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{{Short description|American WWII fighter}} | |||
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{{Infobox aircraft | |||
|image=Image:00910460 060.jpg | |||
|name= P-40 Warhawk <br/>Tomahawk / Kittyhawk | |||
|caption=USAAF P-40K with "shark mouth" ]. | |||
|image=File:Curtiss P-40M Warhawk '2104590 - 44' (G-KITT) (26830598751).jpg | |||
|designer= | |||
| image_caption = A restored P-40M Warhawk landing at Season Premier Airshow, in ], UK | |||
|first flight=] | |||
|aircraft_type=] | |||
|introduction= | |||
|national_origin= United States | |||
|retired=] (USAF) | |||
|manufacturer=] | |||
|status= | |||
|first_flight=14 October 1938<ref>Hagen, Brad. ''Curtiss P-40 Warhawk''. Retrieved: 21 August 2011.</ref> | |||
|primary user=] | |||
|introduction= 1939 | |||
|more users=]<br>]<br>]<br>Many others | |||
|retired= ] (1958) | |||
|produced=1939-1944 | |||
|primary_user=] | |||
|number built=13,738 | |||
|more_users=]<br />]<br />] | |||
|unit cost=US$60,552<ref name="knaack">Knaack, Marcelle Size. ''Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems: Volume 1 Post-World War II Fighters 1945-1973''. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History, 1978. ISBN 0-912799-59-5.</ref> | |||
|produced=1939–1944 | |||
|developed from=] | |||
|number_built=13,738<ref>Angelucci and Matricardi 1978, p. 48.</ref> | |||
|variants with their own articles = ] | |||
|developed_from= ] | |||
|variants = ] | |||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Curtiss P-40''' |
The '''Curtiss P-40 Warhawk''' is an American single-engined, single-seat, all-metal ] that first flew in 1938. The P-40 design was a modification of the previous ] which reduced development time and enabled a rapid entry into production and operational service. The Warhawk was used by most ] during World War II, and remained in frontline service until the end of the war. It was the third most-produced American fighter of World War II, after the ] and ]; by November 1944, when production of the P-40 ceased, 13,738 had been built,<ref name=Murphy>Murphy and McNiece 2009, p. 83.</ref> all at ]'s main production facilities in ]. | ||
P-40 Warhawk was the name the ] gave the plane, and after June 1941, the ] | |||
'''Warhawk''' was the name the ] adopted for all models, making it the official name in the United States for all P-40s. ] air forces gave the name '''Tomahawk''' to models equivalent to the P-40B and P-40C and the name '''Kittyhawk''' to models equivalent to the P-40D and all later variants. | |||
adopted the name for all models, making it the official name in the U.S. for all P-40s. The ] and ] air forces used the name '''Tomahawk''' for models equivalent to the original P-40, P-40B, and P-40C, and the name '''Kittyhawk''' for models equivalent to the P-40D and all later variants. P-40s first saw combat with the British Commonwealth squadrons of the ] in the Middle East and North African campaigns, during June 1941.<ref name = "nijbrw">Alexander 2006, p. 25.</ref><ref name = "lmnsbs">Brown 1983, p. 20.</ref> ] ], was among the first to operate Tomahawks in North Africa and the unit was the first ] military aviation unit to feature the "shark mouth" logo,<ref name=Crawford>Crawford 1977, p. 14.</ref><ref>Vader 1970, p. 95.</ref> copying ] on some Luftwaffe ] twin-engine fighters.<ref name=Crawford/> {{refn|Inspired by 112 Squadron's usage of them in North Africa, and by the Luftwaffe's earlier use of it, both via Allied wartime newspaper and magazine article images, ] on the sides of the P-40's nose was most famously used on those of the ] in China. The Bf 110s were from ''II Gruppe/]''. Shilling, an AVG pilot indicated, "I was looking through a British magazine one day and saw a photo of a Messerschmitt Bf 110 with a shark face on it."<ref> Retrieved: 28 February 2008.</ref>|group=N}} | |||
The lack of a ] for the P-40's ] engine's made it inferior to ] fighters such as the ] or the ] in high-altitude combat and it was rarely used in operations in ]. However, between 1941 and 1944, the P-40 played a critical role with Allied air forces in three major theaters: ], the ], and ]. It also had a significant role in the ], ], ], ] and ]. The P-40's performance at high altitudes was not as important in those theaters, where it served as an ], bomber escort and ]. | |||
Although it gained a postwar reputation as a mediocre design, suitable only for ], more recent research including scrutiny of the records of Allied squadrons indicates that this was not the case; the P-40 performed surprisingly well as an air superiority fighter, at times suffering severe losses, but also inflicting a very heavy toll on enemy aircraft.<ref name="P40Zero">Masell, Patrick. ''Naval Aviation and Military History'', 2002. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.</ref> Based on war-time victory claims, over 200 Allied fighter pilots – from the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa, the US and the Soviet Union – became ] flying the P-40. These included at least 20 double aces, mostly over North Africa, China, Burma and India, the South West Pacific and Eastern Europe.<ref name="Moleseworth">See Molesworth 2000,2003,2006,2008</ref> The P-40 offered the additional advantages of low cost and durability, which kept it in production as a ground-attack aircraft long after it was obsolescent as a fighter. | |||
The P-40's lack of a ] made it inferior to '']'' fighters in high altitude combat, and as such the P-40 was rarely used in operations in ]. Between 1941 and 1944, however, the P-40 played a critical role with ] air forces in five major theaters around the world: ], the ], the ], the ] and in ]. | |||
P-40s first saw service with the ] squadrons of the ], in August 1941.<ref name="rafweb">Barass, M.B. ''RAF Timeline 1939 - 1945''. Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organization, 2 December 2005. Access date: 4 September 2006.</ref> The P-40's poor performance at high altitudes was not as critical in ] and the ], where its bomb load, armour and good range were beneficial. The ]'s ] was the first to fly Tomahawks in North Africa. The squadron copied the "shark mouth" nose markings used by '']'' ] ''Zerstörer'' units.<ref>Crawford, Jerry L. ''Messerschmitt BF 110 Zerstörer in action''. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1977 , p. 14. ISBN 0-89747-029-X. Note: In early spring 1940, JG 44 adopted the sharkmouth as their emblem.</ref> The logo was later used on P-40s by the ] in ] <ref>Erik Shilling, an AVG pilot indicated, "I was looking through a British magazine one day and saw a photo of a Messerschmitt-110 with a shark face on it."<ref> </ref>. | |||
==Design and development== | ==Design and development== | ||
The prototype XP-40 was actually a Curtiss ] with its ] (civilian name, Twin Wasp) 14-cylinder ] replaced by a liquid-cooled, supercharged ] ] engine. The "V-12" engine offered no more power than the radial but its smaller frontal area reduced drag. | |||
] | |||
===Origins=== | |||
===Performance characteristics=== | |||
] of the U.S. Army Air Corps]] | |||
The P-40 had good agility, especially at high speed. It was one of the tightest-turning monoplane fighters of the war,<ref name="Flying">Hingam, Robin. ''Flying American Combat Aircraft of WW II''. Manhattan, Kansas: Sunflower University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-8117-3124-3.</ref> although at lower speeds it was not comparable to highly maneuverable Japanese fighters such as the ] and ].<ref name="P40Zero">Masell, Patrick. ''The P-40 and the Zero''. Naval Aviation and Military History, 2002. Access date: 7 March 2006.</ref> | |||
On 14 October 1938, Curtiss test pilot Edward Elliott flew the prototype XP-40 on its first flight in Buffalo.<ref> ''Air Force Historical Studies Office''. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.</ref> The XP-40 was the 10th production Curtiss P-36 Hawk,<ref name="Famous Fighters">Green 1957, p. 43.</ref> with its ] 14-cylinder air-cooled ] replaced at the direction of Chief Engineer ] by a liquid-cooled, supercharged Allison V-1710 ] engine. The first prototype placed the glycol coolant radiator in an underbelly position on the fighter, just aft of the wing's trailing edge.<ref name=Merriam>Merriam 2000, p. 15.</ref> USAAC Fighter Projects Officer Lieutenant ] flew this prototype some 300 miles in 57 minutes, approximately {{convert|315|mph}}. Hiding his disappointment, he told reporters that future versions would likely go {{convert|100|mph}} faster.<ref>''American Aviation'', Volume 3, 1939, p. 2.</ref> Kelsey was interested in the Allison engine because it was sturdy and dependable, and it had a smooth, predictable power curve. The V-12 engine offered as much power as a radial engine but had a smaller frontal area and allowed a more streamlined cowl than an aircraft with a radial engine, promising a theoretical 5% increase in top speed.<ref name=Wilson1997>Wilson, Randy. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304061418/http://rwebs.net/dispatch/output.asp?ArticleID=19 |date=4 March 2016 }} ''Allison Press Release on the Certification of its V-1710 Engine by the Air Corps'' via ''The Dispatch'', Volume 22, Number 1, Spring, 1997. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.</ref> | |||
Allison V-1710 engines were not powerful by the standards of the time, and the P-40's speed was average. Its climb performance was fair to poor, depending on the subtype.<ref name="P40Zero"/> Dive acceleration was good and dive speed excellent.<ref name="P40Zero"/> However the single-stage, single-speed supercharger meant that it could not compete with modern enemy or Allied planes as a high-altitude fighter. | |||
Curtiss engineers worked to improve the XP-40's speed by moving the radiator forward in steps. Seeing little gain, Kelsey ordered the aircraft to be evaluated in a ] wind tunnel to identify solutions for better aerodynamic qualities. From 28 March to 11 April 1939, the prototype was studied by NACA.<ref>Wagner, Ray. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150521015346/http://www.americancombatplanes.com/p40_1.html |date=21 May 2015 }} ''American Combat Planes of the 20th century''. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.</ref> Based on the data obtained, Curtiss moved the glycol coolant radiator forward to the chin; its new air scoop also accommodated the oil cooler air intake. Other improvements to the landing gear doors and the exhaust manifold combined to give performance that was satisfactory to the USAAC.<ref name=Merriam/> Without beneficial tail winds, Kelsey flew the XP-40 from ] back to Curtiss's plant in Buffalo at an average speed of {{convert|354|mph|abbr=on}}.{{refn|Due to the reporter's unfamiliarity with the type, the XP-40 was inaccurately identified as an upgraded P-36.<ref>"America Creeps Up". ''The Aeroplane'' (Temple Press), Volume 56, 1938, p. 730.</ref>|group=N}} Further tests in December 1939 proved the fighter could reach {{convert|366|mph|abbr=on}}.<ref>Molesworth 2008, p. 10.</ref> | |||
It was a fairly simple aircraft, lacking such sophisticated innovations as boosted ]s or automatic leading edge slats, but it had a very strong structure including a seven-] wing which enabled P-40s to survive several documented partial mid-air collisions with enemy aircraft (some of which were recorded as victories by the RAF and VVS).<ref name="Romanenko">Romanenko, Valeriy and Gebhardt, James F. ''The P-40 in Soviet Aviation''. Lend-lease on airforce.ru Access date: 7 March 2006.</ref> | |||
An unusual production feature was a special truck rig to speed delivery at the main Curtiss plant in Buffalo, New York. The rig moved the newly built P-40s in two main components, the main wing and the fuselage, the eight miles from the plant to the airport where the two units were mated for flight and delivery.<ref> ''Popular Mechanics'', January 1941, p. 91.</ref> | |||
===Performance characteristics=== | |||
], Arizona.]] | |||
The P-40 was conceived as a pursuit aircraft and was agile at low and medium altitudes but suffered from a lack of power at higher altitudes. At medium and high speeds it was one of the tightest-turning early monoplane designs of the war,<ref name="Flying">Higam 2004, p. 3.</ref> and it could out-turn most opponents it faced in North Africa and the Russian Front. In the Pacific Theater it was out-turned at lower speeds by the lightweight fighters ] and ] (known to Allies as "Oscar"). The American Volunteer Group Commander ] advised against prolonged dog-fighting with the Japanese fighters due to speed reduction favoring the Japanese.<ref name="Gunstonp68">Gunston 1981, p. 68.</ref> | |||
Allison's V-1710 engines produced {{convert|1040|hp|kW|abbr=on}} at sea level and {{convert|14000|ft|m|abbr=on}}. This was not powerful compared with contemporary fighters, and the early P-40 variants' top speeds were only average. The single-stage, single-speed ] meant that the P-40 was a poor high-altitude fighter. Later versions, with {{convert|1200|hp|kW|abbr=on}} Allisons or more powerful 1,400 hp ] engines were more capable. Climb performance was fair to poor, depending on the subtype.<ref name="P40Zero"/> Dive acceleration was good and dive speed was excellent.<ref name="P40Zero"/> The highest-scoring P-40 ], ] (]), who claimed 22 of his 28½ kills in the type, said that the P-40 had "almost no vices", although "it was a little difficult to control in terminal velocity".<ref>Alexander 2006, p. 22.</ref> The P-40 had one of the fastest maximum dive speeds of any fighter of the early war period, and good high-speed handling. | |||
Operational range was good by early war standards, almost double that of the ] or Bf 109 for example, though inferior to the A6M Zero and the Ki-43, or the late-war ] and ]. | |||
] T. R. Jacklin (''pictured'') flew this ] P-40N-5 more than {{convert|200|mi|0|abbr=on}} after the loss of the port aileron and 25% of its wing area, due to a mid-air collision with another P-40N-5.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.adf-serials.com/2a29-N1.shtml|title=ADF Aircraft Serial Numbers - RAAF A29 Curtiss P-40N Kittyhawk IV|date=13 January 2005|website=www.adf-serials.com|access-date=25 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160828165557/http://www.adf-serials.com/2a29-N1.shtml|archive-date=28 August 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref> {{refn|The fighter was repaired and served out the war.|group=N}}]] | |||
