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#41
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
In article , "rob"
wrote: "Eeyore" wrote ... The RAF didn't really have confidence in it with the Allison. In particular its high level performance was poor so it wasn't a good fighter choice. IIRC the RAF used the Allsion engined version for ground attack a bit where the failings weren't so obvious. Used as a dive bomber no less, A-36 Invader I believe was its name Nope -- it was "Apache." |
#42
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
On Thu, 04 Oct 2007 15:10:50 -0700, "Scott M. Kozel"
wrote: You miss the fact that the British were instrumental in keeping Mustang production going and were instrumental in pushing continued production alongside the introduction of the Merlin engine. Neither of these initiatives came from the USAAF. The USAAF examined the alternatives, and decided to build the P-51. The USAAF examined the alternatives, were presented with a British-sponsored alternative pushed by senior British officers, Winston Churchill to Harry Hopkins and FDR, and at the May-June discussions over the second Arnold-Towers-Portal agreement over aircraft allocations. The USAAF alternatives available at this point (mid-'42) were the P-38 which was only just entering substantive production after critical aerodynamic problems and with engine output limitations, the P-39 which was being discredited by combat reports from the south-west Pacific, and the P-40 which was suffering from the same altitude performance limitations as the P-39 was currently being produced with a Packard Merlin 20 series engine to address that shortcoming, while the P-47 remained the great white hope of USAAF fighter procurement. The decision to continue Mustang production with a Merlin-engined variant originated with the British. They wern't "pushed" to do anything that they didn't intentionally decide to do. They were; the Merlin-engined P-51 would not have existed if it had not been for the British initiative of April-June 1942. The test reports Arnold used in his memoirs to defend his fighter procurement policy against media critics were British ones submitted to him by the Slessor mission of early June 1942 which convinced him to continue Mustang production at British behest. I'm not sure what is your point. It wouldn't have existed, without the U.S., either, at least not in quantities that would have had any measurable impact on the war. The Merlin-engined Mustang only became a part of USAAF procurement policy by means of British agency, and the Mustang also only existed to start with as a result of British agency. As I said, the British efforts were in the preliminary design. And as I've pointed out, the USAAF had no interest in the Mustang, nor had any idea about a Merlin-engined Mustang until the British presented them with it, and in addition swapped Spitfires for an undertaking to produce them with an allocation of 200 to the RAF. It was NAA and Packard that built over 15,000 of the main models of the P-51, in the U.S.; the British did not do that. Who said they did? Look, I'm not trying to make this a competetion of U.S. and British Neither am I. I am pointing out the historical facts involved in Merlin-Mustang procurement. I merely stepped into this thread when someone questioned why the P-51 was listed under USA aircraft. It was an American aircraft; nevertheless it would not have existed without British agency in terms of sponsoring the initial design (although the technological and development work was almost entirely done by North American) and furthermore it wouldn't have existed in a Merlin-engined variant without the British pushing it upon the USAAF at a time in mid-1942 when Arnold's fighter procurement policy was subject to significant public misgivings. Gavin Bailey -- Solution elegant. Yes. Minor problem, use 25000 CPU cycle for 1 instruction, this why all need overclock Pentium. Dumbass. - Bart Kwan En |
#43
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
"rob" wrote in message ... "Eunometic" wrote Essential Wellington: Britains Medium bomber and an important coastal command aircraft. For a short while, they probably wouldn't have missed it had it not been designed. I have to disagree. The Wellington was the best bomber available until the Lancaster and Halifax came along, the fact that over 11,000 were produced speaks for itself. Keith |
#44
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
