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- From: jfb@ihlpl.att.com
- Newsgroups: sci.military
- Subject: Number Forty-Seven in the Series--Republic P-47 Thunderbolt (1 of 9)
- Keywords: XP-47, XP-47A, XP-47B, P-47B
- Message-ID: <C1D8L9.A10@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Date: 24 Jan 93 16:03:09 GMT
- Sender: military@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Sci.Military Login)
- Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories - Naperville, Illinois
- Lines: 232
- Approved: military@law7.daytonoh.ncr.com
-
-
- From jfb@ihlpl.att.com
-
-
- The Republic P-47 Thunderbolt originated from the drawing board of
- Alexander Kartveli of the Seversky Aircraft Corporation (later
- renamed Republic Aviation). The Thunderbolt is consistently rated as
- one of the three outstanding USAAF fighters of World War II-- rated
- right up there along with the North American P-51 Mustang and the
- Lockheed P-38 Lightning. The P-47 was built in larger numbers than
- any other American fighter, 15,683 examples rolling off the assembly
- line before production finally ended.
-
- At one time during the heady days of 1944, there were no less than 31
- front-line fighter groups flying Thunderbolts. Thunderbolts fought on
- all fronts in World War 2, including Alaska. Approximately two-thirds
- of all Thunderbolts built actually reached operational units overseas.
- In two and a half years of combat, from March 1943 to August 1945,
- these Thunderbolts flew over half a million combat missions,
- destroying over 12,000 enemy aircraft both in the air and on the
- ground, as against a total of 5222 Thunderbolts lost, only 824 of them
- in the heat of combat. This corresponded to 54 percent of the
- Thunderbolts which went overseas being eventually lost either to enemy
- action or to accidents, which was a fairly typical attrition rate for
- a wartime fighter. Losses of Thunderbolts on operational missions
- were 0.7 percent of those dispatched, an exceptionally low figure.
-
- By the end of the war, the Thunderbolt had established an overall
- ratio of air-to-air combat victories to losses of 4.6 to 1.
- Thunderbolts dropped 132,482 tons of bombs, fired 59,567 rockets, and
- expended 135 million belts of machine gun ammunition.
-
- From D-Day to V-E Day in Europe, Thunderbolts destroyed 86,000 railway
- cars, 9000 locomotives, 6000 armored vehicles and tanks, and 68,000
- trucks. By the end of the war, Thunderbolts had destroyed 2752 enemy
- aircraft in the air and 3315 on the ground.
-
- The P-47 as originally conceived was quite different from the aircraft
- which was ultimately to emerge from the Republic factories. On August
- 1, 1939, Kartveli, in response to an official requirement, proposed a
- lightweight high-altitude interceptor to the USAAC under the company
- designation of AP-10. It was to be powered by a 1150 hp Allison
- V-1710-39 liquid-cooled in-line engine. This was a radical change in
- design philosophy for Kartveli, since he had always preferred radial
- air-cooled engines for fighters because of their greater simplicity
- and their ability to absorb a greater amount of battle damage. Gross
- weight was to be 4900 pounds and estimated maximum speed was 415 mph.
- Armament was to be a pair of 0.50-in machine guns mounted in the
- engine housing.
-
- The USAAC looked over the proposal and was favorably impressed.
- However, they deemed that additional armament would be required, even
- if it adversely affected performance. Kartveli increased the size of
- his AP-10 design somewhat, and added four wing-mounted 0.30-inch
- machine guns. Gross weight rose to 6570 pounds. In this guise, in
- November 1939 the USAAC ordered one prototype of the AP-10 design
- under the designation XP-47. The serial number was 40-3051.
-
- In addition, on January 17, 1940, the USAAC ordered a stripped,
- unarmed version under the designation XP-47A. The serial number of
- the XP-47A was 40-3052.
-
- In the meantime, combat reports coming in from Europe were changing
- everyone's ideas about air combat. More firepower, more armament,
- more armor protection, and self-sealing fuel tanks were likely to be
- required in future air battles. Both the XP-47 and XP-47A had
- insufficient engine power to accommodate the additional weight
- required by these features, and the USAAC came to the conclusion that
- these designs were likely to fall far short of future air combat
- requirements. Kartveli went back to the drawing board.