Visibility was adequate, although hampered by an overly complex frame and completely blocked to the rear in early models. Poor ground visibility and the relatively narrow undercarriage and wheels led to many losses due to accidents on the ground.<ref name="P40Zero"/> | |||
The P-40 tolerated harsh conditions and a variety of climates. Its semi-] design was easy to maintain in the field. It lacked innovations such as boosted ]s or automatic ], but its strong structure included a five-] wing, which enabled P-40s to pull high-G turns and survive some midair collisions. Intentional ] were occasionally recorded as victories by the ] and ].<ref name="Romanenko">Romanenko, Valeriy and James F. Gebhardt. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060505113914/http://lend-lease.airforce.ru/english/articles/romanenko/p-40/index.htm |date=5 May 2006 }} ''Lend-lease on airforce.ru''. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.</ref> Caldwell said P-40s "would take a tremendous amount of punishment, violent aerobatics as well as enemy action".<ref name="Alexander p.21"/> Operational range was good by early war standards and was almost double that of the ] or ], although inferior to the Mitsubishi A6M Zero, Nakajima Ki-43 and ]. | |||
] | |||
It was also fairly heavily armed and armored. The P-40 could carry a moderately effective air-to-ground load (although it was never fitted with rockets), was semi-modular and thus easy to maintain in the field, and tolerated harsh conditions, fighting everywhere from the deserts of ], to the jungles of ] and the ], to the Arctic climes of the Soviet Union and Alaska. | |||
Caldwell found the P-40C Tomahawk's armament of two {{convert|.50|in|mm|adj=on}} ] "light-barrel" dorsal nose-mount synchronized machine guns and two {{convert|.303|in|mm|adj=on}} ]s in each wing to be inadequate.<ref name="Alexander p.21">Alexander 2006, p. 21.</ref> This was improved with the P-40D (Kittyhawk I) which abandoned the synchronized gun mounts and instead had two {{convert|.50|in|mm|adj=on}} guns in each wing, although Caldwell still preferred the earlier Tomahawk in other respects. The D had armor around the engine and the cockpit, which enabled it to withstand considerable damage. This allowed Allied pilots in Asia and the Pacific to attack Japanese fighters head on, rather than try to out-turn and out-climb their opponents. Late-model P-40s were well armored. Visibility was adequate, although hampered by a complex windscreen frame, and completely blocked to the rear in early models by a raised turtledeck. Poor ground visibility and relatively narrow landing gear track caused many losses on the ground.<ref name="P40Zero"/> | |||
Like the ], many Army Air Forces officials considered the P-40 inferior; it was unpopular with some United States pilots in the Pacific.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Its gradual replacement by the turbo-supercharged P-38 was greeted with relief. However, the bulk of the fighting conducted by the USAAF during the height of Axis power in 1942-1943 was borne by the P-40 (and the P-39,) and it was these two Army Air Force fighters, along with the Navy's ], which contributed most among US types to breaking Axis air-power during this critical period, especially in the Pacific. In this stop-gap role, fighting in nearly every theater and under every allied flag, the P-40 offered the additional advantage of a low price tag, which kept it in production as a tactical (ground-attack) fighter long after it was obsolete as an air-superiority type. | |||
Curtiss tested a follow-on design, the ], but it offered little improvement over newer P-40 models and was cancelled.<ref>Berliner 2011, p. 18.</ref> | |||
In theaters where the high-altitude characteristics were less important, the P-40 still proved considerably effective as a fighter. Although it gained a postwar reputation as a mediocre type suitable only for close air support, more recent data from Allied squadrons in particular indicate that the P-40 performed surprisingly well as an air-superiority fighter, at times, suffering severe losses but also taking a very heavy toll on enemy aircraft.<ref name="P40Zero"/> | |||
==Operational history== | ==Operational history== | ||
In April 1939, the Army Air Corps, |
In April 1939, the U.S. Army Air Corps, having witnessed the new, sleek, high-speed, in-line-engined fighters of the European air forces, placed the largest fighter order it had ever made for 524 P-40s. | ||
===French Air Force=== | ===French Air Force=== | ||
An early order came from the French '']'', which was already operating P-36s. |
An early order came from the French '']'', which was already operating P-36s. The ''Armée de l'Air'' ordered 100 (later the order was increased to 230) as the '''Hawk 81A-1''' but the French were defeated before the aircraft had left the factory and the aircraft were diverted to British and Commonwealth service (as the Tomahawk I), in some cases complete with metric flight instruments. | ||
In late 1942, as French forces in North Africa split from the ] to side with the Allies, |
In late 1942, as French forces in North Africa split from the ] to side with the ], U.S. forces transferred P-40Fs from ] to ''GC II/5'', a squadron that was historically associated with the ]. GC II/5 used its P-40Fs and Ls in combat in ] and later for patrol duty off the ] until mid-1944, when they were replaced by ] Thunderbolts. | ||
===British Commonwealth=== | |||
===Royal Air Force/Desert Air Force=== | |||
====Service history==== | |||
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| The British ] deemed the P-40 Tomahawk unsuitable for combat in North West Europe, and it was relegated to service with the ] (DAF) in ] and the ]. The P-40 entered service in August 1941. Tomahawk and Kittyhawk squadrons bore the brunt of the '']'' and the '']'' onslaught in the ]. Tomahawks initially proved quite effective against Axis aircraft and contributed to a slight shift of momentum in the Allied favor. Its appearance and gradual replacement of ]s led to the Luftwaffe accelerating retirement of the ]E ("Emil") and introducing the newer Bf 109F ("Friedrich") to North Africa. | |||
====Deployment==== | |||
Over ], ], ] (RAF) claimed the first air combat victory for the P-40 on ] ] when Sgt Tom Paxton and ] Jack Hamlyn destroyed a ] bomber from ''211<sup>a</sup> Squadriglia'' of the ''Regia Aeronautica''.<ref> Brown 1983, p. 20.</ref> Several days later, the Tomahawk was in action in the ] with ], ] (RAAF), which claimed 19 aerial victories over ] aircraft in June and July 1941, for the loss of one P-40 (as well as one lost to ground fire).<ref>Brown 1983, p. 17.</ref> The claims included five, state-of-the-art ] fighters. | |||
] in North Africa, 23 December 1941]] | |||
|} | |||
In all, 18 ] (RAF) squadrons, four ] (RCAF), three ] (SAAF) and two ] (RAAF) squadrons serving with RAF formations, used P-40s.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130302045415/http://www.rafweb.org/aircraftM-T.htm |date=2 March 2013 }} ''rafweb.org'', 2007. Retrieved: 6 January 2008.</ref><ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130302045814/http://www.rafweb.org/aircraftE-L.htm |date=2 March 2013 }} ''rafweb.org'', 2007. Retrieved: 6 January 2008.</ref> The first units to convert were ] squadrons of the ] (DAF), in early 1941. The first Tomahawks delivered came without armor, bulletproof windscreens or ]s, which were installed in subsequent shipments. Pilots used to British fighters sometimes found it difficult to adapt to the P-40's rear-folding landing gear, which was more prone to collapse than the lateral-folding landing gear of the Hurricane or ]. In contrast to the "three-point landing" commonly employed with British types, P-40 pilots were obliged to use a "wheels landing": a longer, low angle approach that touched down on the main wheels first. | |||
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| ], ] at ], ], in 1943. A ground crewman can be seen riding on the wing, directing the pilot, whose view is hindered by the aircraft's nose. In mid-1941, the squadron was the first P-40 unit to use the famous "shark mouth" markings, later made famous by the ].]] | |||
| | |||
When they converted to the P-40, DAF pilots found that landing it required a flatter, slower approach than Spitfires and Hurricanes, due to the P-40's rear-folding landing gear, which was prone to collapse in harder landings. The most prominent Australian ] of the war, ] later said that he found the Tomahawk's armament of two .50 calibers firing through the prop and two .303 Brownings in each wing to be inadequate.<ref>Alexander 2006, p. 21.</ref> This was rectified with the P-40E Kittyhawk, which had three .50 calibers in each wing. Caldwell was impressed with other characteristics; he said the P-40 "would take a tremendous amount of punishment — violent aerobatics as well as enemy action."<ref>''Ibid.''</ref> He said the P-40 had "almost no vices", although "it was a little difficult to control in terminal velocity".<ref>Alexander 2006, p. 22.</ref> Caldwell said that the type was "faster down hill than almost any other aeroplane with a propellor." He believed that Operational Training Units did not properly prepare pilots for the air combat in the P-40, and as a commander, stressed the importance of training novice pilots properly.<ref>Alexander 2006, p. 55-56.</ref> | |||
Testing showed the aircraft did not have the performance needed for use in ] at high-altitude, due to the service ceiling limitation. Spitfires used in the theater operated at heights around {{convert|30000|ft|m|abbr=on}}, while the P-40's Allison engine, with its single-stage, low altitude rated supercharger, worked best at {{convert|15000|ft|m|abbr=on}} or lower. When the Tomahawk was used by Allied units based in the UK from February 1941, this limitation relegated the Tomahawk to low-level reconnaissance with ] | |||
The Tomahawk was superseded by the more powerful Kittyhawk ("D"-mark onwards) types from early 1942, though Tomahawks remained in service until 1943. Kittyhawks included many major improvements, and were the DAF's air superiority fighter for the first few months of 1942, until "]" ]s were available. From 26 May, all Kittyhawk units operated primarily as fighter-bomber units.<ref> Brown 1983, p. 257-8.</ref> DAF units received few of the speedier Packard ]-engined P-40F/L models (Kittyhawk IIA), most of which went to the USAAF. The later P-40M/N versions arrived after, but were also used mostly in the fighter-bomber role. | |||
and only ] was used in the fighter role for a mere 29 sorties, before being replaced by Spitfires. ] deemed the P-40 unsuitable for the theater. UK P-40 squadrons {{clarify|text=from mid-1942 re-equipped with aircraft such as Mustangs|reason=British employment of the Mustang was a complicated evolution of early contracts for P-40 performance-like, Allison-engined NA-73 and NA-83 series Mustangs I and II, similar P-51B series III (both via Lend-Lease and cash-and-carry), then phase-in of licensed Packard-produced Rolls-Royce Merlin-powered later series Mustangs (such as the P-51D), with latter debuts rolling all the way into the winter of 1943-1944|date=February 2017}} | |||
], ] at ], ], in 1943. The ground crewman on the wing is directing the pilot, whose forward view is hindered by the aircraft's nose.]] | |||
In all, 12 British RAF squadrons, as well as two RAAF squadrons and two ] (SAAF) squadrons serving with the DAF, used 930 P-40s. The British government also donated 23 P-40s to the Soviet Air Force. | |||
The Tomahawk was superseded in North Africa by the more powerful Kittyhawk ("D"-mark onwards) types from early 1942, though some Tomahawks remained in service until 1943. Kittyhawks included many improvements and were the DAF's air superiority fighter for the critical first few months of 1942, until "]" ]s were available. DAF units received nearly 330 Packard V-1650 Merlin-powered P-40Fs, called Kittyhawk IIs, most of which went to the USAAF and the majority of the 700 "lightweight" L models, also powered by the Packard Merlin, in which the armament was reduced to four .50 in (12.7 mm) Brownings (Kittyhawk IIA). The DAF also received some 21 of the later P-40K and the majority of the 600 P-40Ms built; these were known as Kittyhawk IIIs. The "lightweight" P-40Ns (Kittyhawk IV) arrived from early 1943 and were used mostly as fighter-bombers.{{refn|Late P-40Fs and most Ks, Ls and the P-40Ms had lengthened rear fuselages; the F/Ls had no carburettor air scoop on the upper engine cowling.<ref>Green and Swanborough 1977, pp. 57–59.</ref>|group=N}} From July 1942 until mid-1943, elements of the U.S. ] (57th FG) were attached to DAF P-40 units. The British government also donated 23 P-40s to the Soviet Union. | |||
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====Combat performance==== | ====Combat performance==== | ||
Tomahawks and Kittyhawks bore the brunt of ''Luftwaffe'' and '']'' fighter attacks during the ]. The P-40s were considered superior to the Hurricane, which they replaced as the primary fighter of the Desert Air Force.<ref name="P40Zero"/> | |||
Because most of the air combat took place well within the performance envelope of the P-40 (below 16,000 feet), in the hands of competent pilots the P-40 proved effective against even the best of the ''Luftwaffe'' and ''Regia Aeronautica''.<ref name="P40Zero"/><ref name="P40RAF">Thomas 2002</ref> Considered markedly superior to the older ] which it replaced as the primary fighter of the Desert Air Force,<ref name="P40Zero"/> the P-40 was deadly against Axis bombers in theater, and dominated the ] and the early Italian fighter types such as the ] and the ], though the ] proved a greater challenge, particularly the later F and G variants. The P-40 was at least equal in firepower to the 109, superior in maneuverability and of a much stronger overall structure, but inferior in climb and (somewhat less) in speed.<ref name="P40Zero"/> P-40s also eventually faced the ] and several much-improved late Italian fighter types such as the excellent ] and ], the ]/]/] and the superlative ] which were superior in many aspects, especially top speed. | |||
