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Favorites and their achilles heels!

Aviation Discuss Favorites and their achilles heels! in the World War II - Aviation forums; Originally Posted by parsifal Spitfire: Its limited range and limited fighter bomber capabilities. Feels like I am blaspheming when I ...

  1. #16
    Member Arossihman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Spitfire: Its limited range and limited fighter bomber capabilities. Feels like I am blaspheming when I do this
    I know what ya mean!


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    Senior Member futuredogfight's Avatar
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    The p-36 lacked the choice to leave the battle at will
    Last edited by futuredogfight; 01-29-2012 at 05:57 PM.

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    Was the original P-47 designed to be an escort fighter? If not then what is the Problem? Did it have equal or greater range than the P-40? The Initial design for the P-47B was offered to the Army in June of 1940 and the contract for the prototype placed in Sept 1940, during the BoB. What was the original range or endurance requirement? The fact that the ASAAC wanted escort fighters 3 years later doesn't mean that the P-47 failed to meet it's original goals.

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    Banned Siegfried's Avatar
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    Me 109. For the same power it was faster than and could outclimb just about any fighter. However for various reasons the Germans fell behined in power between late 42 and early 44.

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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Spitfire: Its limited range and limited fighter bomber capabilities. Feels like I am blaspheming when I do this
    It was designed to be a short ranged interceptor. Carrying extra fuel and having fighter bomber capabilities would hurt it's interceptor abilities. Please remember that the British, for what they considered good and proper reasons ( but then they drink warm beer) decided that their fighters should use fixed pitch propellers and single speed supercharged engines in the late 1930s while the bombers got the two pitch or constant speed propellers and the two speed super charged engines.

    The difference in take off performance of the propellers alone is staggering. take off run dropped from 420 yds with the fixed pitch to 320 yds with the 2 pitch to 225 yds with the Rotol propeller. Take off to clear a 50 ft obstacle went from 790 yds to 490yds to 370 yds. The Rotol equipped plane could be at 50ft before the fixed pitch plane got it's wheels of the ground. It took 6 minutes less to get to 30,000ft too. If the fighters had been given constant speed propellers earlier then maybe more weight could have been used for secondary roles without compromising performance too much.

    edit> having the best all round fighter in the world doesn't do much good if it can't take-off from most of your existing air fields.
    Last edited by Shortround6; 01-29-2012 at 05:14 PM.

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    Senior Member drgondog's Avatar
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    The Mustang B/C/D had a couple of serious issues - namely vicious high G stall/spin characteristics, more vulnerable to 'golden B-B' with underslung radiator/oil cooler and glycol lines, some structural issues in High G diving roll, and for the B/C gun jamming from both high G stresses as well as marginal gun heater.

    It can be a beast in a severe cross wind landing - and do NOT ditch the airplane.
    "The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein

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    Senior Member herman1rg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Shortround6 View Post
    ( but then they drink warm beer) .
    Not all of us do!!


    Hawker Hurricane as flown by Douglas Bader when in command of 242 Squadron RAF

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    Senior Member parsifal's Avatar
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    For the Spitfire, maybe we should add "poor choice of prop and supercharger for the earlier marks".

    Design choices are design choices. For the Spit, like anything else, compromises had to be made. For me, and i admit this is open to interpretation, the Spuit was thje best all round fighter in 1938-40. but a price had to be paid for that, and that eventually had an effect on operations for the aircraft and indeed the RAF as a whole. Because the Spit (and all the other RAF SE fighters of the time) could not fly all the way to Germany, the RAF had to fly its bombers at night . Later, when the FC swung opver to the offensive, Spits could not really operate in the FB role very well.
    Fr President Clemenceau’s speech to the AIF 7th July 1918: “ we expected a great deal of (Australians)… We knew that you would fight a real fight, but we did not know that from the beginning you would astonish the whole continent. I shall go back and say to my countrymen “I have seen the Australians, I have looked in their faces …I know that they will fight alongside of us again until the cause for which we are all fighting is safe for us and for our children”.




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    There are all kinds of 'official requirements" in the 1930s that disappeared real quick when the actual shooting started that affected aircraft designs. The British even had a limitation on maximum tire pressure to avoid causing ruts in the grass air fields. It was the same maximum for all aircraft types so it is rarely, if ever mentioned in individual requirements. It may be a small thing but several small things add up, the landing field requirement was a big thing in the 30s too. Even the Blenheim bomber was practically a STOL machine.
    You have to also look at what was possible at the time. The power to weight ratios of the available engines in 1938-40 simple didn't allow a single engine fighter to carry enough fuel to fly long distances and still perform well enough to handle a short ranged fighter. The Zero was the only fighter to pull that trick off and it required some sacrifices and an element of luck. Luck in the form of well trained, experienced pilots going up against mostly Green pilots and often a rather disorganized defense. Imagine Zeros trying to fly from England to Points in Germany (even if not Berlin) in the Spring of 1942 and think how well they would have done?

    many people do not really appreciate the changes that better fuel ( and engines ) made. Every body (mostly ) knows about 100 octane fuel but the timing and what it meant to engine operations and aircraft performance is remarkable. Considering the time it takes to get an aircraft from design to large scale service use, just about ALL aircraft (basic airframe)used up until 1942 were designed with 87 octane fuel in mind. granted many of them used 100 and 100/130 fuel to great advantage.