-
- In order to accommodate the heavy firepower, armor, and self-sealing
- fuel tanks and still provide a performance capable of meeting enemy
- aircraft on equal terms, a lot of engine horsepower would be needed.
- Kartveli decided to produce a design based around a turbosupercharged
- Pratt and Whitney R-2800 Twin Wasp eighteen-cylinder air-cooled radial
- engine, one of the most powerful aircraft engines available at the
- time. Armament was to be a set of eight 0.50-in machine guns in the
- wings, following the RAF's trend toward eight-gun fighters and making
- the Republic proposal among the heaviest-armed fighters yet considered
- by the USAAC up to that time. Total weight was to be a massive 11,500
- pounds, unprecedented for a USAAC single-seat fighter. On June 12,
- 1940, Kartveli submitted his ideas to the USAAC. The USAAC was
- sufficiently impressed with the proposal that on September 6, 1940 it
- ordered a prototype under the designation XP-47B. This designation
- was sort of unusual at the time, namely, using the same P-number for
- what was in effect a totally new design. All work on the XP-47 and
- the XP-47A was cancelled, and the serial number of the abortive XP-47
- was transferred to the XP-47B.
-
- One week later, on September 13, 1940, 773 production examples of the
- Thunderbolt were ordered by the USAAC, 171 to be delivered as P-47Bs
- and 602 as P-47Cs. At the same time, the Army contract placed back in
- 1939 for 80 P-44 Rockets was cancelled. The contract was replaced
- with an order for a similar quantity of P-43 Lancers which would keep
- the Farmingdale production lines occupied pending the introduction of
- the new fighter.
-
- Kartveli decided to design the XP-47B fuselage around the large
- turbosupercharger from the start, rather than to add it onto the
- aircraft later as sort of an afterthought. In order to preserve a
- streamlined fuselage with a small cross-section, the large
- turbosupercharger was placed in the rear fuselage. It was fed by an
- air duct located beneath the large R-2800 engine. Engine exhaust
- gases were directed back to the rear fuselage in separate pipes to the
- turbine and were expelled through an exhaust under the rear tail.
- Ducted air was fed to a centrifugal impeller and was returned to the
- engine under pressure via an intercooler.
-
- Another problem that had to be solved was that the aircraft required a
- very large twelve-foot diameter four-bladed propeller in order fully
- to take advantage of the R-2800 engine's high power output. This
- large propeller in turn required a long and stalky undercarriage in
- order that the propeller be given adequate ground clearance during
- takeoff and landing. If a conventional retractable undercarriage were
- used for the P-47, its suspension would have to have been placed very
- far outboard on the wings, leaving insufficient space for the eight
- wing guns and their ammunition. In order to solve this problem, the
- landing gear telescoped and was nine inches shorter when retracted
- than when extended. Somewhat surprisingly, this complex telescoping
- landing gear seems to have caused few problems in the field.
-
- Like the earlier P-35 and P-43 fighters, the P-47 was a cantilever
- low-wing monoplane, the wing being elliptical in shape with the
- ailerons on the outer trailing edge and flaps on the inner trailing
- edge. The semimonocoque fuselage was all metal, but initially the
- control surfaces were fabric covered. The tailwheel was steerable and
- was fully retractable. All the fuel tanks were inside the fuselage
- and were self-sealing from the start. The cockpit was protected by
- armor and was unpressurized.
-
- The XP-47B prototype flew for the first time on May 6, 1941, piloted
- by Lowry L. Brabham. This was only eight months after the order was
- placed. The XP-47B was the largest single-engine fighter built up to
- that time. On the first flight, the pilot was forced to make an
- unplanned emergency landing because of a leakage of exhaust fumes into
- the cockpit. At a loaded weight of 12,086 pounds, the XP-47B dwarfed
- all previous fighters, being almost twice as heavy as most of its
- contemporaries. Its eighteen-cylinder XR-2800-21 radial engine
- offered 1960 hp at 25,800 feet, and gave it a maximum speed of 412
- mph, 12 mph faster than Kartveli had projected. An altitude of 15,000
- feet could be attained in five minutes. Empty and normal gross
- weights were 9189 pounds and 12,086 pounds respectively. The
- prototype was destroyed in an accident on August 8, 1942.