{{Blockquote|quote=I would evade being shot at accurately by pulling so much ]...that you could feel the blood leaving the head and coming down over your eyes... And you would fly like that for as long as you could, knowing that if anyone was trying to get on your tail they were going through the same bleary vision that you had and you might get away... I had deliberately decided that any deficiency the Kittyhawk had was offset by aggression. And I'd done a little bit of boxing – I beat much better opponents simply by going for . And I decided to use that in the air. And it paid off.|source=], ]<ref>Hawkins, Belinda. ''Australian Story'' via '']'', 2002. Retrieved: 8 November 2007.</ref>}} | |||
The P-40 initially proved quite effective against Axis aircraft and contributed to a slight shift of advantage in the Allies' favor. The gradual replacement of Hurricanes by the Tomahawks and Kittyhawks led to the ''Luftwaffe'' accelerating retirement of the Bf 109E and introducing the newer Bf 109F; these were to be flown by the veteran pilots of elite ''Luftwaffe'' units, such as ] (JG27), in North Africa.<ref name="Scutts pp. 12–13"/> The P-40 was generally considered roughly equal or slightly superior to the Bf 109 at low altitude but inferior at high altitude, particularly against the Bf 109F.<ref>Pentland 1974, p. 22.</ref> Most air combat in North Africa took place well below {{cvt|16000|ft}}, negating much of the Bf 109's superiority. The P-40 usually had an advantage over the Bf 109 in turning, dive speed and structural strength, was roughly equal in firepower but was slightly inferior in speed and outclassed in rate of climb and operational ceiling.<ref name="P40Zero"/><ref name="Scutts pp. 12–13">Scutts 1994, pp. 12–13.</ref> | |||
P-40s continued to give a generally good account of themselves however, particularly in escort, fighter sweep and combat air patrol missions where the type's strengths could be exploited. A total of 46 British Commonwealth pilots reached ace in P-40s, including seven double aces.<ref name="P40RAF">Thomas 2002</ref> But as P-40 squadrons began to fly more bomber escort and ] missions, losses rose dramatically. From 1942, the Kittyhawk was also used by the DAF as a fighter-bomber, giving rise to the nickname "Kittybomber". As a result of these uses, many Desert Air Force P-40 pilots were caught low and slow by marauding Bf 109s, flown by the veteran pilots of elite ''Luftwaffe'' units such as '']'', and the Allied squadrons suffered heavy casualties. | |||
The P-40 was generally superior to early Italian fighter types, such as the ] and the ]. Its performance against the ] elicited varying opinions. Some observers consider the Macchi C.202 superior.<ref name="Gunston p. 226">Gunston 1984, p. 226.</ref> Caldwell, who scored victories against them in his P-40, felt that the ''Folgore'' was superior to the P-40 and the Bf 109 except that its armament of only two or four machine guns was inadequate.<ref>Ethell and Christy 1979, p. 51.</ref> Other observers considered the two equally matched or favored the ''Folgore'' in aerobatic performance, such as turning radius. The aviation historian ] wrote that over Africa, the P-40 and the ''Folgore'' were "equivalent".<ref>Boyne 2002, p. 406.</ref><ref>Snedden 1997, p. 51.</ref><ref>Glancey 2006, p. 166.</ref> Against its lack of high-altitude performance, the P-40 was considered to be a stable gun platform and its rugged construction meant that it was able to operate from rough front line airstrips with a good rate of serviceability.<ref>Pentland 1974, pp. 8, 20.</ref> | |||
], loaded with six 250 lb bombs. (Photographer: William Hadfield.)]] In addition, some Commonwealth units, in particular the South African squadrons, are alleged to have utilized poor tactics — such as the defensive ] — and suffered even higher attrition rates as a result. Various other formations were tried by DAF units in 1941-42, including "fluid pairs" (similar to the German ''rotte''), the use of one or two "weavers" at the back of a squadron in formation, and a tactic in which whole squadrons would bob and weave in loose formations.<ref>Brown, 1983, p. 28-29.</ref> One of Germany's top aces, ], who would be credited with 114 Allied planes in only 197 combat missions, referrred to the latter as "bunches of grapes" because he found them so easy to pick off.<ref>''Ibid.''</ref> German aces made good use of the superior climb rate of the Bf 109 and specialized in destroying Allied fighter aircraft in slashing vertical attacks. Most notable was ] ] who may have destroyed as many as 70 P-40s in his career before losing his life in a non-combat accident.<ref name="wwii_ace_stories_marseille">Ratuszynski, Wilhelm. Hans-Joachim Marseille - Desert Eagle. World War II Ace Stories, 8 March 1999. Access date: 7 March 2006.</ref> However, some researchers have suggested that German pilots in North Africa over-reported kills, by a margin of as much as 200% on some occasions.<ref>For example, on 15 September 1942, JG27 claimed 19 P-40s destroyed from No. 239 Wing, while squadron records show only five aircraft lost to enemy action. Brown 1983, p. 281-2.</ref> In addition, Marseille is believed to have destroyed only three bombers — all of them unescorted — a testament to the performance of escort duties by DAF pilots.<ref>Brown 1983, p. 257-8.</ref> | |||
The earliest victory claims by P-40 pilots include ] aircraft, during the 1941 ], against ]s, a type often considered to be the best French fighter of the war.<ref name = "nijbrw"/> The P-40 was deadly against Axis bombers in the theater, as well as against the ] twin-engine fighter. In June 1941, Caldwell, of ] in ], flying as ] (F/O) Jack Hamlyn's wingman, recorded in his log book that he was involved in the first air combat victory for the P-40. This was a ] bomber on 6 June.<ref name = "nijbrw"/> The claim was not officially recognized, as the crash of the CANT was not witnessed. The first official victory occurred on 8 June, when Hamlyn and ] (Flt Sgt) Tom Paxton destroyed a CANT Z.1007 from ''211<sup>a</sup> Squadriglia'' of the ''Regia Aeronautica'', over ].<ref name = "lmnsbs"/> Several days later, the Tomahawk was in action over Syria with ], which claimed 19 aerial victories over Vichy French aircraft during June and July 1941, for the loss of one P-40 (and one lost to ground fire).<ref>Brown 1983, p. 17.</ref> | |||
It is clear that a capable and experienced pilot, able to use the P-40 to its utmost, could fare well against the best ''Luftwaffe'' pilots flying the Bf-109E/F. For example, Clive Caldwell scored 22 of his 28.5 victories flying Tomahawks and Kittyhawks with 112 and 250 Squadrons in North Africa. On ] ], while on a mission over northwest Egypt, Caldwell became separated from other members of his squadron and was returning to base. He was attacked by two Bf 109 pilots, one of them Schrorer in the Bf 109E-7 "Black 8". Although Caldwell was wounded three times, and his Tomahawk was hit by more than 100 7.9 mm bullets and five 20 mm cannon shells, he destroyed the Bf 109 accompanying Schroer and damaged "Black 8," forcing Schroer to disengage. Some sources claim that Caldwell killed another German ''expert'', ] (69 kills) while flying a P-40.<ref>Alexander, ''Op. Cit.'', p. 224-228. Kageneck's brother, August Graf von Kageneck, who corresponded with Caldwell after the war, was among those who held this theory.</ref> Caldwell's victories in North Africa included: ten Bf 109s and two ]s. (He later achieved another 6.5 victories flying Spitfires in the South West Pacific.)<ref name="wwii_ace_stories_caldwell">Dragicevic, George. ''Clive "Killer" Caldwell — Stuka Party''. 17 July 1999 Access date: 7 March 2006.</ref> ], the highest-ever scoring ace with a South African unit, scored most of his 15 kills in P-40s.<ref> ''Military History Journal'' (South Africa), v.1, no.6. Access date: ] ]. </ref> Canadian pilot ], who achieved 13 kills in the P-40 with the RAF's ] and ] Squadrons in North Africa, shot down German ace ] (51 kills) while flying a Kittyhawk. Edwards and Caldwell were only two of at least a dozen pilots of several different Allied nations who achieved ace status two or more times over (ten or more kills) while flying the P-40.<ref name="P40RAF">Thomas 2002</ref><ref name="P40CBI">Molesworth 2000</ref> | |||
], loaded with six {{convert|250|lb|abbr=on}} bombs.]] | |||
===Royal Australian Air Force=== | |||
Some DAF units initially failed to use the P-40's strengths or used outdated defensive tactics such as the ]. The superior climb rate of the Bf 109 enabled fast, swooping attacks, neutralizing the advantages offered by conventional defensive tactics. Various new formations were tried by Tomahawk units from 1941 to 1942, including "fluid pairs" (similar to the German ''rotte''); the ] (one or two "weavers") at the back of a squadron in formation and whole squadrons bobbing and weaving in loose formations.<ref name="Brown P. 26-29">Brown 1983, pp. 28–29.</ref> ], who was credited with destroying 114 Allied aircraft in only 197 combat missions, referred to the latter formation as "bunches of grapes", because he found them so easy to pick off.<ref name="Brown P. 26-29"/> The leading German ''expert'' in North Africa, ], ] as many as 101 P-40s during his career.<ref name="wwii_ace_stories_marseille">Ratuszynski, Wilhelm. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141103230105/http://www.elknet.pl/acestory/aces.htm |date=3 November 2014 }} ''World War II Ace Stories''. Retrieved: 8 March 1999.</ref> | |||
], commander of ], taxis along ] at ], ] in September 1942.]] | |||
The Kittyhawk was the main fighter used by the RAAF in World War II, in greater numbers than the Spitfire. Two RAAF squadrons serving with the Desert Air Force, ] and ]s, were the first Australian units to be assigned P-40s. Other Australians served with RAF Squadrons in the theater. | |||
From 26 May 1942, Kittyhawk units operated primarily as fighter-bomber units, giving rise to the nickname "Kittybomber".<ref>Brown 1983, pp. 257–258.</ref> As a result of this change in role and because DAF P-40 squadrons were frequently used in bomber escort and close air support missions, they suffered relatively high losses; many Desert Air Force P-40 pilots were caught flying low and slow by marauding Bf 109s. | |||
Many RAAF pilots achieved high scores in the P-40 (some while flying for the RAF early in the war), at least five reaching double-ace status: Caldwell (22 kills), Barr (11 kills) and Gibbs (ten kills) in North Africa, Whittle and Waddy (11 kills each) in North Africa and New Guinea. In all, 18 RAAF pilots became aces while flying P-40s.<ref name="P40RAF"/> | |||
{| class="wikitable floatright" | |||
|- | |||
|+Victory claims and losses for three Tomahawk/Kittyhawk<br> squadrons of the ], June 1941 – May 1943. | |||
|- | |||
! scope="col" style="width:200px;"| Unit | |||
! scope="col" style="width:50px;"| ] | |||
! scope="col" style="width:50px;"| ] | |||
! scope="col" style="width:50px;"| ]{{efn|group=vicclaims|Began conversion to P-40s in December 1941; operational in February 1942.<ref>Brown 1983, p. 259.</ref>}} | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" | Claims with Tomahawks | |||
| 41 || 36 || – | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" | Claims with Kittyhawks | |||
| 74.5 || 82.5 || 49 | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" | Total P-40 claims | |||
| 115.5 || 118.5 || 49 | |||
|- | |||
! scope="row" | P-40 losses (total) | |||
| 34 || 38 || 28 | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="5"| {{notelist|group=vicclaims}} | |||
|} | |||
Caldwell believed that ]s did not properly prepare pilots for air combat in the P-40 and as a commander, stressed the importance of training novice pilots properly.<ref>Alexander 2006, pp. 55–56.</ref> | |||
Competent pilots who took advantage of the P-40's strengths were effective against the best of the ''Luftwaffe'' and ''Regia Aeronautica''.<ref name="P40Zero"/><ref name = "P40RAF"/> In August 1941, Caldwell was attacked by two Bf 109s, one of them piloted by German ace ]. Although Caldwell was wounded three times and his Tomahawk was hit by more than 100 {{convert|7.92|mm|in|abbr=on}} bullets and five ] shells, Caldwell shot down Schröer's wingman and returned to base. Some sources also claim that in December 1941, Caldwell killed a prominent German ''Experte'', ] (69 kills), while flying a P-40.{{refn|Kageneck's brother, August Graf von Kageneck, who corresponded with Caldwell after the war, was among those who believed that Caldwell shot down Erbo.<ref>Alexander 2006, pp. 224–228.</ref>|group=N}} Caldwell's victories in North Africa included 10 Bf 109s and two Macchi C.202s.<ref name="wwii_ace_stories_caldwell">Dragicevic, George. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130712021216/http://www.elknet.pl/acestory/caldw/caldw.htm |date=12 July 2013 }} ''elknet.pl'', 17 July 1999. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.</ref> ] of 112 Squadron was the leading British P-40 ace with 13 victories.<ref name = "P40RAF"/> ] (RCAF), who achieved 12 kills in the P-40 in North Africa, shot down German ace Otto Schulz (51 kills) while flying a Kittyhawk with ].<ref name = "P40RAF"/> Caldwell, Drake, Edwards and ] were among at least a dozen pilots who achieved ace status twice over while flying the P-40.<ref name="P40RAF">Thomas 2002</ref><ref name="P40CBI">Molesworth 2000</ref> A total of 46 British Commonwealth pilots became aces in P-40s, including seven double aces.<ref name = "P40RAF"/> | |||
