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| Aviation Discussion on the aircraft of WWII. |
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| | #61 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 486
| "The reason Performance didn't change much with the change to the Merlin was because that Merlin was setup similarly to the Allison, i.e., single stage/single speed supercharger." No, the Merlins used in the P-40 had single stage TWO speed superchargers. They used 8.15 and 9.49 gear sets and were rated at 1240HP at 11,500ft and 1120hp at 18,500ft using 9lb of boost ( 48")compared to the later P-40 Allisons which gave 1125hp at 15,500ft at 7.25lbs of boost (44.5in) The Merlin was rated at 1300hp for take off compared to the late Allisons 1200hp. Going to the TWO stage Merlin design of supercharger would have ment an extra couple of hundred pounds of engine weight NOT INCLUDING the Liquied radiator for the aftercooler. This radiator has to be placed somewhere and will add at least some drag. THE question is not weither it could be done but weither the improvement was worth the effort and the delay or interuption in production. |
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| | #62 |
| Senior Member | I watched Season 1 of Dogfights last night, and episode #3 was about the Flying Tigers. I've always like the P-40 but even I gained greater respect for it after watching the show. I certainly could hold her own and dish it out!
__________________ "Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it" "Those who dwell in the past, condemn the future" ![]() |
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| | #63 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Little Norway, U.S.A.
Posts: 811
| Quote:
Elvis | |
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| | #64 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 486
| Quote:
The -39 engines in D's and E's were rated at 1150HP. The -73 engines in the K's were rated at 1325HP. The -81,-99 and -115 engines in the M's and N's were rated at 1200HP. | |
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| | #65 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 31
| One might compare the tomahawk with a Spit Mk 1. Look at the Griffon Spits and the Merlin Spits and one would see a virtually new airframe. Compare the dimensions of a Mk 1 and later Spits with Griffons. The Griffon was a much bigger and heavier engine than the Merlin requiring major changes to the airframe. If one were to put a Griffon in a P 40 it would'nt be a P 40 any more. The planform of a Griffon Spit is deceiving. It closely resembles Merlin engined Spits. |
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| | #66 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jul 2009 Location: So Cal
Posts: 3
| I'm new to this site and actually stumbled upon it looking for something. Very nice posts by all and the research or experience you all must have done to collect the data regarding the P40's from the 1st XP40 to the very last XP40Q or the name she was given, (Suzy-Q). Lots of what I'm reading is miss leading, or beating around the bush, witch may be from anger or from the love of this aircraft or neither. Yes the Rolls Royce/Merlin was the last engine to be used in this great or not so great aircraft. I had to live with the P40 my entire life and know of it's existence from start to finish because my Grandfather was Walter Tydon who designed the P40. To me the P40-B is my favorite and the later P51's are up there also. I should have never mentioned that around my Grandfather. Here is why... If you look at the XP40, the very 1st one, it had the Marsupial Cooling System on the belly of the craft. Since the plans for all of these planes belong to the government, they are allowed to dictate on what stays and what goes. They made Curtiss-Wright remove this scoop because on the Ohio airstrip it works great but lets face reality. When at war, we'll drop some tanks and dozers and plow an airstrip somewhere. Now we have a dirt runway and the props and wheels kick up rocks and debris and send them through the cooling system putting holes in the radiators, not good !! Redesign it !!! Look at the P51, same design, but this aircraft went into production well after the 1st P40 and the P51 was able to have this cooling system stay. There is many other issues between these 2 planes and would probably PO some people so I won't get into that here. The bottom line is that both of these GREAT planes did there job. I'm just trying to find some info or someone that either knew my Grandfather or flew this aircraft back then. I think all WWII Vets don't get the recognition they deserve and would be honored to speak with one. Thank you, |
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| | #67 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 31
| Maybe pitlane could shed some light on the P 40b/c of the AVG. Allegedly the 100 engines were carefully assembled from rejected leftovers and put out 100 to 200 hundred more hp than standard. I knew Bill McGarry of the AVG very well. After the war he attended Loyola Law School in L.A. and became a lawyer with the federal government. When he retired he moved to Hemet where he died. He is buried in Holy Cross Cemetary on Slauson Blvd in L.A. or is it Culver City very near the old Hughes airfield and Loyola University. |
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| | #68 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Little Norway, U.S.A.