-
- At one time, it had been hoped that it would be possible for the RAF
- to test the Thunderbolt in combat in the Middle East, but production
- difficulties caused the British Air Ministry to be informed in
- September 1941 that it was probably not a good idea to do this until
- all the bugs had been wrung out of the design.
-
- The first production P-47B was delivered on December 21, 1941, and
- five more were delivered in March 1942, only eight months after the
- XP-47B had first flown. Numerous problems soon presented themselves
- as the test program advanced. At altitudes above 30,000 feet,
- ailerons snatched and froze, the cockpit canopy could not be opened,
- and control forces became excessive. These problems caused further
- P-47B acceptances to be delayed until May. The problem of the
- freezing ailerons was solved by having all control surfaces being
- fully metal-covered on all subsequent P-47Bs. The ailerons were
- revised in shape and fitted with blunt noses, which alleviated the
- excessive control force problem. Balanced trim tabs were adopted to
- reduce rudder pedal loads. The stuck cockpit canopy problem was
- solved by replacing the original hinged canopy by a rearward sliding
- hood. This meant that the dorsal radio antenna had to be redesigned
- and moved aft to accommodate the rearward-sliding hood.
-
- The production P-47B was fitted with a a production R-2800-21 engine
- of 2000 hp. An increase in the amount of internal equipment raised
- the empty, normal loaded, and maximum loaded weights to 9346, 12,245
- pounds, and 13,360 pounds respectively. However, the increased power
- of the production-ready engine provided an increase in level speed to
- 429 mph at 27,000 feet. The maximum speed was 349 mph at 5000 feet.
- Initial climb rate was 2560 feet per minute and an altitude of 15,000
- feet could be attained in 6.7 minutes. Service ceiling was 42,000
- feet. Range (clean) at maximum cruising power was 550 miles at 335
- mph at 10,000 feet. Wingspan was 40 feet 9 3/4 inches, length was 35
- feet 3 1/4 inches, height was 14 feet 1 3/4 inches, and wing area was
- 300 square feet.
-
- P-47Bs were first issued in mid-1942 to the 56th Fighter Group. This
- group was chosen to be the first recipient of the P-47B because it
- was based near New York City and hence located near the Farmingdale
- plant where Republic engineers could be easily called upon to help in
- ironing out problems as they arose. The P-47Bs of the 56th Fighter
- Group were used largely for stateside testing and operational
- training, and very few ever went overseas. The 56th Fighter Group
- found the process of working up to its new mounts rather difficult--13
- pilots and 41 aircraft were lost in accidents.
-
- The last P-47B was delivered in September 1942. Serial numbers of the
- 170 P-47Bs constructed were 41-5895/6065.
-
- The last example of the P-47B series (41-6065) was converted during
- manufacture in September 1942 as the XP-47E with a pressurized cockpit
- and a hinged canopy. However, increased emphasis on low-level
- operations over Europe lead to the cancellation of plans to introduce
- this pressurized Thunderbolt into production.
-
- XP-47F was the designation given to another P-47B airframe (serial
- number 41-5938) which was used to test a new larger-area wing with a
- laminar-flow aerofoil. It flew for the first time on September 17,
- 1942. No production was undertaken.
-
- Sources:
-
- American Combat Planes, Ray Wagner, Third Enlarged Edition, Doubleday,
- 1982.
-
- The American Fighter, Enzo Angelucci and Peter Bowers, Orion Books,
- 1987.
-
- War Planes of the Second World War, Fighters, Volume Four, William
- Green, Doubleday 1964.
-
- United States Military Aircraft since 1909, Gordon Swanborough and
- Peter M. Bowers, Smithsonian, 1989.
-
- The Republic P-47D Thunderbolt, Aircraft in Profile, Edward Shacklady,
- Doubleday, 1969.
-
- Famous Fighters of the Second World War, Volume I, William Green,
- 1967.
-
- Thunderbolt!, Robert S. Johnson and Martin Caidin, Ballantine Books,
- 1958.
-
- British Military Aircraft Serials, 1912-1969, Bruce Robertson, Ian
- Allen, 1969.
-
- Joe Baugher AT&T Bell Laboratories 2000 North Naperville Road
- Naperville, Illinois 60566-7033. (708) 713-4548
-