At the same time as the heaviest fighting in North Africa, the ] was also in its early stages, and RAAF units in Australia were completely lacking in state-of-the-art fighters. Spitfire production was being absorbed by the war in Europe, Mustangs had not yet reached squadrons anywhere and Australia's tiny and inexperienced aircraft industry was geared towards larger planes. US-built P-40s were seen as the main solution to this problem. ] was flown more than 200 miles (320 kilometres) by ] T. R. Jacklin (pictured) after losing its port aileron and 25% of its wing area.]] During the course of the war, the RAAF ordered 880 Kittyhawks for use in the ]. The P-40 fought on the front line as a fighter during the critical early years of the war in the Pacific in 1942 and 1943, and later the durability and bomb-carrying abilities of the P-40 made it ideal for the ] role until the end of the war. | |||
===Chinese Air Force=== | |||
RAAF Kittyhawks from No.s ], and ] squadrons played a critical role in the Australian war effort during the ] <ref>''Australia's War 1939-1945''. Official Australian Government, Department of Veterans Affairs. Access date: 8 January 2007.</ref>. The Kittyhawks of No. 75 and 76 squadron successfully fended off Japanese aircraft and performed effective close air support for the Australian and U.S. troops, largely negating the initial Japanese advantage in light tanks and sea power. | |||
====Flying Tigers (American Volunteer Group)==== | |||
The RAAF units which made the most use of Kittyhawks were: No. 75 Squadron RAAF, No. 76 Squadron RAAF, ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] (an RAAF unit recruited from ] fliers). Kittyhawks from 75 and 76 Squadrons were instrumental in the historic defeat of Japanese ground forces at the ]. | |||
]. {{refn|Smith commented on the challenge of taking this photo while "scanning the surrounding sky every few seconds to make sure no Jap fighters were about to ambush us".<ref>Ford, Daniel. ''warbirdforum.com''. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.</ref>|group=N}}]] | |||
The ], known officially as the 1st American Volunteer Group (AVG), were a unit of the ], recruited from amongst U.S. Navy, Marine Corps and Army aviators and ground crew. | |||
AVG leader Claire Chennault received crated Model Bs which his airmen assembled in Burma at the end of 1941, adding self-sealing fuel tanks and a second pair of wing guns, such that the aircraft became a hybrid of B and C models.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zbr_z99E54QC&pg=PA47 |page=47 |title=Claire Chennault: Flying Tiger |last=Rice |first=Earle |date=2003 |publisher=Infobase |isbn=9780791072172}}</ref> These were not well-liked by their pilots: they lacked ]s for extra range, and there were no bomb racks on the wings. Chennault considered the liquid-cooled engine vulnerable in combat because a single bullet through the coolant system would cause the engine to overheat in minutes. The Tomahawks also had no radios, so the AVG improvised by installing a fragile radio transceiver, the RCA-7-H, which had been built for a Piper Cub. Because the plane had a single-stage low-altitude supercharger,<ref>02-5AD-1 V-1710-35 Operating and Flight Instructions dated 1941-10-25</ref> its effective ceiling was about {{convert|25000|ft|m}}. The most critical problem was the lack of spare parts; the only source was from damaged aircraft. The planes were viewed as cast-offs that no one else wanted, dangerous and difficult to fly. But the pilots did appreciate some of the planes' features. There were two heavy sheets of steel behind the pilot's head and back that offered solid protection, and overall the planes were ruggedly constructed.<ref>Schultz, Duane. 1987. ''The Maverick War, Chennault and the Flying Tigers''. St. Martin's Press, 335 pp.</ref> | |||
Late in 1945, RAAF fighter squadrons began converting to P-51Ds. However, Kittyhawks were in use with the RAAF until the very last day of the war in the ]. | |||
Compared to opposing Japanese fighters, the P-40B's strengths were that it was sturdy, well armed, faster in a dive and possessed an excellent rate of roll. While the P-40s could not match the maneuverability of the Japanese Army air arm's ]s and Ki-43s, nor the much more famous Zero naval fighter in slow, turning dogfights, at higher speeds the P-40s were more than a match. Chennault trained his pilots to use the P-40's particular performance advantages.<ref>Rossi, J.R. ''flyingtigersavg.22web.org'', 1998. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.</ref> The P-40 had a higher dive speed than any Japanese fighter aircraft of the early war years, for example, and could exploit so-called "boom-and-zoom" tactics. The AVG was highly successful, and its feats were widely publicized by an active cadre of international journalists to boost sagging public morale at home. According to its official records, in just {{frac|6|1|2}} months, the Flying Tigers destroyed 297 enemy aircraft for the loss of just four of its own in air-to-air combat. | |||
===Royal Canadian Air Force=== | |||
] in Ottawa, Canada.]] | |||
In mid-May 1940, the ] had its first look at the Curtiss P-40. At that time a party of American officers flew to Uplands Airport near Ottawa where they saw the XP-40 and a Spitfire flown in comparative tests. When Canadian Army requirements for France were drawn up, one of the units was to have been an Army Co-operation Wing (No. 101) consisting of three squadrons: ] (previously No. 110) Squadron and ], equipped with P-40 Tomahawk aircraft, formed No. 39 (Army Co-operation) Wing (RCAF). By January 1943, all three squadrons had converted to the Mustang Mk I. In all, the RCAF received 72 Kittyhawk I, 12 Kittyhawk Ia, 15 Kittyhawk III and 35 Kittyhawk IV aircraft, for a total of 134 aircraft, plus the loan of nine P-40Ks in the Aleutians, all in lieu of the 144 P-39 Airacobras originally allotted to Canada and rejected. | |||
In the spring of 1942, the AVG received a small number of Model E's. Each came equipped with a radio, six .50-caliber machine guns, and auxiliary bomb racks that could hold 35-lb fragmentation bombs. Chennault's armorer added bomb racks for 570-lb Russian bombs, which the Chinese had in abundance. These planes were used in the battle of the ] Gorge in late May 1942, which kept the Japanese from entering China from Burma and threatening Kunming. Spare parts, however, remained in short supply. "Scores of new planes...were now in India, and there they stayed—in case the Japanese decided to invade... the AVG was lucky to get a few tires and spark plugs with which to carry on its daily war."<ref>Schultz, Duane. 1987.</ref> | |||
] | |||
One of the most significant uses of the RCAF P-40s occurred in the 1942 ]. When the Imperial Japanese Navy moved to ], it sent a diversionary battle group to attack the Aleutian Islands. The RCAF sent ], flying the Kittyhawk I, to a forward base on Adak Island, Alaska. During the drawn-out campaign, 12 Canadian Kittyhawks operated on a rotational basis from a new, more advanced base on ], 75 miles southeast of ]. Two RCAF fighter squadrons, No. 111 and ], took "turn-about" at the base. During the deployment, one ] ] was shot down by Squadron Leader Ken Boomer. After the Japanese threat diminished, the RCAF units returned to Canada and eventually transferred to England without their Kittyhawks. | |||
=== |
====4th Air Group==== | ||
China received 27 P-40E models in early 1943. These were assigned to squadrons of the 4th Air Group.<ref>Demin, Anatolii, translated by George M. Mellinger. ''Planes and Pilots of World War Two'', June 2000. Retrieved: 4 November 2011.</ref> | |||
A total of 301 P-40s were allocated to the ] under lend lease, 297 seeing service, (the remaining 4 being lost on delivery). These aircraft equipped ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. Some RNZAF pilots in North Africa and Italy also flew British P-40s while serving with RAF squadrons. | |||
===United States Army Air Forces=== | |||
RNZAF P-40s were successful in air combat against the Japanese during intense fighting in the ] theatre from 1942 until 1944, when they were replaced by F4Us. ] pilots claimed 99 aerial victories in P-40s, losing 20 aircraft in aerial combat. ], the ]'s highest scoring ] in the Pacific, flew P-40s with ], although half his victories came on the ]. | |||
] | |||
].<ref name="Curtiss P-40B Warhawk - G-CDWH">Donselaar, Remco et al. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181022113221/http://www.touchdown-aviation.com/flying-legends/plane/fighter-collection-the/curtiss-p-40b-warhawk-g-cdwh.php |date=22 October 2018 }} ''Touchdown Aviation'', 2011. Retrieved: 4 November 2011.</ref>]] | |||
] and a captured P-40B in the Dutch East Indies, 1942]] | |||
A total of 15 USAAF pursuit/fighter ]s (FG), along with other pursuit/fighter ]s and a few ] (TR) units, operated the P-40 during 1941–45.<ref name="P40CBI"/><ref name="P40MTO2"/><ref name = "P40PTO"/> As was also the case with the ], many USAAF officers considered the P-40 exceptional but it was gradually replaced by the Lockheed P-38 Lightning, the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt and the North American P-51 Mustang. The bulk of the fighter operations by the USAAF in 1942–43 were borne by the P-40 and the P-39. In the Pacific, these two fighters, along with the ] ], contributed more than any other U.S. types to breaking Japanese air power during this critical period. | |||
====Pacific theaters==== | |||
From late 1943 and 1944, RNZAF P-40s were increasingly used against ground targets. The last frontline RNZAF P-40s were replaced by ]s in 1944, with P-40s relegated to use as advanced pilot trainers.<ref>Horn 1992</ref><ref>Mossong, Peter. The Curtiss P-40 in RNZAF Service. Royal New Zealand Air Force Pacific WWII Homepage. Access date: 4 September 2006.</ref><ref>''Curtiss P-40N Kittyhawk''. New Zealand Warbirds Family Album. Access date: 4 September 2006.</ref> | |||
], 44th FS, at the time part of ], on ]]] | |||
Remaining RNZAF P-40s, excluding the 20 shot down and 154 written off, were mostly scrapped at ] in 1948. At least six RNZAF P-40s have survived. Fisken's machine is owned by The Old Stick and Rudder Company (OSRC) and is currently being restored in New Zealand.<ref>Official dedication for Old Stick and Rudder company. Wairarapa Times-Age. 22 January 2005. Access date: 24 March 2007.</ref> Three are currently airworthy: ''NZ3009'' with the OSRC, whilst ''NZ3094'' and ''NZ3125'' are flying in Australia. Other New Zealand P-40s are on display at the ] in Auckland and under restoration at the ] in ]. The remains of two others are part of a private collection in New Zealand. | |||
The P-40 was the main USAAF fighter aircraft in the ] and ]s during 1941–42. At ]<ref>Jordan, Corey C. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151015214226/http://www.planesandpilotsofww2.webs.com/Welch1.html |date=15 October 2015 }} ''Planes and Pilots of World War Two'', 2000. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.</ref> and in ],<ref name="The Dutch East Indies Campaign">Klemen, L. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151015214226/http://www.dutcheastindies.webs.com/december2.html |date=15 October 2015 }} ''Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942'', 1999–2000. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.</ref> USAAF P-40 squadrons suffered crippling losses on the ground and in the air to Japanese fighters such as the A6M Zero and Ki-43 Hayabusa respectively. During the attack on Pearl Harbor, most of the USAAF fighters were P-40Bs, the majority of which were destroyed. However, a few P-40s managed to get in the air and shoot down several Japanese aircraft, most notably by ] and ]. | |||
In the ], the ] (Provisional), formed from USAAF pilots evacuated from the Philippines, claimed 49 Japanese aircraft destroyed, for the loss of 17 P-40s<ref name="P40PTO">Molesworth 2003</ref><ref name="The Dutch East Indies Campaign"/> The seaplane tender ] was sunk by Japanese airplanes while delivering P-40s to ], ].<ref>Klemen, L. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210412133714/http://warfare.gq/dutcheastindies/USN_losses.html |date=12 April 2021 }} ''Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942'', 1999–2000. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.</ref> In the ] and ]s and the ], improved tactics and training allowed the USAAF to better use the strengths of the P-40. Due to aircraft fatigue, scarcity of spare parts and replacement problems, the US ] and ] created a joint P-40 management and replacement pool on 30 July 1942 and many P-40s went back and forth between the air forces.<ref>Birkett, Gordon. ''adf-serials.com'', 2005. Retrieved: 1 August 2007.</ref> | |||
===Chinese Air Force / Flying Tigers (American Volunteer Group)=== | |||
] based out of Burma in formation.]] | |||
The ] known officially as the American Volunteer Group, were a unit of the ], and were led by a retired Army Air Force officer and military observer ]. From late 1941, the P-40 was the fighter used by the Flying Tigers. | |||
The ] was in action in the Pacific from the beginning of the war. ] scored 10 kills (of 14 overall) in the P-40 with the 49th FG. He compared the P-40 favorably with the P-38: | |||
Compared to opposing Japanese fighters, the P-40's strengths were that it was very sturdy, heavily armed, generally faster in a dive and possessed a good rate of roll.<ref name="shilling">Shilling, Erik. ''Erik Shilling, AVG Pilot''. Access date: 25 March 2006.</ref> While the P-40 could not match the maneuverability of the Japanese ] and ] monoplanes they were facing, Chennault trained the AVG pilots to use the performance advantage the P-40 held over the Japanese fighters to gain the upper hand in combat. The P-40 had a higher dive speed than the Japanese fighters, for example, and would often be used with so-called "boom-and-zoom" tactics. The AVG was highly successful, and accordingly, their exploits were widely published in order to boost the morale of the American public. According to the American count, the Flying Tigers were credited with destroying 297 aircraft in the air and on the ground for the loss of only 21 pilots and their aircraft. Alternative counts have been as low as 115-21, but never any lower. | |||