"Eunometic" wrote in message oups.com... On Oct 3, 7:41 am, "Keith Willshaw" wrote: "Eunometic" wrote in message ps.com... Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft. *********************************************** I've created a list of aircraft of WW2 that were essential to that side and also others that were dispensible in the sense that their place could easily have been taken by other aircraft or that were so ineffective that they were not needed at all. A great deal of effort was spent on aircraft that did not perform and were 'war loosers' while there was also a great deal of duplication of effort on aircraft that added nothing special and detracted from gains in production. United Kingdom Essential: Hurricane; had to be avialable in numbers for battle of britain Spitfire; had to provide quality fighter throughout the war an amenable to all rolls. Mosquito; night bomber, night fighter, fast day bomber and most importanty reconaisance aircraft par excellance. Lancaster; easy to fly, devastating war load. Wellington: Britains Medium bomber and an important coastal command aircraft. Non Essential: Beaufighter; not a useless aircraft as it could take damage but its roll could have been taken by others. It kept bristol busy. I strongly disagree. It played an essential role both as a nightfighter and in the shipping strike role in the ETO and their long range made them extremely valuable ground attack aircraft in the far east It's contemporary the the Mosquito could also do that job, and much better at that. The Beau was in service a full year before the Mosquito and with its twin air cooled radials was much more resistant to damage in the low level strike role. I knew a coastal command pilot who flew both types and he reckoned the Beau was the better choice for low level shipping strikes, one hit in the cooling system on the Mosquito and you could lose an engine What I don't like about it was that if confronted by german airforce day fighters it was in deep trouble. It needed an escort; whereas the mosquito coastal command aircraft actualy took on Fw 190. And lost if the German pilot knew his business, the Mosquito was outclassed by German single seat fighters and the coastal command version If given a choice of choosing between 1000 extra Mosquito vs 1000 less beaufighter? Timing old boy, in 1942 and 1943 there simply were not the Mosquitos available, the first FB VI didnt fly until June 1942 but the Beaufighter Mk IC entered service in May 1941 and played a vital role in the shpping strikes from Malta that devastated the logistics of the Afrika Corps. It was also much more suitable for use in the Far East where the Mosquito was to suffer from severe problems due to its wooden construction Hampden; Halifax; a good aircraft but Lancaster was better. Stirling; a waste of time although a saluatory lesson. Tempest and Typhoon: These aicraft had very poor high altitude performance and the typhoon had handling difficulties, was not particularly fast due to its thick wing and its airframe tended to snap of at the tail It could and did however make an excellent ground attack aircraft and played a vital role in the western campaign attacking the Wehrmacht I don't deny it. It was kind of successful, napier and tail breakages aside but as far as I can see the Mk XII Griffon spit could do a better job and was available at the right time. Immagine putting the engineers who were working on the the Typhoon/ Tempest and the Sabre to work on things more essential such as a B-29 class bomber using the centaurus or a fast medium bomber. B-29 type bombers were neither needed or affordable and the policy was to buy US made medium bombers. The Tempest was needed to counter the V-1 and FW-190 raids on the south coast and the Typhoon replaced the Hurricane IID in the ground attack role, both were essential roles. Generally the British (air ministry, raf etc) had the knack of abandoning loosing designs and making pragmatic choices. Just so, they decided NOT to pursue the Victory bomber design by Barnes Wallis for exceedingly pragmatic reasons, this was indeed a British aircraft designed for the same high altitude role filled by the B-29. Keith |
#45
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
The Amaurotean Capitalist wrote:
"Scott M. Kozel" wrote: The Merlin-engined Mustang only became a part of USAAF procurement policy by means of British agency, and the Mustang also only existed to start with as a result of British agency. You keep calling it a "Merlin-engined Mustang" while in fact those built by NAA utilized a Packard built engine that was a modifification of the Merlin design. I merely stepped into this thread when someone questioned why the P-51 was listed under USA aircraft. It was an American aircraft; nevertheless it would not have existed without British agency in terms of sponsoring the initial design (although the technological and development work was almost entirely done by North American) and furthermore it wouldn't have existed in a Merlin-engined variant without the British pushing it upon the USAAF at a time in mid-1942 when Arnold's fighter procurement policy was subject to significant public misgivings. Nevertheless it would not have existed in quantities that could have a measurable impact on the war without U.S. final design and manufacturing. If there was no P-51 then some other design could have been developed, such as the advanced P-47 being completed much sooner. |
#46
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
On Oct 5, 7:20 am, "Scott M. Kozel" wrote:
