhow, what do I know right?
He is the only pilot I remember reading, in
hundreds of P-47 combat reports, who places a FW-190D before June of 1944, an aircraft that first came out in September, long after Johnson was home... But that is easily forgivable, beyond duly noting that very few of the other pilots did it that early... Let's go into the less forgiveable:
When we talk about a P-47D, let's be clear we are talking about something that is not even in the same
galaxy as a P-47M...
As far as I can tell, Johnson's tour of duty ended in MAY 1944... And you believe him when he claims performance from a 1943 airframe that almost matches the P-47M that appeared
only in early 1945?????...
Let me put this in perspective: If a genuine Fw-190A pilot were to tell you his late 1943 A-6 Anton was GM-1 boosted to the same high altitude speed/climb performance as a Ta-152,
would you believe him on face value? That's exactly what you are doing here...
Johnson claims
enormous speed increases from overboosting his D to 72" above 25 000 ft. (I can't quite recall the extent of his fantasy, but he was basically adding 50-70 mph at 30 000 ft.
were even the later D-22 shows the
same 72" overboosting added NOTHING to bone-stock
standard speed above 25 000 ft...)... His P-47D was a much earlier block than D-22... Even if his aircraft was upgraded to a later block,
it still had no more to do with an M than a FW-190A has to do with a Ta-152... If he had a better turbo, why do
none of the much later blocks show any evidence of this for more than a year? Well he was just so
special you know...
Is it even possible? Who knows. Given the general demeanor of the guy, should we believe it? NO.
The very fact you would even mention the hugely re-engineered M engine to support your point shows you have nothing concrete to stand on...
Do you realize the M is basically one of the fastest-climbing piston-engine fighter of WWII? And you want to compare that to an
early P-47D, which was one of the
slowest climbing?
His attempts to exaggerate all the stereotypical "perceived" strong points of the P-47D (Speed, strength, climb-?-, high altitude, zoom, roll rate) are particularly sad in that he actually completely misses some of the more remarkable, and routinely used, strong points of the P-47D, namely that it could sustain tight medium/slow-speed LEVEL turns with just about anything short of a FW-190A, and the Razorback in particular routinely ate for dinner any Me-109Gs that tried to sustain prolonged level turns with it (sustained level turning being the
no 1 obsessive tactic of
most P-47D pilots, if you do any after-action report reading, not edited-out by Shaw that is

, -this being quite unlike the dive and zoom obsessed Spitfire btw...-): Typically the P-47D gained 120 degrees per level 360 turn on the 109G, the slower and more level the better, all the way down to the deck at 130 mph...
I have no doubt the early P-47D Razorback could indeed sustain constant speed level turns better than a Spitfire Mk IX, particularly with a needle tip prop... It probably could not start the turn as hard in the first 180, especially from low speed...
I have an account of 16 P-47Ds in a prolonged dogfight on the deck, with 20+ Me-109Gs, while each were carrying two 1000 lbs bombs, with 16 pilots mentioning in an overall conclusion that they were pleased they could more than hold their own in turning matches with Me-109Gs with their 2000 lbs bombload onboard while turning on the deck. Axis losses: 3 Me-109Gs shot down to one P-47D damaged... This was a prolonged twenty minutes dogfight, and the bridge was bombed at the end of it...
The source for the bomb run story is in the Osprey book about P-47 operations in Italy, on a bridge named "Aquapendente". I won't bother with more detail, since I doubt any amount of
true stories with multiple witnesses could ever change your mind, or anyone else's sadly...
Let's just say that I'll bet that when discussing the P-47's advantages, Robert Johnson
didn't mention
out-turning Me-109Gs on the deck while carrying 2000 lbs of bombs... Since he was obviously so keen about promoting his mount, I'll ask you: Why do you think that is so?... I think my jaw would have dropped at this story even more than at 470 MPH at 30 000 ft...
Gaston