:"If you flew wisely, the P-40 was a very capable aircraft. could outturn a P-38, a fact that some pilots didn't realize when they made the transition between the two aircraft. The real problem with it was lack of range. As we pushed the Japanese back, P-40 pilots were slowly left out of the war. So when I moved to P-38s, an excellent aircraft, I did not that the P-40 was an inferior fighter, but because I knew the P-38 would allow us to reach the enemy. I was a fighter pilot and that was what I was supposed to do."<ref name="Acepilots"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060326204955/http://www.acepilots.com/usaaf_pto_aces.html#DeHaven |date=26 March 2006 }} ''Acepilots.com'', 2005. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.</ref> | |||
The 8th, 15th, 18th, 24th, 49th, 343rd and 347th PGs/FGs, flew P-40s in the Pacific theaters between 1941 and 1945, with most units converting to P-38s from 1943 to 1944. In 1945, the 71st Reconnaissance Group employed them as armed ] during ground operations in the Philippines, until it received delivery of P-51s.<ref name="P40PTO"/> They claimed 655 aerial victories. | |||
===United States Army Air Forces=== | |||
A P-40C of the 33rd Fighter Squadron, flown by 2nd Lt. Joseph D. Shaffer and based at ], ], shared credit for the first victory over a German aircraft by the USAAF in World War II. A ] bomber overflew the base on ] ] and was destroyed by Shaffer and a ] of the ]. | |||
Contrary to conventional wisdom, with sufficient altitude, the P-40 could turn with the A6M and other Japanese fighters, using a combination of a nose-down vertical turn with a bank turn, a technique known as a ]. Robert DeHaven describes how this tactic was used in the 49th Fighter group: | |||
====South West Pacific area==== | |||
:ou could fight a Jap on even terms, but you had to make him fight your way. He could outturn you at slow speed. You could outturn him at high speed. When you got into a turning fight with him, you dropped your nose down so you kept your airspeed up, you could outturn him. At low speed he could outroll you because of those big ailerons ... on the Zero. If your speed was up over 275, you could outroll . His big ailerons didn't have the strength to make high speed rolls... You could push things, too. Because ... f you decided to go home, you could go home. He couldn't because you could outrun him. That left you in control of the fight. | |||
] | |||
In the first major battles at Pearl Harbor, the Philippines and in the Dutch East Indies, USAAF P-40 squadrons were massacred on the ground and slaughtered in the air by Japanese fighters like the ] "Oscar" and the ]. But in later battles, improved tactics and training allowed the strengths of the aircraft to be more effectively utilized, enabling often-outnmbered P-40 squadrons to hang on against heavy odds and eventually triumph over the IJN and the JAAF. | |||
====China Burma India Theater==== | |||
The ] was one of the most important US fighter groups in the South West Pacific, in action from the beginning of the war to the very end, playing a key role in the defense of Darwin, Australia and Port Morseby, New Guinea. The 49th flew P-40s until they were replaced by P-38s in 1944. | |||
USAAF and Chinese P-40 pilots performed well in this theater against many Japanese types such as the Ki-43, ] "Tojo" and the Zero. The P-40 remained in use in the ] (CBI) until 1944 and was reportedly preferred over the P-51 Mustang by some US pilots flying in China. The American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers) was integrated into the USAAF as the ] in June 1942. The unit continued to fly newer model P-40s until 1944, achieving a high kill-to-loss ratio.<ref name="P40CBI"/><ref>{{cite web |title=23 Fighter Group (ACC) |url=https://www.afhra.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/1230891/23-fighter-group-acc/ |website=Air Force Historical Research Agency |access-date=28 September 2023}}</ref> | |||
Robert Marshall DeHaven was an ace with the 49th FG, scoring ten kills in the P-40, 14 kills overall. He compared the P-40 to the P-38: | |||
In the Battle of the Salween River Gorge of May 1942 the AVG used the P-40E model equipped with wing racks that could carry six 35-pound fragmentation bombs and Chennault's armorer developed belly racks to carry Russian 570-pound bombs, which the Chinese had in large quantity.<ref>Schultz, Duane. 1987. The Maverick War, Chennault and the Flying Tigers. St. Martin's Press</ref> | |||
:''"If you flew wisely, the P-40 was a very capable aircraft. In many conditions, it could outturn a P-38, a fact that some pilots didn't realize when they made the transition between the two aircraft. The P-40 kept me alive and allowed me to accomplish my mission. The real problem with it was lack of range. As we pushed the Japanese back, P-40 pilots were slowly left out of the war. So when I moved to P-38s, an excellent aircraft, I did so not because I believed that the P-40 was an inferior fighter, but because I knew the P-38 would allow us to reach the enemy. I was a fighter pilot and that was what I was supposed to do." <ref name="Acepilots">''PTO/CBI Pilots of WWII''. Acepilots.com, ©2005 Access date: 7 March 2006.</ref> | |||
Units arriving in the CBI after the AVG in the 10th and 14th Air Forces continued to perform well with the P-40, ] 973 kills in the theater, or 64.8 percent of all enemy aircraft shot down. Aviation historian Carl Molesworth stated that "...the P-40 simply dominated the skies over Burma and China. They were able to establish air superiority over free China, northern Burma and the Assam valley of India in 1942, and they never relinquished it."<ref name="Molesworth 2000, p.6">Moleseworth 2000, page 6</ref> The 3rd, 5th, 23rd, 51st and 80th FGs, along with the 10th TRS, operated the P-40 in the CBI.{{refn|Although part of the US 14th AF, the P-40s of 3rd and 5th FGs of the Chinese American Composite Wing were flown by both American and Chinese pilots.<ref name="P40CBI"/>|group=N}} CBI P-40 pilots used the aircraft very effectively as a fighter-bomber. The ] in particular used its so-called ''B-40'' (P-40s carrying 1,000-pound high-explosive bombs) to destroy bridges and kill bridge repair crews, sometimes demolishing their target with one bomb.<ref>"Playing Large Part in Burma Fighting Against Japs". ''CBI Roundup'', Vol. II, No. 32, 20 April 1944.</ref> At least 40 U.S. pilots reached ace status while flying the P-40 in the CBI. | |||
====China-Burma-India theater==== | |||
The P-40 performed extremely well in this theater, scoring high kill ratios against Japanese Army types such as the Nakajima Ki-43 ''Hayabusa'' ("Oscar" to the Allies), ]''Shoki'' ("Tojo" to the Allies) and even Navy types like the A6M Zero throughout the war. The P-40 remained in use in the CBI until 1944 and was reportedly preferred over the ] by some US pilots flying in China. | |||
====Europe and Mediterranean theaters==== | |||
At least 40 US Pilots reached Ace status flying the P-40 in the CBI.<ref name="P40CBI"/> | |||
] | |||
On 14 August 1942, the first confirmed victory by a USAAF unit over a German aircraft in World War II was initiated by a P-40C pilot. 2nd Lt Joseph D. Shaffer, of the 33rd Fighter Squadron, intercepted a ]C-3 maritime patrol aircraft that overflew his base at ], ]. Shaffer damaged the Fw 200, which was finished off by a P-38F. Warhawks were used extensively in the ] by USAAF units, including the ], ], ], ], ] and ]s.<ref name="P40MTO2">Molesworth 2002</ref> While the P-40 suffered heavy losses in the MTO, many USAAF P-40 units achieved high kill-to-loss ratios against Axis aircraft; the 324th FG scored better than a 2:1 ratio in the MTO.<ref name=autogenerated1>Higham 2004, pp. 3–4.</ref> In all, 23 U.S. pilots became aces in the MTO on the P-40, most of them during the first half of 1943.<ref name = "P40MTO2"/> | |||
P-40 pilots from the 57th FG were the first USAAF fliers to see action in the MTO, while attached to Desert Air Force Kittyhawk squadrons, from July 1942. The 57th was also the main unit involved in the "]", on 18 April 1943. Decoded ] signals revealed a plan for a large formation of ] transports to cross the Mediterranean, escorted by German and Italian fighters. Between 1630 and 1830 hours, all wings of the group were engaged in an intensive effort against the enemy air transports. Of the four Kittyhawk wings, three had left the patrol area before a convoy of a 100+ enemy transports were sighted by 57th FG, which tallied 74 aircraft destroyed. The group was last in the area, and intercepted the Ju 52s escorted by large numbers of Bf 109s, Bf 110s and ]s. The group claimed 58 Ju 52s, 14 Bf 109s and two Bf 110s destroyed, with several probables and damaged. Between 20 and 40 of the Axis aircraft landed on the beaches around ] to avoid being shot down; six Allied fighters were lost, five of them P-40s. | |||
On 22 April, in ], a similar force of P-40s attacked a formation of 14 ] ''Gigant'' ("Giant") six-engine transports, covered by seven Bf 109s from II./JG 27. All the transports were shot down, for a loss of three P-40s. The 57th FG was equipped with the Curtiss fighter until early 1944, during which time they were credited with at least 140 air-to-air kills.<ref name="Weal p. 91">Weal 2003, p. 91.</ref> On 23 February 1943, during ], the pilots of the 58th FG flew 75 P-40Ls off the aircraft carrier {{USS|Ranger|CV-4|6}} to the newly captured Vichy French airfield, Cazas, near ], in ]. The aircraft supplied the 33rd FG and the pilots were reassigned.<ref>USAAF General Orders; USAAF History of the 58th FG. </ref> | |||
The American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers) were integrated into the USAAF as the ]. The unit continued to fly P-40s (of newer models) until the end of the war, racking up a high kill-to-loss ratio.<ref name="23FG">Pike, John. ''23rd Fighter Group Official Website''. GlobalSecurity, 21 August 2005. Access date: 5 September 2006.</ref><ref name="P40CBI"/> | |||
The 325th FG (known as the "Checkertail Clan") flew P-40s in the MTO and was credited with at least 133 air-to-air kills from April–October 1943, of which 95 were Bf 109s and 26 were Macchi C.202s, for the loss of 17 P-40s in combat.<ref name="P40MTO2"/><ref name="325MTO2">Cathcart, Carol. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120210183837/http://www.325thfg.org/totalvic.htm |date=10 February 2012 }} '' Official 325th Fighter Group WWII: "Checkertail Clan" Association''. Retrieved: 25 March 2006.</ref> The 325th FG historian Carol Cathcart wrote: | |||
====Mediterranean theater==== | |||
] | |||
Though the P-40 suffered heavy loses in the ] (MTO), many US P-40 units had good combat records in the theater, racking up high kill to loss ratios against the Germans and Italians. For example the ] scored better than a 2:1 ratio while fighting in the (MTO).<ref name="Flying">Higham 2004</ref> In all, 23 US pilots became aces in the MTO while flying the P-40, most during a fairly short period during the first half of 1943.<ref name="P40MTO2">Molesworth 2002 </ref> As in the Pacific, success in combat seemed to largely be a matter of experience and effective tactics. It is also worth noting that like the Soviets, many United States pilots stripped down their P-40s to improve performance, often even removing two or more of the wing guns from their P-40F/L Warhawks. It was also in this theater that the lightened P-40L (which also had some wing guns removed) was most heavily used, primarily by U.S. pilots. | |||
{{blockquote|on 30 July, 20 P-40s of the 317th ... took off on a fighter sweep ... over ]. As they turned to fly south over the west part of the island, they were attacked near ]... The attacking force consisted of 25 to 30 Bf 109s and Macchi C.202s... In the brief, intense battle that occurred ... 21 enemy aircraft.|Cathcart<ref name="325MTO317">Cathcart, Carol. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120210183840/http://www.325thfg.org/317his.htm |date=10 February 2012 }} ''Official 325th Fighter Group WWII "Checkertail Clan" Association''. Retrieved: 5 September 2006.</ref>}} | |||
Some of the first Army Air Force P-40s used in this theater were launched from aircraft carriers during Operation Torch, to land on freshly captured Vichy French airfields. This was one of the very rare examples of land based planes being deployed from a carrier, another being Jimmy Doolittle's famous B-25 raid on Tokyo. | |||
Cathcart wrote that Lt. Robert Sederberg assisted a comrade being attacked by five Bf 109s, destroyed at least one German aircraft, and may have shot down as many as five. Sederberg was shot down and became a prisoner of war.<ref name="325MTO317"/> | |||
The ] was equipped with the Curtiss fighter until early 1944, during which time they were credited with at least 140 air-to-air kills. It was the 57th that took part in the "Palm Sunday Massacre" which took place on ] ]. On this day, decoded ] ciphers had given away a Luftwaffe plan to cross the Mediterranean Sea with a large formation of German transport planes (]) and their escorts (]s). An ambush was laid for them with three squadrons of the 57th, one squadron from the 324th Fighter Group (also flying P-40s) and a small group of British Spitfires intercepting the German formation and shooting down at least 70 German planes with only six or seven Allied airplanes being downed.<ref name="P40MTO2"/> | |||
A famous ] unit, the ], better known as the "Tuskegee Airmen" or "Redtails", flew P-40s in stateside training and for their initial eight months in the MTO. On 9 June 1943, they became the first African-American fighter pilots to engage enemy aircraft, over ], Italy. A single ] was reported damaged by Lieutenant Willie Ashley Jr. On 2 July the squadron claimed its first verified kill; a Fw 190 destroyed by Captain Charles Hall. The 99th continued to score with P-40s until February 1944, when they were assigned P-39s and P-51 Mustangs.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120114174554/http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=1356 |date=14 January 2012 }} ''National Museum of the USAF''. Retrieved: 19 June 2010.</ref><ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101130173210/http://www.tuskegeeairmen.org/uploads/stats.pdf |date=30 November 2010 }} ''National Museum of the USAF''. Retrieved: 19 June 2010.</ref> | |||