The Amaurotean Capitalist wrote: "Scott M. Kozel" wrote: The Merlin-engined Mustang only became a part of USAAF procurement policy by means of British agency, and the Mustang also only existed to start with as a result of British agency. You keep calling it a "Merlin-engined Mustang" while in fact those built by NAA utilized a Packard built engine that was a modifification of the Merlin design. I merely stepped into this thread when someone questioned why the P-51 was listed under USA aircraft. It was an American aircraft; nevertheless it would not have existed without British agency in terms of sponsoring the initial design (although the technological and development work was almost entirely done by North American) and furthermore it wouldn't have existed in a Merlin-engined variant without the British pushing it upon the USAAF at a time in mid-1942 when Arnold's fighter procurement policy was subject to significant public misgivings. Nevertheless it would not have existed in quantities that could have a measurable impact on the war without U.S. final design and manufacturing. If there was no P-51 then some other design could have been developed, such as the advanced P-47 being completed much sooner. You're assuming the resources put into the Mustang would've been used on the T-Bolt....they might've just as easily gone into more P-40s or at least derivatives like the P-60. |
#47
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
On Fri, 05 Oct 2007 04:20:20 -0700, "Scott M. Kozel"
wrote: You keep calling it a "Merlin-engined Mustang" Because it used a Merlin engine. QED. while in fact those built by NAA utilized a Packard built engine that was a modifification of the Merlin design. The Merlin 61 used in the initial Spitfire IX's was also a modification of the Merlin design. The fact remains that the V-1650-3 and -7 were two-stage Merlins produced under licence by Packard. If there was no P-51 then some other design could have been developed, such as the advanced P-47 being completed much sooner. If there was no P-51 then North American would have been producing more B-25's at their Dallas plant and probably at Inglewood as well. Which leaves the US with what they had at the time; the P-38, the P-39, the P-40 and the P-47. Now which of these are you going to stop production of in order to develop a better long-range fighter design? The longer-ranged P-47D doesn't come along until April 1944 (and requires that British Typhoon tear-drop canopy in any case), the dive-brake-equipped and longer-range P-38L doesn't appear until May 1944, and neither the P-39 nor the P-40 are ever going to become high-performance, high-altitude long-range fighters. And on the horizon? Yes, the mighty P-75.... Gavin Bailey -- Solution elegant. Yes. Minor problem, use 25000 CPU cycle for 1 instruction, this why all need overclock Pentium. Dumbass. - Bart Kwan En |
#48
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
The Amaurotean Capitalist wrote:
"Scott M. Kozel" wrote: You keep calling it a "Merlin-engined Mustang" Because it used a Merlin engine. QED. No, it used --- while in fact those built by NAA utilized a Packard built engine that was a modifification of the Merlin design. The Merlin 61 used in the initial Spitfire IX's was also a modification of the Merlin design. The fact remains that the V-1650-3 and -7 were two-stage Merlins produced under licence by Packard. That is partially true. Packard modified the turbocharger to produce more high-altitude power, and modified the alloys of some of the major engine components to adapt the engine to U.S. mass production engineering and processes. The Rolls-Royce Merlin engines were hand- built. U.S. mass production processes allowed vastly greater quantities (over 16,000) of the V-1650 to be built in a timely and reliable manner. Packard added considerably to the design of the engine, which includes and is integral with its production processes. If there was no P-51 then North American would have been producing more B-25's at their Dallas plant and probably at Inglewood as well. Which leaves the US with what they had at the time; the P-38, the P-39, the P-40 and the P-47. Now which of these are you going to stop production of in order to develop a better long-range fighter design? The longer-ranged P-47D doesn't come along until April 1944 (and requires that British Typhoon tear-drop canopy in any case), the dive-brake-equipped and longer-range P-38L doesn't appear until May 1944, and neither the P-39 nor the P-40 are ever going to become high-performance, high-altitude long-range fighters. If there was no P-51 then some U.S. company would have greatly accelerated the production of something of similar performance. Most likely an advanced P-38 and/or P-47. Both the U.S. and the British each produced a number of excellent advanced warplanes in WWII. In a universe without the P-51, certainly something else of similar performance would have been produced. |
#49
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
On Oct 5, 11:26 am, "Scott M. Kozel" wrote:
