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#1
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I have read that the usefulness of the Bell P-39 was greatly decreased
by certain decisions made by the USAAF before it went into production in the 1930s. Chief among these was the deletion of the turbosupercharger, but the shortening of the wings also had an effect. The question is, just how much more effective would this plane have been had these changes not been made? Would it have a much greater climb rate and been more effective at high altitudes? Or would it still have been pretty much of a bust as a fighter/interceptor? |
#2
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Bob M. wrote in part:
I have read that the usefulness of the Bell P-39 was greatly.. You may want to read "Nannette" by Edwards Park, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1977. Excellent book largely about the P-39. Quent |
#3
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![]() "Bob M." wrote in message om... I have read that the usefulness of the Bell P-39 was greatly decreased by certain decisions made by the USAAF before it went into production in the 1930s. Chief among these was the deletion of the turbosupercharger, but the shortening of the wings also had an effect. The question is, just how much more effective would this plane have been had these changes not been made? Would it have a much greater climb rate and been more effective at high altitudes? Or would it still have been pretty much of a bust as a fighter/interceptor? You might want to get your www.google.com going using "P-39", "P-45" and the one where they got it right "P-63". In the meantime check http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/research/p39.htm and http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/air_power/ap1.htm and http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/p39.html especially the entry for XP-39. Tex Houston |
#4
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#5
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![]() "B2431" wrote in message ... I don't wish to pick nits You needed something for lunch anyway, Dan. |
#6
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Bob M. wrote:
: I have read that the usefulness of the Bell P-39 was greatly decreased : by certain decisions made by the USAAF before it went into production : in the 1930s. The air force was not the only party responsible. The installation of the supercharger was criticised by NACA, which suggested a number of modifications. And Bell did not protest; the turbocharger was troublesome and the company urgently needed to sell some aircraft. : The question is, just how much more effective would this plane have : been had these changes not been made? Would it have a much greater : climb rate and been more effective at high altitudes? Or would it : still have been pretty much of a bust as a fighter/interceptor? A P-39 with a turbosupercharged engine (in a better installation than available on the prototype) would have retained the basic P-39 problem, that it was a small fighter with most internal space taken up by the engine installation, and its handling sensitive to correct loading. Performance at altitude would have been improved, that at low altitude could have suffered because of the extra drag and weight. Other disadvantages -- such as the eccentric cockpit design and the rather unsuitable armament -- would also have stayed. Overall, however, the P-39 might have been a more useful aircraft, as its altitude performance was one of the biggest complaints about the type (at least in the USAAF). That the concept held promise was proven by the P-63, with a V-1710 with a two-stage mechanical supercharger and laminar flow wings; the Kingcobra was an excellent fighter, though handicapped by the small range inherent in the basic design (i.e., the engine was were the fuel tanks ought to have been.) -- Emmanuel Gustin |
#8
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#9
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I wish I could post replies but my computer won't let me. When the
Allision finally became avaliable with a mechanical two stage supercharger the P-39 displayed me-109F performance at around 25,000 feet. Had the supercharging been available a couple of years earlier it would have eaten up zeros and been competitive with 109's of that vintage. The Russians used the q's to good avantage in 44 but the US now had superior and much more expensive fighters already in the works, that is the q, wiht the same basic airframe that the earlier models had but with the supercharger was outdated for late 43-44 but would have been excellent in 41-42. Nevertheless the q was still effective as a tactical fighter in 44 in Russia and would have also been superior to zeros and tonys in the same time period had we needed it in the pacific although of course we had superior aircraft. The fact that the USAAF was not disappointed in the q was that it accepted the P-63 for production although as it turned out the current fighters that already in mass production continued to improve and the P-63 was considered excess to USAAAF needs, so the Russians got the benefit of a fighter that was a natural progression of the P-39 and was equal to the 109's and 190's it had to face in 44-45. The US decision to cancel the supercharger in the P-39 was the unreliability of the system and the shortening of the wings was due to the US deciding that the P-39 could be very effective as a low altitude tactical fighter although the early p-39's were put into an interceptor battle scenario the US did not anticipate due to the exengencies of war. The fact is the P-40 proved a superior fighter than the P-39 in the interceptor role with unsupercharged allisons but the P-39q, wiht the supercharger fitted proved a better fighter than the P-40, the P-40 design having reached a peak in 1942 (the P-40 with merlins did not give the performance boost that was hoped due to airframe limitations) while the P-39 had a design that could best take advantage of the supercharging. Of course by this time it was eclipsed by the P-47 in the tactical/interceptor role. In 44 and 45 P-39q's and P-63's were still in the thick of things in Europe, albeit with the Russians while P-40's had pretty much faded away. AL "Bob M." wrote in message om... I have read that the usefulness of the Bell P-39 was greatly decreased by certain decisions made by the USAAF before it went into production in the 1930s. Chief among these was the deletion of the turbosupercharger, but the shortening of the wings also had an effect. The question is, just how much more effective would this plane have been had these changes not been made? Would it have a much greater climb rate and been more effective at high altitudes? Or would it still have been pretty much of a bust as a fighter/interceptor? |
#10
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![]() A two-stage supercharger would certainly have helped. The Lightning was powered by the same engine as the Airacobra. But then--so was the P-40. It didn't have a two-stage supercharger, either, but it was a redoubtable aircraft at low and medium altitudes. On 28 Dec 2003 11:56:49 -0800, (Bob M.) wrote: I have read that the usefulness of the Bell P-39 was greatly decreased by certain decisions made by the USAAF before it went into production in the 1930s. Chief among these was the deletion of the turbosupercharger, but the shortening of the wings also had an effect. The question is, just how much more effective would this plane have been had these changes not been made? Would it have a much greater climb rate and been more effective at high altitudes? Or would it still have been pretty much of a bust as a fighter/interceptor? all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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