The ], better known as the "Checkertail Clan", also fought in the MTO. While flying the P-40, the three squadrons of the 325th were credited with at least 133 air-to-air kills while flying the P-40 from April to October 1943, of which 95 victories were Bf 109s and 26 were the superior Macchi C.202, for the loss of only 17 P-40s in combat.<ref name="325MTO2">Cathcart, Carol. ''325th Fighter Group: Total Victories by Type of Aircraft''. Official 325th Fighter Group WWII: "Checkertail Clan" Association. Access date: 25 March 2006.</ref><ref name="P40MTO2"/> One incident with the 325 FG indicates what could happen if Bf 109 pilots made the mistake of trying to turn-fight with the P-40. | |||
The much-lightened P-40L was most heavily used in the MTO, primarily by U.S. pilots. Many US pilots stripped down their P-40s even further to improve performance, often removing two or more of the wing guns to improve the roll rate. | |||
:''On ], 20 P-40s of the 317th and 16 P-40s of the 319th Squadron took off on a fighter sweep, to rendezvous over Sardinia. As they turned to fly south over the west part of the island, they were attacked near Sassari and 20 miles north of the rendezvous point where they were to meet the 319th coming from the east. The attacking force consisted of 25 to 30 Bf 109s and Macchi C.202s, bringing the estimated total of enemy aircraft engaged to between 40 and 50 planes. Radio communications with the other squadron was poor and repeated inquiries received no answers, so the 319th was unable to locate the battle. In the brief, intense battle that occurred, 20 P-40s engaged and destroyed 21 enemy aircraft. General observations on the encounter show that in addition to the 21 victories and four probables reported, there may have been many more. It is believed that Lt. Robert Sederberg, who singly went to the aid of a fellow pilot who was being attacked by five Bf 109s, in addition to destroying one Me-109 for sure, scored at least four victories. Lt. Sederberg was last seen engaged in combat with five Bf 109s. Many months later, he was reported a prisoner of war in Germany.<ref name="325MTO317">Cathcart, Carol. ''History of the 317th Fighter Squadron''. Official 325th Fighter Group WWII "Checkertail Clan" Association. Access date: 5 September 2006.</ref> | |||
===Royal Australian Air Force=== | |||
As combat waned in North Africa, the 325th moved on to Sardinia, then Sicily and finally Italy, transitioning to P-47 Thunderbolts and later to P-51 Mustangs, continuing to increase their excellent victory totals against the Luftwaffe. | |||
], commander of ], taxis along ] at ], ] in September 1942]] | |||
] <br />] Denis Baker scored the RAAF's last aerial victory ] in this fighter on 10 June 1944. It was later flown by ] ]. Note the dark blue tip on the ] used to identify ].]] | |||
The Kittyhawk was the main fighter used by the RAAF in World War II, in greater numbers than the Spitfire. Two RAAF squadrons serving with the Desert Air Force, ] and ]s, were the first Australian units to be assigned P-40s. Other RAAF pilots served with RAF or SAAF P-40 squadrons in the theater. | |||
Many RAAF pilots achieved high scores in the P-40. At least five reached "double ace" status: ], ], ], ] (11 kills each) and ] (10 kills) in the Middle East, North African and/or ]s. In all, 18 RAAF pilots became aces while flying P-40s.<ref name="P40RAF"/> | |||
Nicky Barr, like many Australian pilots, considered the P-40 a reliable mount: "The Kittyhawk became, to me, a friend. It was quite capable of getting you out of trouble more often than not. It was a real warhorse."<ref name="Nicky Barr quiet Soldier">Barr, Nicky. ''ABC Australia''. Retrieved: 8 November 2007.</ref> | |||
At the same time as the heaviest fighting in North Africa, the ] was also in its early stages, and RAAF units in Australia were completely lacking in suitable fighter aircraft. Spitfire production was being absorbed by the war in Europe; P-38s were trialled, but were difficult to obtain; Mustangs had not yet reached squadrons anywhere, and Australia's tiny and inexperienced aircraft industry was geared towards larger aircraft. USAAF P-40s and their pilots originally intended for the ] in the Philippines, but diverted to Australia as a result of Japanese naval activity were the first suitable fighter aircraft to arrive in substantial numbers. By mid-1942, the RAAF was able to obtain some USAAF replacement shipments. | |||
RAAF Kittyhawks played a crucial role in the ]. They fought on the front line as fighters during the critical early years of the Pacific War, and the durability and bomb-carrying abilities (1,000 lb/454 kg) of the P-40 also made it ideal for the ground attack role. During the ] RAAF ] destroyed or damaged some 33 Japanese aircraft of various types, with another 30 probables.<ref>44 days, 75 Squadron and the Battle for Australia, Michael Veitch, Hachette Australia; 1st edition (25 July 2017), {{ISBN|978-0733638817}}, pp 15</ref> General ] said of No 75 squadron: "Victory in the entire air war against Japan can be traced back to the actions which took place from that dusty strip at Port Moresby in early 1942."<ref>44 days, 75 Squadron and the Battle for Australia, Michael Veitch, Hachette Australia; 1st edition (25 July 2017), {{ISBN|978-0733638817}}, pp 371</ref> For example, ], and ] Squadrons played a critical role during the ],<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060909034841/http://www.ww2australia.gov.au/asfaras/milnebay.html |date=9 September 2006 }} ''Official Australian Government, Department of Veterans Affairs''. Retrieved: 8 January 2007.</ref><ref>Pentland 1974, pp. 27–39.</ref> fending off Japanese aircraft and providing effective close air support for the Australian infantry, negating the initial Japanese advantage in light tanks and sea power. The Kittyhawks fired "nearly 200,000 rounds of half-inch ammunition" during the course of the battle.<ref>Turning Point: The Battle for Milne Bay 1942 - Japan's first land defeat in World War II, Michael Veitch, Hachette Australia; 1st edition (23 July 2019), {{ISBN|978-0733640551}}, pp 325</ref> | |||
The RAAF units that most used Kittyhawks in the South West Pacific were 75, 76, ], ], ], ], ] and ] Squadrons. These squadrons saw action mostly in the New Guinea and ]. | |||
Late in 1945, RAAF fighter squadrons in the South West Pacific began converting to P-51Ds. However, Kittyhawks were in use with the RAAF until the end of the war, in Borneo. In all, the RAAF acquired 841 Kittyhawks (not counting the British-ordered examples used in North Africa), including 163 P-40E, 42 P-40K, 90 P-40 M and 553 P-40N models.<ref> ''defence.gov.au''. Retrieved: 1 August 2007.</ref> In addition, the RAAF ordered 67 Kittyhawks for use by ] (a joint Australian-] unit in the South West Pacific). The P-40 was retired by the RAAF in 1947. | |||
===Royal Canadian Air Force=== | |||
] in 1943.]] | |||
A total of 13 ] units operated the P-40 in the North West European or Alaskan theaters. | |||
In mid-May 1940, Canadian and US officers watched comparative tests of a XP-40 and a Spitfire, at ], Ottawa. While the Spitfire was considered to have performed better, it was not available for use in Canada and the P-40 was ordered to meet home air defense requirements. In all, eight Home War Establishment Squadrons were equipped with the Kittyhawk: 72 Kittyhawk I, 12 Kittyhawk Ia, 15 Kittyhawk III and 35 Kittyhawk IV aircraft, for a total of 134 aircraft. These aircraft were mostly diverted from RAF Lend-Lease orders for service in Canada. The P-40 Kittyhawks were obtained in lieu of 144 P-39 Airacobras originally allocated to Canada but reassigned to the RAF. | |||
However, before any home units received the P-40, three RCAF ]s operated Tomahawk aircraft from bases in the United Kingdom. No. 403 Squadron RCAF, a fighter unit, used the Tomahawk Mk II briefly before converting to Spitfires. Two ] (close air support) squadrons: 400 and 414 Sqns trained with Tomahawks, before converting to Mustang Mk. I aircraft and a fighter/reconnaissance role. Of these, only No. 400 Squadron used Tomahawks operationally, conducting a number of armed sweeps over France in the late 1941. RCAF pilots also flew Tomahawks or Kittyhawks with other British Commonwealth units based in North Africa, the Mediterranean, South East Asia and (in at least one case) the South West Pacific.{{refn|After being evacuated from Singapore to Australia in 1942, F/L Thomas W. Watson RCAF served for a period with No. 77 Squadron RAAF.|group=N}} | |||
In 1942, the Imperial Japanese Navy ], ] and ], in the ], off ]. RCAF home defense P-40 squadrons saw combat over the Aleutians, assisting the USAAF. The RCAF initially sent 111 Squadron, flying the Kittyhawk I, to the US base on ] island. During the drawn-out campaign, 12 Canadian Kittyhawks operated on a rotational basis from a new, more advanced base on ],{{convert|75|mi|km|abbr=on}} southeast of ]. 14 and 111 Sqns took "turn-about" at the base. During a major attack on Japanese positions at Kiska on 25 September 1942, Squadron Leader ] shot down a ] ("Rufe") seaplane. The RCAF also purchased 12 P-40Ks directly from the USAAF while in the Aleutians. After the Japanese threat diminished, these two RCAF squadrons returned to Canada and eventually transferred to England without their Kittyhawks. | |||
In January 1943, a further Article XV unit, 430 Squadron was formed at ], England and trained on obsolete Tomahawk IIA.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110807191815/http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/1w-1e/sqns-escs/page-eng.asp?id=394 |date=7 August 2011 }} ''airforce.forces.gc''. Retrieved: 3 March 2011.</ref><ref name="Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawks of the RCAF"> ''rcaf.com'', 2010. Retrieved: 3 March 2011.</ref> The squadron converted to the Mustang I before commencing operations in mid-1943. | |||
In early 1945 pilots from No. 133 Squadron RCAF, operating the P-40N out of ], (Victoria, British Columbia), intercepted and destroyed two Japanese ],<ref name="Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawks of the RCAF"/> which were designed to cause wildfires on the North American mainland. On 21 February, Pilot Officer E. E. Maxwell shot down a balloon, which landed on ] in Washington State. On 10 March, Pilot Officer J. 0. Patten destroyed a balloon near ], British Columbia. The last interception took place on 20 April 1945 when Pilot Officer P.V. Brodeur from 135 Squadron out of ] shot down a balloon over Vedder Mountain.<ref>Coyle 2002, pp. 214–215.</ref> | |||
The RCAF units that operated P-40s were, in order of conversion: | |||
*] serving in the UK under direct command and control of the RAF, with RAF owned aircraft. | |||
**] (Tomahawk IIA and IIB, March 1941) | |||
**] (Tomahawk I, IIA and IIB, April 1941 – September 1942) | |||
**] (Tomahawk I, IIA and IIB, August 1941 – September 1942) | |||
**] (Tomahawk IIA and IIB, January 1943 – February 1943) | |||
* Operational Squadrons of the Home War Establishment (HWE) (Based in Canada) | |||
**] (Kittyhawk I, IV, November 1941 – December 1943 and P-40K, September 1942 – July 1943), | |||
**] (Kittyhawk I, November 1941 – October 1943), | |||
**] (Kittyhawk I, January 1942 – September 1943), | |||
**] (Kittyhawk IA & III, April 1942 – September 1944), | |||
**] (Kittyhawk I, May 1942 – October 1942), | |||
**] (Kittyhawk I & III, October 1943 – March 1944), | |||
**] (Kittyhawk I, March 1944 – July 1945) and | |||
**] (Kittyhawk IV, May 1944 – September 1945). | |||
===Royal New Zealand Air Force=== | |||
] in front of his P-40, ''Wairarapa Wildcat'' (''NZ3072/19'')]] | |||
Some ] (RNZAF) pilots and New Zealanders in other air forces flew British P-40s while serving with DAF squadrons in North Africa and Italy, including the ace ]. | |||
A total of 301 P-40s were allocated to the RNZAF under ], for use in the Pacific Theater, although four of these were lost in transit. The aircraft equipped ], ], ], ], ], ] and ]. | |||
RNZAF P-40 squadrons were successful in air combat against the Japanese between 1942 and 1944. Their pilots claimed 100 aerial victories in P-40s, whilst losing 20 aircraft in combat{{refn|In total, the RNZAF claimed 106 victories in the Pacific: three by ] in ] and ] (all confirmed), three by ]s (one confirmed) and the remaining 102 by P-40 pilots. A total of 99 victories were officially confirmed, including 95 by P-40s.|group=N}}<ref name="Chris Rudge 2003">Rudge 2003</ref> ], the highest scoring British Commonwealth ace in the Pacific, flew P-40s with 15 Squadron, although half of his victories were claimed with the ]. | |||
The overwhelming majority of RNZAF P-40 victories were scored against Japanese fighters, mostly Zeroes. Other victories included ] "Val" dive bombers. The only confirmed twin engine claim, a ] "Sally" (misidentified as a ] "Betty") fell to Fisken in July 1943.<ref name="Chris Rudge 2003"/> | |||
From late 1943 and 1944, RNZAF P-40s were increasingly used against ground targets, including the innovative use of naval depth charges as improvised high-capacity bombs. The last front line RNZAF P-40s were replaced by ]s in 1944. The P-40s were relegated to use as advanced pilot trainers.<ref>Horn 1992</ref><ref>Mossong, Peter. ''Royal New Zealand Air Force Pacific WWII Homepage''. Retrieved: 4 September 2006.</ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130207124522/http://nzwarbirds.org.nz/p40a.html |date=7 February 2013 }} ''New Zealand Warbirds Family Album''. Retrieved: 4 September 2006.</ref> | |||
The remaining RNZAF P-40s, excluding the 20 shot down and 154 written off, were mostly scrapped at ] in 1948. | |||
===Soviet Union=== | ===Soviet Union=== | ||
] | |||
] | |||
The ] and ] also referred to P-40s as "Tomahawks" and "Kittyhawks". In fact, the Curtiss P-40 Tomahawk / Kittyhawk was the first Allied fighter supplied to the USSR under the Lend-Lease agreement.<ref name="Gordon p. 435">Gordon 2008, p. 435.</ref> | |||
