It's a pity that the Yanks are only gazing at their own navels - They don't mention Boomerangs, Wirraways, Woomeras, Wacket, Peka, Jindavick, Beaufighters (Whispering Death), Mosquito, Interceptor CA13, CAC Sabres, etc
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Possum; AKA:- Ali El-Aziz Mohamed Gundawiathan
Sent from my imperial66 typewriter using carrier pigeon, message sticks and smoke signals.
Thanks for that ... a lot of work to produce that large volume of interesting reading, despite it's understandable USA bias. A US body of work for US consumption no doubt, but good stuff none the less.
They were of course one of the MAJOR players, once they joined the fray and as such are entitled to skite a bit .. in the usual American way.
The European theatre was on the offensive, Spitfires were pretty useless for this task. Typhoons, Tempests and Mosquitos were used though. They needed aircraft that had range and could carry something, like rockets or bombs.
The European theatre was on the offensive, Spitfires were pretty useless for this task. Typhoons, Tempests and Mosquitos were used though. They needed aircraft that had range and could carry something, like rockets or bombs.
I believe that England is in Europe and the spitfire came in handy in the Battle of Britain, the greatest plane of them all that won the war finally was the mustang ,it was far superior to anything else in the air and had the fuel range to support the bombers over Germany...
North American Aviation originally designed the Mustang in response to a British specification. They agreed to produce the first prototype only 4 months after signing the contract in April 1940.
By the end of 1941 North American had delivered the first Mustang to England for test flights. These first Mustangs were powered by the Allison V-1710 engine, a good engine, but one which didn't operate well at high altitudes.
A Better Engine
In April, 1942, a British test pilot, Ronald Harker, flew the Mustang and was very impressed by it. He suggested that the new plane would be a natural fit with the Rolls Royce Merlin 60-series engine, well-suited to high altitudes. At the prodding of Major Thomas Hitch****, the Americans began working along the same lines (using the Packard license-built version of the Merlin), and the first Merlin-equipped Mustang, the P-51B, flew in November, 1942. The results were impressive, to say the least. At 30,000 feet, the improved Mustang reached 440 MPH, almost 100 MPH faster than the Allison-equipped Mustang at that altitude.
The P51 generally considered as one of the best fighter aircraft of ww2, there were a lot of good aircraft at that time. The Mustang was no good for navel operations, as ditching that aircraft was a death sentence for the pilot, on account of the oil cooler intake under the fuse.
Unless it was a bad aircraft, they all had attributes, when used to their advantage gave an upper hand. The Americans were able to produce practical aircraft to maintain, flying was not the only thing that made an aircraft good, it had to be able to take damage, and be easily maintained.
My dealings with British aircraft of that era, was they were complicated and hard to maintain.