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Dogfighter?

Aviation Discuss Dogfighter? in the World War II - Aviation forums; Just a quick one, which type of fighter plane is more of a dogfighter? (Interceptor, bomber ECT)...

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    Member Oskar the Pilot's Avatar
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    Dogfighter?

    Just a quick one, which type of fighter plane is more of a dogfighter? (Interceptor, bomber ECT)


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    (Bristol) Bulldog?

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    Senior Member davebender's Avatar
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    Low speed stall fighter?

    Disclaimer.
    High speed maneuverability will normally defeat low speed maneuverability. But if your heart is set on a WWII era stall fighter I recommend these aircraft.

    USA. P-36.
    Japan. IJA Ki-43. IJN A6M was good too.
    VVS. I-16.
    RAF. Gloster Gladiator.
    Italy. ?? I think they produced some good bi-planes during the late 1930s.
    Germany. No WWII era stall fighters. The jumped straight to the Me-109 which was designed to Boom & Zoom.

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    Senior Member pbfoot's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Edgar Brooks View Post
    (Bristol) Bulldog?
    sopwith pup

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    Ki43 would be my example, apart from dogfighting in swirling combats it wasn't really suited to anything else!
    I would say it would be regarded as an "air superiority" fighter, rather than an interceptor?

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    Senior Member davebender's Avatar
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    Why doesn't the P-36 get more respect?

    Low wing loading made the P-36 an excellent stall fighter. Roll rate and climb were good too. I suspect a P-36 flown by a skilled pilot could hold its own vs the Ki-43 and A6M. As icing on the cake the P-36 was dirt cheap. One of the few fighter aircraft that compares well to the Me-109 in production cost.

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    Why would a P-36 be dirt cheap?

    the ONLY differences between a P-36 and an early P-40 is the engine and the landing gear doors. 10th production P-36 was re-engined to make the XP-40.

    Without going into actual contract details some quoted costs are very far from the real cost of some airplanes.

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    Senior Member MikeGazdik's Avatar
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    I would think the radial of the P-36 was far less expensive than the liquid cooled Allison. Just a guess.

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    Senior Member Elmas's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by davebender View Post
    Disclaimer.
    ..........
    Italy. ?? I think they produced some good bi-planes during the late 1930s.
    ..........
    From ”They gave me a Seafire” Cap. 7 – Cmdr R. “Mike” Crosley, pag. 42

    There were still two Gladiators at Yeovilton. There was also a captured Italian CR 42. Wiggy and our CO, Rodney Carver, had a doghfight over the airfield and the CR won. That was rather glossed over later, and no one would admit it; but it was true.”

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    Quote Originally Posted by MikeGazdik View Post
    I would think the radial of the P-36 was far less expensive than the liquid cooled Allison. Just a guess.
    Without prices for both from the same year and for a similar quantity of engines ( a contract for 100 engines would give a cheaper per engine price than a single engine purchase) and spares, if any spelled out, comparing prices gets tricky. The P-36 used a 14 cylinder radial, some export Hawks used the same engine and some used the 9 cylinder Cyclone. The radials used cylinder heads with the fins machined into them and used cylinders of steel with the cooling fins also machined into them. I don't know about the P&W engine but the Cyclone used 16 hold down bolts for each cylinder. Cost of bolts is a problem but the accurate machining and threading of all those holes is.
    Airplane engines were not cheap and while P&W and Wright were competing against each other in trying to provide engines of similar power to weight ratios and cost and Allison may not have been ( not in the commercial market, although perhaps hopes initial planning stages?) the benefit to cost ratio would have had to been considered at some point.

    And changing engines doesn't change a plane from being expensive to dirt cheap. While the engine is the single most expensive item in the airplane even a P-36/P-40 air frame can cost several times the price of the engine and that is without the instruments, radios and armament. Changing from say a $12,000 dollar engine to a $9,000 dollar engine doesn't rally change the price of a $50,000 fighter that much.

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    Has anybody priced compared radial and inline v engines to see which is more expensive.

    I can see many more labor hours spend to make all the parts a radial needs, much more complicated intake, and exhaust manifolds, machining, or very fragiile molds for the fins. All the separate assemblies would take much more labor to bolt together.

    I not so sure a radial would be cheaper.

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    Senior Member wmaxt's Avatar
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    If we are talking about low speed dogfighting here is a story about a P-38 pilot in WWII in a P-38 against an A6M Secrets of a P-38 Ace. John Tilley's electrifying story

    If we want to talk about radial vs liquid cooled engines check this out
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radial_engine
    Last edited by wmaxt; 01-14-2012 at 12:46 PM.

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    Senior Member oldcrowcv63's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by davebender View Post
    Disclaimer.
    if your heart is set on a WWII era stall fighter I recommend these aircraft.

    USA. P-36.
    Japan. IJA Ki-43. IJN A6M was good too.
    VVS. I-16.
    RAF. Gloster Gladiator.
    Italy. ?? I think they produced some good bi-planes during the late 1930s.
    Germany. No WWII era stall fighters. The jumped straight to the Me-109 which was designed to Boom & Zoom.
    How about the Brewster F2A-1 or its probably slightly lighter, land-based export version B-239? Being, by design, a carrier aircraft, I'd expect low speed flight/stall characteristic to be pretty good. I believe these parameter values are based on weight, power and wing area values that are pretty close to correct but noticed some variability among sources. Looks like the Buff comes in pretty close to the p-36... Haven't looked at the same values for the I-16. Might that not be a contender along with the Fiat Cr-42

    Brewster F2A-1:
    Power loading: 5.65 lbs/hp
    Wing loading: 25.7 lbs/sq. ft.

    Gloster Gladiator:
    Power loading: 5.86 lbs/hp
    Wing loading: 16.8 lbs/sq. ft.

    Curtiss P-36A:
    Power loading: 5.38 lbs/hp
    Wing loading: ~25.0 lbs/sq. ft.
    Last edited by oldcrowcv63; 01-19-2012 at 03:40 AM.
    None of us is as smart as all of us...

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    Senior Member oldcrowcv63's Avatar
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    Ooops you already mentioned the I-16. don't know how I missed that.
    None of us is as smart as all of us...

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    I can't remember where I read it anymore, but I remember reading that the Northrop P-66 was even more maneuverable than the P-36.

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