Though only moderately popular with the Soviets, the Soviet Air Force used the relatively few P-40s they had been given quite extensively against the ] on the Eastern front; most Soviet P-40 squadrons had good combat records. The Warhawk provided close air support as well as air-to-air capability for the Soviet Air Force, with many Soviet pilots becoming aces on the P-40 (although not as many as on the ], which was the most popular American fighter used by the Soviet Air Force).<ref name="Romanenko"/> | |||
The USSR received 247 P-40B/Cs (equivalent to the Tomahawk IIA/B in RAF service) and 2,178 P-40E, -K, -L, and -N models between 1941 and 1944.<ref name="Romanenko"/> The Tomahawks were shipped from Great Britain and directly from the US, many of them arriving incomplete, lacking machine guns and even the lower half of the engine cowling. In late September 1941, the first 48 P-40s were assembled and checked in the USSR.<ref name="Gordon pp. 436-437">Gordon 2008, pp 436–437.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hill |first=Alexander |year=2007 |title=British Lend Lease Aid and the Soviet War Effort, June 1941 – June 1942 |jstor= 30052890 |journal=The Journal of Military History |volume=71 |issue=3 |pages=773–808 |doi=10.1353/jmh.2007.0206 |s2cid=159715267 }}</ref> Test flights showed some manufacturing defects: generator and oil pump gears and generator shafts failed repeatedly, which led to emergency landings. The test report indicated that the Tomahawk was inferior to Soviet "]-powered production fighters in speed and rate of climb. However, it had good short field performance, horizontal maneuverability, range, and endurance."<ref name="Gordon p. 437">Gordon 2008, p. 437.</ref> Nevertheless, Tomahawks and Kittyhawks were used against the Germans. The ] (IAP), fighting on the Western and Kalinin Fronts, were the first unit to receive the P-40. The regiment entered action on 12 October 1941. By 15 November 1941, the regiment had shot down 17 German aircraft. However, Lt (SG) Smirnov noted that the P-40 armament was sufficient for strafing enemy lines but rather ineffective in aerial combat. Another pilot, ] (a ]), remarked that he had to shoot half the ammunition at 50–100 meters (165–340 ft) to shoot down an enemy aircraft.<ref name="Gordon p. 437"/> | |||
], is shown in the colors of the Flying Tigers, but never actually served with them; it began life with the RAF and was later transferred to the Soviet Union]] | |||
The Soviets stripped down their P-40s significantly for combat, in many cases removing the wing guns altogether in P-40B/C types, for example. Soviet pilots interviewed in the 1990s reported that they considered the type quite capable of handling the ] using "turn and burn" tactics, since it could out-turn the Bf 109 though not follow one into a climb.<ref name="Romanenko"/> and many squadrons racked up good kill ratios against the 109 and the early Fw 190 variants. Soviet Air Force reports state that they liked the range and fuel capacity of the P-40 which were superior to most of the Soviet fighters, though they still preferred the P-39. Their biggest complaint was its poor climb rate and problems with maintenance, especially with burning out the engines. VVS pilots usually flew the P-40 at ''War Emergency Power'' settings while in combat, this would bring the acceleration and speed performance closer to that of their German rivals, but could burn out engines in a matter of weeks.<ref name="Romanenko"/> They also had difficulty with the more demanding requirements for fuel quality and oil purity of the Allison engines. A fair number of burnt out P-40s were re-engined with Soviet Klimov engines but these performed relatively poorly and were relegated to rear area use.<ref name="Romanenko"/> | |||
In January 1942, some 198 aircraft sorties were flown (334 flying hours) and 11 aerial engagements were conducted, in which five Bf 109s, one Ju 88, and one He 111 were downed. These statistics reveal a surprising fact: it turns out that the Tomahawk was fully capable of successful air combat with a Bf 109. The reports of pilots about the circumstances of the engagements confirm this fact. On 18 January 1942, Lieutenants S. V. Levin and I. P. Levsha (in pair) fought an engagement with seven Bf 109s and shot down two of them without loss. On 22 January, a flight of three aircraft led by Lieutenant E. E. Lozov engaged 13 enemy aircraft and shot down two Bf 109Es, again without loss. Altogether, in January, two Tomahawks were lost; one downed by German anti-aircraft artillery and one lost to Messerschmitts.<ref name="Romanenko"/> | |||
The P-40 saw the most front-line use in Soviet hands in 1942 and early 1943. It was used in the northern sectors and played a significant role in the defense of Leningrad. The most numerically important types were P-40B/C, P-40E and P-40K/M. By the time the better P-40F and N types became available, production of superior Soviet fighters had increased sufficiently so that the P-40 was replaced in most Soviet Air Force units by the ] and various later Yakovlev types. | |||
The Soviets stripped down their P-40s significantly for combat, in many cases removing the wing guns altogether in P-40B/C types, for example. Soviet Air Force reports state that they liked the range and fuel capacity of the P-40, which were superior to most of the Soviet fighters, though they still preferred the P-39. Soviet pilot Nikolai G. Golodnikov recalled: "The cockpit was vast and high. At first it felt unpleasant to sit waist-high in glass, as the edge of the fuselage was almost at waist level. But the bullet-proof glass and armored seat were strong and visibility was good. The radio was also good. It was powerful, reliable, but only on HF (high frequency). The American radios did not have hand microphones but throat microphones. These were good throat mikes: small, light and comfortable."<ref name="Drabkin p. 129">Drabkin 2007, p. 129.</ref> The biggest complaint of some Soviet airmen was its poor climb rate and problems with maintenance, especially with burning out the engines. <!-- statement already made; is there need to repeat it?---Tomahawks' Allison engine was regarded as "not very good but powerful as such". When pushed to full RPMs, towards maximum output, it began to "make metal dust".<ref name="Drabkin p. 130">Drabkin 2007, p. 130.</ref>----> VVS pilots usually flew the P-40 at War Emergency Power settings while in combat, which brought acceleration and speed performance closer to that of their German rivals, but could burn out engines in a matter of weeks.<ref name="Romanenko"/> Tires and batteries also failed. The fluid in the engine's radiators often froze, cracking their cores, which made the Allison engine unsuitable for operations during harsh winter conditions. During the winter of 1941, the 126th Fighter Aviation Regiment suffered from cracked radiators on 38 occasions. Often, entire regiments were reduced to a single flyable aircraft because no replacement parts were available.<ref>Mellinger 2006, pp. 24–25</ref> They also had difficulty with the more demanding requirements for fuel and oil quality of the Allison engines. A fair number of burned-out P-40s were re-engined with Soviet ] engines, but these performed relatively poorly and were relegated to rear area use.<ref name="Romanenko"/> | |||
===Japan=== | |||
The ] captured some examples of Curtiss P-40 Warhawks for tests and later operated a number based in ]. The Japanese appear to have had as many as ten flyable P-40Es.<ref></ref> For a brief period, during 1943, a few of them were actually used operationally by the 2 Hiko Chutai, 50th Hiko Sentai in the defense of ]. Testimony to this fact is given by ], a member of the 64th Hiko Sentai. In his memoirs, he says one Japanese Warhawk was shot down by mistake by a friendly ] "Sally" over Rangoon. | |||
{{Blockquote| quote=Actually, the P-40 could engage all Messerschmitts on equal terms, almost to the end of 1943. If you take into consideration all the characteristics of the P-40, then the Tomahawk was equal to the Bf 109F and the Kittyhawk was slightly better. Its speed and vertical and horizontal manoeuvre were good and fully competitive with enemy aircraft. Acceleration rate was a bit low, but when you got used to the engine, it was OK. We considered the P-40 a decent fighter plane.<ref name= "Drabkin p. 130">Drabkin 2007, p. 130.</ref> | |||
===Other nations=== | |||
|source=N. G. Golodnikov,<br />2nd Guards Fighter Regiment (GIAP),<br />Northern Aviation Fleet (VVS SF)<ref>Sokhorukov, Andrey, (translation) and James F. Gebhardt. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090404055409/http://lend-lease.airforce.ru/english/articles/golodnikov/part1.htm |date=4 April 2009 }} ''lend-lease.airforce.ru'', 2008. Retrieved: 26 January 2009.</ref>}} | |||
The P-40 was used by over two dozen countries during and after the war. The P-40 was used by Brazil, China, Chile, Egypt, Finland, Netherlands East Indies, ] and Turkey. The last P-40s in military service were serving with the ] (FAB) when they were finally retired as late as 1958. | |||
The P-40 saw the most front line use in Soviet hands in 1942 and early 1943. Deliveries over the Alaska-Siberia ] ferry route began in October 1942. It was used in the northern sectors and played a significant role in the ]. The most numerically important types were P-40B/C, P-40E and P-40K/M. By the time the better P-40F and N types became available, production of superior Soviet fighters had increased sufficiently so that the P-40 was replaced in most Soviet Air Force units by the ] and various later Yakovlev types. In spring 1943, Lt D.I. Koval of the ] gained ace status on the North Caucasian front, shooting down six German aircraft flying a P-40. Some Soviet P-40 squadrons had good combat records. Some Soviet pilots became aces on the P-40, though not as many as on the P-39 Airacobra, the most numerous Lend-Lease fighter used by the Soviet Union.<ref name="Romanenko"/> However, Soviet commanders thought the Kittyhawk significantly outclassed the Hurricane, although it was "not in the same league as the ]".<ref name="Drabkin p. 130" /><ref name="Gordon p. 437-438">Gordon 2008, pp. 437–438.</ref> | |||
In the Air War over Finland, several Soviet P-40s were shot down or had to crash land due to other reasons. The Finns, short of good aircraft, collected these and managed to repair one Warhawk, although it was mistakenly believed to be a Kittyhawk. This aircraft was attached to an operational squadron of the ], but lack of spares kept it on the ground, with the exception of a few evaluation flights. | |||
===Japan=== | |||
==Variants and development stages== | |||
The ] captured some P-40s and later operated a number in ]. The Japanese appear to have had as many as 10 flyable P-40Es.<ref> ''J-Aircraft.com''. Retrieved: 19 June 2010.</ref> For a brief period in 1943, a few of them were used operationally by 2 ''Hiko Chutai'', 50 ''Hiko Sentai'' (2nd Air Squadron, 50th Air Regiment) in the defense of ]. Testimony of this is given by ], a member of the 64 ''Hiko Sentai''. In his memoirs, he says one Japanese-operated P-40 was shot down in error by a friendly ] "Sally" over Rangoon. | |||
] | |||
{{see also|Comparison of P-40 variants}} | |||
* Departing from normal ] convention, there was no '''P-40A'''. Some records indicate this might have been reserved for a reconnaissance variant that was briefly in development by Curtiss, but quickly discarded. | |||
* Revised versions of the P-40 soon followed: the '''P-40B''' or '''Tomahawk IIA''' had extra .30 cal (7.62 mm) US, or ] (7.7 mm) machine guns in the wings and self-sealing tanks; the '''P-40C''' or '''Tomahawk IIB''' added underbelly drop tank and bomb shackles, as well as improved self-sealing fuel tanks and other minor revisions, but the extra weight did have a negative impact on aircraft performance. (All versions of the P-40 had a relatively low power-to-weight ratio compared to contemporary fighters.) | |||
* Only a small number of '''P-40D''' or '''Kittyhawk Mk I'''s were made—less than 50. With a new, larger Allison engine, slightly narrower fuselage, redesigned canopy, and improved cockpit, the P-40D eliminated the nose-mounted .50 cal guns and instead had a pair of .50 cal (12.7 mm) guns in each wing. The distinctive chin airscoop grew larger in order to adequately cool the large Allison engine. | |||
* Retrospective designation for a single prototype. The '''P-40A''' was a single camera-carrying aircraft. | |||
* The '''P-40E''' or '''P-40E-1''' was very similar in most respects to the P-40D, except for a slightly more powerful engine and an extra .50 in (12.7 mm) gun in each wing, bringing the total to six. Some aircraft also had small underwing bomb shackles. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk IA'''. The P-40E was the variant that bore the brunt of air to air combat by the type in the key period of early to mid 1942, for example with the first US squadrons to replace the AVG in China (the AVG was already transitioning to this type from the P-40B/C), the type used by the Australians at Milne Bay, by the New Zealand squadrons during most of their air to air combat, and by the RAF / Commonwealth in North Africa as the Kittyhawk IA. | |||
], Texas. The lead ship in a formation of P-40s is peeling off for the "attack" in a practice flight at the Army Air Forces advanced flying school. Selected aviation cadets were given transition training in these fighter planes before receiving their pilot's wings. 1943.]] | |||
* '''P-40F''' and '''P-40L''', which both featured a Packard Merlin engine in place of the normal Allison, and thus did not have the ] scoop on top of the nose. Performance for these models at higher altitudes was better than their Allison-engined cousins. The L in some cases also featured a fillet in front of the ], or a stretched fuselage to compensate for the higher torque. The P-40L was sometimes nicknamed "]," after a famous stripper of the era, due to its stripped-down condition. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces under the designation '''Kittyhawk Mk II''', a total of 330 Mk IIs were supplied to the RAF under Lend-Lease. The first 230 aircraft are sometimes known as the '''Kittyhawk Mk IIA'''. The P-40F/L was extensively used by US fighter groups operating in the Mediterranian Theater. | |||
