Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 7:13 pm Posts: 5664 Location: Minnesota, USA
|
Based on the barrage of feedback this thread is receiving, I'll give it one more shot and promise to remain silent forever. Today's clips feature the P-38...from yarchive.net: The 364FG arrived in UK in Feb., '44. Led by Col John Lowell, who had helped develop the P-38 at Wright-Pat, on its first mission over Berlin on 6 March, he downed 2 Me-109s, and two more on 8 March. On 9 March he downed an FW-190. He was eventually to tally 11 kills in the P-38, but several were downgraded to probables after the war.
During the late winter of 1944 ocurred the famous dual between a Griffon-engined Spitfire XV and a P-38H of the 364FG. Col. Lowell few the P-38, engaging the Spitfire at 5,000 ft. in a head-on pass. Lowell was able to get on the Spitfire's tail and stay there no matter what the Spitfire pilot did. Although the Spitfire could execute a tighter turning circle than the P-38, Lowell was able to use the P-38's excellent stall characteristics to repeatedly pull inside the Spit's turn radius and ride the stall, then back off outside the Spit's turn, pick up speed and cut back in again in what he called a "cloverleaf" maneuver. After 20 minutes of this, at 1,000 ft. altitude, the Spit tried a Spit-S (at a 30-degree angle, not vertically down). Lowell stayed with the Spit through the maneuver, although his P-38 almost hit the ground. After that the Spitfire pilot broke off the engagement and flew home. This contest was witnessed by 75 pilots on the ground.The rest is frosting on the cake. It doesn't cover mock combat between friendlies, but provides some insight on why certain pilots favored the Lightning in combat even over the P-51: I'm offering the suggestion that the P-38L (and later J models) was the best all-around fighter aircraft of World War II, not based on the numbers or book references, but on the views of two WWII pilots who flew the aircraft--and others--in combat. One was my father-in-law, Elliott Dent (who posted once to this group when he was visiting me) and Sidney Woods, a WWII buddy of my father-in-law who fought in both Europe and the Pacific. I'll refer to them as Elliott and Sidney.
Elliott flew P-40s in combat with the 49 FG before switching to P-38s. He liked the P-40. His only complaint, and it was a major one, was that the model he flew mostly, the N, was a pig at altitude.
The P-38, however, was a vast improvement. Things he cited as making the P-38 superior to other WWII fighters:
First and foremost (although usually overlooked by nonpilots) was its tricycle landing gear. WWII fighters had landing speeds too high for conventional gear. There was always that critical point in landing when speed had dropped such that the rudder was ineffective, yet the tail was still in the air and trying to use wheel braking to control direction would collapse a gear or lead to a ground loop. Exhausted pilots returning from multi-hour combat missions didn't need the final challenge of a fast landing in a tail-dragger. The P-38 floated in and planted itself. If you came in a little fast, you could use the dive brakes to slow down before your wheels touched. I'm sure everyone has seen the film of that F4U landing at Guadalcanal that balloons and floats down the runway forever. That sort of thing couldn't happen with a P-38.
Second, two engine reliability. Especially on long over-water flights, the security of having a spare engine in case one quit, simply can't be appreciated by a non-combat pilot. As much as he liked the P-40, Elliott recalls that the tension of listening intently to the engine--what was that noise? Was that a miss? Did it just stutter?--soaked his flight suit with sweat. And many a compatriot who reported engine trouble and broke out of formation was never heard from again.
Third, range. The P-38 could go where the action was, or trade range for payload and carry a bomber's load. Only the P-51D and P-47N (which came along very late in the war) were in its range playground.
Fourth, let's call steadyness. With engines turning in opposite directions, the P-38 was stable in all maneuvers and could roll equally well right or left. The big-engined, big-propped singles had torque and P-factor problems that became increasingly pronounced as speed dropped, as in a dog fight (which you shouldn't get into, of course, but sometimes you do anyway). They always rolled faster one way than the other. The P-38 driver just rolled the way they couldn't to escape, On the ground this made them genuinely dangerous to operate.
Fifth, firepower concentration and range. The P-38's nose gun arrangement got rid of all the problems of wing guns, specifically the need to be within a specific range for the fire to tell. Anywhere within 1,000 yards would give you hits. Given the tendency for unexperienced pilots to open fire too far away, the P-38 offered the greatest chance for strikes. Much wing-gun fire was wasted, especially by low-combat time pilots who fired at twice or three times nominal range. In head-on attacks, where it is virtually impossible to hold your fire until you hit the "sweet spot" where the wing guns converge, the P-38's advantage of pointing yourself at the enemy and holding the trigger down was signficant.
Sixth, dive brakes. Any aircraft that could reach the vicinity of 400 mph at 20,000 feet would have compressibilty problems in a dive. Only the P-38J/L offered a solution.
Elliot was credited with six kills and five probables. Among other medals, he was awarded the DSC, the DFC, the Air Medal, the Purple Heart. He flew 251 combat missions. He piloted the P-40 and P-38 in combat, the P-39 and P-51 stateside.
Sidney flew P-40s and P-38s with the 49FG. He participated in the Battle of the Bismark Sea. He flew 112 combat missions with the 49th. After a rest stateside, he went to the 4th FG in Europe. He flew 68 combat missions in Europe in P-51s. I don't know what he may have flown stateside.
Sidney shot down two Japanese planes with the 49th and 10 with the 4th (one of these on the ground, as the USAAF in the ETO counted aircraft destroyed on the ground as kills. The USAAF in the PTO did not). Five of the air kills were FW-190s. Among the medals awarded him that I know about, were the Silver Star, the DFC, the Croix de Guerre and the Air Medal.
Sidney described the Mustang as a super P-40. He did not consider it in the same class with the P-38. He often said that the P-40 and P-51 represented pre-war air combat thinking, and that the P-38 represented the future. That's a broad statement, and I can't recall his specific reasons for making it, but it does give you a sense of his feeling for the aircraft.
Sidney said that were he flying the P-38 in Europe he could have shot down more planes than he did. On more than one occasion, for example, he noted that while he was closing in to wing-gun range an FW would execute one of its fabulous snap-rolls and split-S away. Had he been in a P-38 he could have opened fire seconds earlier, gained strikes for certain, possibly destroying the aircraft.
Sidney believed the poor showing of the P-38 in the ETO was the result of AAF brass, who, pre-war were wedded to the unescorted heavy bomber concept, and didn't dare admit, in the face of terrible bomber losses, that they had a perfectly capable figher capable of escorting their bombers from day one to the farthest target they ventured to--but they chose not to use it. Instead, they mutually, if unconsciously, fixed on every reason they could find to discount the P-38 as a capable fighter. They could then say they had no choice but to go unescorted until the P-51 came along. Had they said, Yeah, we had a good escort fighter in the P-38 but decided not to use it, congressional committees would have been demanding to know who screwed the pooch (his phrase).
As far as a combat type went, I recall Sidney talking about how it was impossible to overshoot an aerial target in a dive with the P-38. If you saw that you were overtaking faster than you liked, you popped the speed brakes. Couldn't do that with any other plane. He also liked the low speed maneuvering flaps, the hydraulicly boosted ailerons, and the overall ruggedness of the airplane.
He felt that the AAF made a mistake in not standardizing the P-38 as "the" fighter and having Republic and North American build it as well as Lockheed.
_________________ It was a good idea, it just didn't work.
|
|