    The octane scale is not linear. The performance number scale is much closer to being linear and indicates what an engine could expect to do for internal horsepower, that is the power developed in the cylinders before subtracting friction, pumps and supercharger drive requirements. 100PN = 100 octane. 100/130 should allow for about a 30% increase in power (not all engines responded the same and the range could be from 20-40% increase). 150 PN means a 50% increase over 100PN.
    Now going the other way, to see where the late 1930s aircraft designs came from with the expected available power you have 91 octane fuel having a PN of 75.68, while 87 octane has a PN of 68.29 and 80 octane fuel has a PN of 58.33.
    With an engine running on 87 octane instead of 100 the engine might see a drop of around 30% in power. (it will be less difference at the crankshaft because to make full use of the 100PN fuel more boost needs to be used which means more power used in the supercharger). Obviously such changes in engine power for little differences in weight mean big changes in aircraft performance including lifting more fuel for longer range.

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    Senior Member buffnut453's Avatar
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    P-51 limitation would be jams to the ammunition feeds. Same-same for the F4F.

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    FW-190A series: Poor altitude performance, poor engine reliability in initial marks

    Hawker Typhoon: Poor engine reliability, buckling/loss of tailplane (26 known incidents), leakage of Co2 into cockpit forcing pilots to permanently wear oxygen masks, thick wing harming altitude performance and leading to high-altitude problems with compressibility

    Spitfire I/II/early V & Hurricane I/early Mk IIs: Problems with Merlin float carburetor lead to cut-out in negative G

    de Havilland Mosquito: Wing shedding problems (occurred in 1944 and fixed later that year). NOT due to warping or delamination due to heat/humidity - as oft repeated - but actually due to a manufacturing defect at one of the factories, relating to how the wing skin was attached to the main spar. European Mosquitos suffered more wing failures than Far Eastern Mossies did.

    P-51B/C: Problems with gun jamming, rectified with introduction of P-51D

    Seafire: Poor arrestor frame arrangement leading to high crash/write off levels during carrier ops;

    Bf-109: Narrow track and camber of landing gear;

    Me-110: Slow rate of roll, particularly at low speeds

    A6M: Slow rate of roll, particularly at higher speeds. Control forces at high speeds were very high (also affected early Spitfires, Hurricanes, Bf-109s and many other fighters with fabric skinned ailerons). Japanese pilots often removed radios, particularly on long-range missions. Lack of self sealing fuel tanks in early models. Low limiting dive speed, improved incrementally through the war with improvements to wing skinning and other mods.

    He-177: Prone to engine fires, a problem gradually fixed throguh the war.

    FW-200: Prone to breaking at the spine during landing

  12. #27
    Senior Member MikeGazdik's Avatar
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    So many favorites, but to start. P-39- single stage Allison, 37mm cannon. P-40 - single stage Allison, P-51A - single stage Allison. (theme here?) P-47 range, weight. F4U Corsair, my longest answer. I feel when the cockpit was moved aft, the pilot was then placed in a bad spot in the fuselage. I have seen photos where the rear of the air frame from the pilot seat back twists or breaks away from the wing and forward structure. Bad for a hard crash landing. F6F Hellcat too slow, for all the go under the hood. F4f, landing gear off an Army duece and a half. Me 109-landing gear and weak wing, Fw190-should turn better for its weight. Spitfire- um, uh, its too pretty to talk bad about!!!!
    Last edited by MikeGazdik; 01-30-2012 at 01:41 AM.

  13. #28
    2012 Forum Fantasy Football Champion Bernhart's Avatar
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    carburators in early hurricanes and spits

  14. #29
    Senior Member buffnut453's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by parsifal View Post
    Spitfire: Its limited range and limited fighter bomber capabilities.
    I agree that the Spit's range was limited compared to other fighter aircraft but it must be remembered that, at the time of its creation, there was no requirement for longer-range operations. Also, there was no concept of a "fighter bomber" in the 1930s - that was a tactical evolution that occurred during WWII.

    Perhaps we need to tighten the question a little and simply examine achilles heels that were related to the aircraft's initial intended role?

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    Quote Originally Posted by buffnut453 View Post
    I agree that the Spit's range was limited compared to other fighter aircraft but it must be remembered that, at the time of its creation, there was no requirement for longer-range operations. Also, there was no concept of a "fighter bomber" in the 1930s - that was a tactical evolution that occurred during WWII.
    Actually the fighter bomber dates back to WW I. Many British fighters were given bomb racks for four 20lb bombs. This continued on into the 1920s and a number of American fighters of the late 20s and 30s also had racks under each wing for light bombs. The P-26 could carry four 50lb bombs under the center section. The He 51 could carry six 22lb bombs inside the fuselage. I am sure there were others. Curtiss was advertising a total bomb load of 850lbs for export 75 Hawks, I don't think anybody took them up on it. The basic problem until WW II was the fighter had enough trouble just flying as a fighter without trying to strap a big bomb load to it. With 450-600hp for a late 20s/early 30s fighter and a all up weight of under 4,000lbs trying to carry a 500lb bomb just wasn't going to work without using a really big wing that would kill fighter performance once it was dropped.

    Quote Originally Posted by buffnut453 View Post
    Perhaps we need to tighten the question a little and simply examine achilles heels that were related to the aircraft's initial intended role?
    I think that is a good idea, perhaps two categories?

    Early Spitfires had elevators that were too powerful and were hard to coordinate in maneuvers. Later Spitfires were shorter in range than they could have been given that several schemes for adding fuel tanks had been used in limited numbers. Granted it would never equal the Mustang.

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