Posts: 811
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| | #69 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 486
| Quote:
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| | #70 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Little Norway, U.S.A.
Posts: 811
| "Hand built" often entails a practice called "Blueprinting". This is simply checking all the parts used to build an engine against the manufacturers specs and choosing those parts that spec out in such a way that the engine will give the best performance and reliability. This plus careful tuning can often unlock "hidden" power that a normal "assembly line" engine might not exhibit. This could partly explain why the Brits were able to successfully push those engines harder than they were (supposedly) able to handle. Elvis Last edited by Elvis; 07-20-2009 at 06:41 PM. |
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| | #71 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 10,277
| Quote:
These P47's took off of the escort carriers (probably in a lightly loaded config) and flew to nearby Saipan.
__________________ "Pilot to copilot..... what are those mountain goats doing up here in the clouds?" | |
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| | #72 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 486
| Quote:
Since both the British and the AVG sometimes pushed these engines to 58" of boost (and even 62" at 3200rpm) I think we can see were the "extra" power came from. THe AVG engines might have stood up to it better though Some of the AVG parts were not simply "checked" but were actually remanufactured or modified from parts that DID NOT meet original specifications. THE AVG engines were assembled in a seperate building so there was no chance that these "reject" parts would end up in an American or British engine by mistake. | |
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| | #73 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jul 2009 Location: So Cal
Posts: 3
| fibus , I never heard of any rejected engines going in these planes but what Elvis says maybe true and was planned that way. It could be that these engines could have been on the first run on the assembly line with minor flaws and put into airplane that had the same minor flaws as well. Thus giving a semi hand build plane and knowing they would be more superior than the production ones. I'm just guessing here. Help |
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| | #74 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: British Columbia, Canada
Posts: 496
| Quote:
Not a quantitative anecdote I know, but I always found the story interesting.
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| | #75 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 486
| Pitlane: According to "Vee's for Victory" THe Engines for the AVG were not reject engines. The British released 100 airframes from one of their production contracts to the Chinese but it was without engines. The Chinese goverment had to buy the engines from Allison. Allison got permission to sell engines to the Chinese but only if it didn't interfear with US and British delieveries. Allison was working almost flat out to produce engines and didn't have spare production capacity but did have a a whole lot of parts that hadn't passed US or British inspection standards. A seperate "production" line was set up and these parts were reworked/modified and assembled into complete engines. THe serial numbers are all over the place although later engines in the 150 engine group do show some groups of consecutive numbers. The compleate story of these engines may never be fully known but what is known is an interesting story and together with the use and maintainence of the these engines in the China theater makes an interesting read. There are also conflicting statements by peaple who were there so that a definiative statement as to how these engines were used is hard to make. I suggest anyone who is interested read the book as this "chapter" is a number of pages long. claidemore; I rather doubt that diesel engines were that sloppy either. Somethng else to consider is that clearances change as engines heat up. That famous diesel clatter when they are cold. Aircraft engines being mostly alumininium have a greater co-effiecent of expansion than an iron engine would and considering their size compared to a car engine might use a different tollerance. Rolls-Royce found that thier intial recomendations for valve tappet clearance were in error. The .020 used for both intake and exhaust was thought to close up as the engine got hot. it did on the exhaust side but the clearance actually got bigger on intake side and later engines change to .010 on the intake valves. R-R did allow over boring an engine to elimate a step at the top of a cylinder but fitting oversized pistons was only alowed after the war and only for a brief period of time. cylinders were to be plated when possable and reground to bring then into spec. |
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