The Amaurotean Capitalist wrote: "Scott M. Kozel" wrote: You keep calling it a "Merlin-engined Mustang" Because it used a Merlin engine. QED. No, it used --- while in fact those built by NAA utilized a Packard built engine that was a modifification of the Merlin design. The Merlin 61 used in the initial Spitfire IX's was also a modification of the Merlin design. The fact remains that the V-1650-3 and -7 were two-stage Merlins produced under licence by Packard. That is partially true. Packard modified the turbocharger to produce more high-altitude power, and modified the alloys of some of the major engine components to adapt the engine to U.S. mass production engineering and processes. The Rolls-Royce Merlin engines were hand- built. U.S. mass production processes allowed vastly greater quantities (over 16,000) of the V-1650 to be built in a timely and reliable manner. Packard added considerably to the design of the engine, which includes and is integral with its production processes. If there was no P-51 then North American would have been producing more B-25's at their Dallas plant and probably at Inglewood as well. Which leaves the US with what they had at the time; the P-38, the P-39, the P-40 and the P-47. Now which of these are you going to stop production of in order to develop a better long-range fighter design? The longer-ranged P-47D doesn't come along until April 1944 (and requires that British Typhoon tear-drop canopy in any case), the dive-brake-equipped and longer-range P-38L doesn't appear until May 1944, and neither the P-39 nor the P-40 are ever going to become high-performance, high-altitude long-range fighters. If there was no P-51 then some U.S. company would have greatly accelerated the production of something of similar performance. Most likely an advanced P-38 and/or P-47. Both the U.S. and the British each produced a number of excellent advanced warplanes in WWII. In a universe without the P-51, certainly something else of similar performance would have been produced. Corsairs and Hellcats over Europe? I agree with your statement, but couldn't the same be said for any other plane on the list? |
#50
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Essential and Dispensible WW2 aircraft.
On Fri, 05 Oct 2007 08:26:27 -0700, "Scott M. Kozel"
wrote: The Merlin 61 used in the initial Spitfire IX's was also a modification of the Merlin design. The fact remains that the V-1650-3 and -7 were two-stage Merlins produced under licence by Packard. That is partially true. No, it's completely true. Packard modified the turbocharger to produce more high-altitude power, 1. The V-1650-3 and -7 used two-stage, two-speed supercharging driven from the engine crank, not turbo-charging. 2. The gearing ratios on the supercharger and the compression ratios were generally no different to that on the Merlin 60 series. The only commentary I have ever seen in relevant British contemporary records recorded a 1,000 feet lower full-throttle height for the Merlin 266 in the Spitfire XVI. Other than that, the only comment by end-users I've seen was criticism by pilots in 145 Wing in Belgium who converted to the Spitfire XVI and complained that they produced less power at low altitude than the Merlin 66-engined Spitfire LF.IXB's that they had used previously. For a while their wing leader continued to fly his LF.IXB for that reason. However, I think it's pretty clear that the RAF didn't consider this a major problem and I would agree with them. and modified the alloys of some of the major engine components to adapt the engine to U.S. mass production engineering and processes. The Rolls-Royce Merlin engines were hand- built. No, they were mass-produced at several factories in Britain, notably Trafford Park in Manchester and Hillingdon outside Glasgow as well as the original Rolls-Royce production lines at Derby and Crewe. The Derby works spent considerable time on R&D which involved disturbing volume production, but this was not true of the other sites. U.S. mass production processes allowed vastly greater quantities (over 16,000) of the V-1650 to be built in a timely and reliable manner. You should check out British production of the Merlin before making this kind of inaccurate comparative assertion. Packard added considerably to the design of the engine, which includes and is integral with its production processes. Packard certainly made modifications to the engine to account for the use of US anciliary equipment such as coolant pipe clips and pump drives - well, at least after delivery of the first batch of them to Britain without that equipment. If there was no P-51 then some U.S. company would have greatly accelerated the production of something of similar performance. So demonstrate this, based upon the historical evidence... I'm not being antagonistic (although it might sound like it), just pointing out that assertions which don't take into account the historical reality aren't that valuable. Both the U.S. and the British each produced a number of excellent advanced warplanes in WWII. In a universe without the P-51, certainly something else of similar performance would have been produced. There certainly would have been more urgency to get something going; however the options were limited. I suspect a second production facility for the P-38 and a major engineering drive to sort out the engine and aerodynamic problems were the most likely, alongside stuffing more tankage in the P-47 and something more than a token gesture at doing the same with the Spitfire. However, none of these would have produced an answer in the same time-frame as the P-51 did. Gavin Bailey -- Solution elegant. Yes. Minor problem, use 25000 CPU cycle for 1 instruction, this why all need overclock Pentium. Dumbass. - Bart Kwan En |
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