* '''P-40G''' : 43 P-40 aircraft fitted with the wings of the Tomahawk Mk IIA. A total of 16 aircraft were supplied to the Soviet Union, and the rest to the US Army Air Force. It was later redesignated '''RP-40G'''. | |||
* '''P-40K''', an Allison-engined P-40L, with the nosetop scoop retained and the Allison configured scoop and cowl flaps. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk III''', it was widely used by US units in the CBI. | |||
* '''P-40M''', version generally similar to the P-40K, with a stretched fuselage like the P-40L and powered by an Allison V-1710-81 engine giving better performance at altitude (compared to previous Allison versions). It had some detail improvements and it was characterized by two small air scoops just before the exhaust pipes. Most of them were supplied to Allied countries (mainly UK and USSR), while some others remained in the USA for advanced training. It was also supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk. III'''. | |||
* '''P-40N''' (manufactured 1943-44), the final production model. The P-40N featured a stretched rear fuselage to counter the torque of the larger, late-war Allison engine, and the rear deck of the cockpit behind the pilot was cut down at a moderate slant to improve rearward visibility. A great deal of work was also done to try and eliminate excess weight to improve the Warhawk's climb rate. Early N production blocks dropped a .50 cal (12.7 mm) gun from each wing, bringing the total back to four; later production blocks reintroduced it after complaints from units in the field. Supplied to Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk IV'''. A total of 553 P-40Ns were acquired by the Royal Australian Air Force, making it the variant most commonly used by the RAAF. Subvariants of the P-40N ranged widely in specialization from stripped down four-gun hot rods which could reach the highest top speeds of any production variant of the P-40 (up to 378 mph), to overweight types with all the extras intended for fighter-bombing or even training missions. | |||
] | |||
* '''P-40P''' : The designation of 1,500 aircraft ordered with V-1650-1 engines, but actually built as the P-40N with V-1710-81 engines. | |||
* '''XP-40Q''' with a 4-bladed prop, cut-down rear fuselage and ], supercharger, squared-off wingtips and tail surfaces, and improved engine with two-speed supercharger was tested, but its performance was not enough of an improvement to merit production when compared to the contemporary late model '''P-47D'''s and '''P-51D'''s pouring off production lines. The XP-40Q was, however, the fastest of the P-40 series with a top speed of 422 mph as a result of the introduction of a high-altitude supercharger gear. (No P-40 model with a single-speed supercharger could even approach 400 mph or 640 km/h.) With the end of hostilities in Europe, the P-40 came to the end of its front line service. | |||
* '''P-40R''' : The designation of P-40F and P-40L aircraft, converted into training aircraft in 1944. | |||
* '''RP-40''' : Some American P-40s were converted into reconnaissance aircraft. | |||
* '''TP-40''' : Some P-40s were converted into two-seat trainers. | |||
== |
===Other nations=== | ||
] | |||
* ]: American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers), Chinese Air Force. (Boyington was later leader of the US Marine Corps' "]".) | |||
The P-40 was used by over two dozen countries during and after the war. The P-40 was used by ], ], ] and ]. The last P-40s in military service, used by the ] (FAB), were retired in 1954. | |||
* ]: RAAF, Australia's greatest World War II ace. (Caldwell scored 20.5 of his 28.5 kills while flying Tomahawks in North Africa.).<ref name="Shores"> Shores, Christopher and Williams, Clive. ''Aces High: A Further Tribute to the Most Notable Fighter Pilots of the British and Commonwealth Air Forces in WWII, v. 2''. London: Grub Street, 1994. ISBN 1-89869-700-0.</ref> | |||
* ], later known as TV/film comedian/actor '''Dan Rowan''': USAAF, Southwest Pacific theater. Scored two kills against Japanese aircraft before being shot down and seriously wounded. | |||
* ]: RCAF, 15.75 kills (12.5 on the P-40). (He wrote two books about Commonwealth Kittyhawk pilots in World War II.).<ref name="Shores">Shores, Christopher and Williams, Clive. ''Aces High: A Further Tribute to the Most Notable Fighter Pilots of the British and Commonwealth Air Forces in WWII, v. 2''. London: Grub Street, 1994. ISBN 1-89869-700-0.</ref> | |||
* ]: the highest scoring RNZAF and British Commonwealth ace in the Pacific theater. 5 of his 11 victories were claimed in Kittyhawks. | |||
* ], SAAF, the highest scoring air ace in a South African unit, with 15 kills (7 on the P-40). Missing in action,16 June 1942 after combat with JG 27 Bf 109s; his body was never found.<ref name="Shores">Shores, Christopher and Williams, Clive. ''Aces High: A Further Tribute to the Most Notable Fighter Pilots of the British and Commonwealth Air Forces in WWII, v. 2''. London: Grub Street, 1994. ISBN 1-89869-700-0.</ref> | |||
* ]: RAAF, later ], 1968-71. (Gorton survived two serious crashes. One required him to undergo extensive ], with his face being changed significantly as a result. When asked in later life what his most memorable flight had been, Gorton replied: "The one in which I got my face mixed up with the instrument panel of a Kittyhawk.") | |||
* ]: VVS, ace, twice ]. (Most of his 22 kills were scored in the P-40.) | |||
* ]: VVS, ace, twice Hero of the Soviet Union, scored 22 personal victories. | |||
* ]: Flying Tigers/USAAF, later commander of the US 23rd Fighter Group, in the ]. (Scored ten+ kills in the P-40.) | |||
* ]: USAAF, one of two US pilots to get airborne in a P-40 during the ], Taylor shot down two Japanese aircraft on 7 December 1941, and was wounded in the arm. | |||
* ]: RAAF, the only ] fighter pilot of World War II. | |||
* ]: USAAF, one of two US pilots to get airborne in a P-40 during the ] of 7 December 1941. Welch shot down three Japanese aircraft that day. | |||
In the air war over Finland, several Soviet P-40s were shot down or had to crash-land due to other reasons. The Finns, short of good aircraft, collected these and managed to repair one P-40M, P-40M-10-CU 43–5925, ''white 23'', which received ] serial number KH-51 (KH denoting "Kittyhawk", as the British designation of this type was Kittyhawk III). This aircraft was attached to an operational squadron HLeLv 32 of the ], but lack of spares kept it on the ground, with the exception of a few evaluation flights. | |||
==Operators== | |||
*{{AUS}} | |||
*{{BRA}} | |||
*{{flag|Canada|1921}} | |||
*{{CHL}} | |||
*{{China as ROC}} | |||
*{{flag|Egypt|1922}} | |||
*{{FIN}} | |||
*{{flagicon|France|free}} ] | |||
*{{flagicon|Japan}} ] | |||
*{{NLD}} | |||
*{{NZL}} | |||
*{{POL}} | |||
*{{flag|South Africa|1928}} | |||
*{{USSR}} | |||
*{{TUR}} | |||
*{{flag|United States|1912}} | |||
Several P-40Ns were used by the ] with ] against the Japanese before being used during the ] in Indonesia until February 1949.<ref>Baugher, Joseph. ''p40warhawk.com'', 14 November 2015. Retrieved: 17 April 2016.</ref> | |||
==Specifications (P-40E)== | |||
] in the cockpit of a ], she was head of the ] (WASP).]] | |||
{{aircraft specifications | |||
<!-- if you do not understand how to use this template, please ask at ] --> | |||
==Variants and development stages== | |||
<!-- please answer the following questions --> | |||
{{more citations needed section|date=October 2017}}<!--most entries here are not cited--> | |||
|plane or copter?=plane | |||
] | |||
|jet or prop?=prop | |||
{{See also|Curtiss P-40 Warhawk variants}} | |||
;XP-40 | |||
:The original Curtiss XP-40, ordered July 1937, was converted from the 10th P-36A by replacing the radial engine with a new Allison V-1710-19 engine. It flew for the first time in October 1938. | |||
This new liquid-cooled engine fighter had a radiator mounted under the rear fuselage | |||
but the prototype XP-40 was later modified and the radiator was moved forward under the engine. | |||
;P-40 | |||
:The P-40 (Curtiss Model 81A-1) was the first production variant, 199 built. | |||
;P-40A | |||
:One P-40 was modified with a camera installation in the rear fuselage and re-designated P-40A. | |||
*Revised versions of the P-40 soon followed: the '''P-40B''' or '''Tomahawk IIA''' had extra .30 in (7.62 mm) U.S., or ] (7.7 mm) machine guns in the wings and a partially protected fuel system; the '''P-40C''' or '''Tomahawk IIB''' added underbelly drop tank and bomb shackles, self-sealing fuel tanks and other minor revisions, but the extra weight did have a negative impact on aircraft performance. (All versions of the P-40 had a relatively low ] compared to contemporary fighters.) | |||
*Only a small number of '''P-40D''' or '''Kittyhawk Mk I'''s were made, fewer than 50. With a new, larger Allison engine, slightly narrower fuselage, redesigned canopy, and improved cockpit, the P-40D eliminated the nose-mounted .50 in (12.7 mm) guns and instead had a pair of .50 in (12.7 mm) guns in each wing. The distinctive chin airscoop grew larger so they could adequately cool the large Allison engine. | |||
*Retrospective designation for a single prototype. The '''P-40A''' was a single camera-carrying aircraft. | |||
*The '''P-40E''' or '''P-40E-1''' was similar in most respects to the P-40D, except for a slightly more powerful engine and an extra .50 in (12.7 mm) gun in each wing, bringing the total to six. Some aircraft also had small underwing bomb shackles. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk IA'''. The P-40E was the variant that bore the brunt of air-to-air combat by the type in the key period of early to mid 1942, for example with the first US squadrons to replace the AVG in China (the AVG was already transitioning to this type from the P-40B/C), the type used by the Australians at Milne Bay, by the New Zealand squadrons during most of their air-to-air combat, and by the RAF/Commonwealth in North Africa as the Kittyhawk IA. | |||
] | |||
<!-- Now, fill out the specs. Please include units where appropriate (main comes first, alt in parentheses). If an item doesn't apply, like capacity, leave it blank. For additional lines, end your alt units with a right parenthesis ")" and start a new, fully-formatted line beginning with an asterisk "*" --> | |||
], Texas. The lead ship in a formation of P-40s is peeling off for the "attack" in a practice flight at the US Army Air Forces advanced flying school. Selected aviation cadets were given transition training in these fighters before receiving their pilot's wings, 1943.]] | |||
*'''P-40F''' and '''P-40L''', which both featured ] engine in place of the normal Allison, and thus did not have the ] scoop on top of the nose. Performance for these models at higher altitudes was better than their Allison-engined cousins. The L in some cases also featured a fillet in front of the ], or a stretched fuselage to compensate for the higher torque. The P-40L was sometimes nicknamed "]", after a famous stripper of the era, due to its stripped-down condition. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces under the designation '''Kittyhawk Mk II''', a total of 330 Mk IIs were supplied to the RAF under Lend-Lease. The first 230 aircraft are sometimes known as the '''Kittyhawk Mk IIA'''. The P-40F/L was extensively used by U.S. fighter groups operating in the Mediterranean Theater. | |||
|ref= | |||
*'''P-40G''': 43 P-40 aircraft fitted with the wings of the Tomahawk Mk IIA. A total of 16 aircraft were supplied to the Soviet Union, and the rest to the US Army Air Forces. It was later redesignated '''RP-40G'''. | |||
*'''P-40K''', an Allison-engined P-40L, with the nose-top scoop retained and the Allison-configured nose radiators scoop, cowl flaps and vertical-stabilizer-to-fuselage fillet. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk III''', it was widely used by US units in the CBI. | |||
*'''P-40M''', version generally similar to the P-40K, with a stretched fuselage like the P-40L and powered by an Allison V-1710-81 engine giving better performance at altitude (compared to previous Allison versions). It had some detail improvements and it was characterized by two small air scoops just before the exhaust pipes. Most of them were supplied to Allied countries (mainly UK and USSR), while some others remained in the US for advanced training. It was also supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk. III'''. | |||
*'''P-40N''' (manufactured 1943–44), the final production model. The P-40N featured a stretched rear fuselage to counter the torque of the more powerful, late-war Allison engine, and the rear deck of the cockpit behind the pilot was cut down at a moderate slant to improve rearward visibility. A great deal of work was also done to try and eliminate excess weight to improve the Warhawk's climb rate. Early N production blocks dropped a .50 in (12.7 mm) gun from each wing, bringing the total back to four; later production blocks reintroduced it after complaints from units in the field. Supplied to Commonwealth air forces as the '''Kittyhawk Mk IV'''. A total of 553 P-40Ns were acquired by the Royal Australian Air Force, making it the variant most commonly used by the RAAF. Subvariants of the P-40N ranged widely in specialization from stripped down four-gun "hot rods" that could reach the highest top speeds of any production variant of the P-40 (up to 380 mph), to overweight types with all the extras intended for fighter-bombing or even training missions. The 15,000th P-40 was an N model decorated with the markings of 28 nations that had employed any of Curtiss-Wright's various aircraft products, not just P-40s. "These spectacular markings gave rise to the erroneous belief that the P-40 series had been used by all 28 countries."<ref>McDowell 1968, p. 68.</ref> Since the P-40N was by 1944 used mainly as a ground attack aircraft in Europe, it was nicknamed '''B-40''' by pilots.<ref>Vader 1970, p. 137.</ref> Survivors redesignated as ZF-40N in June 1948. | |||
] | |||
*'''P-40P''': The designation of 1,500 aircraft ordered with V-1650-1 engines, but actually built as the P-40N with V-1710-81 engines. | |||
*'''XP-40Q:''' Three P-40N modified with a 4-bladed prop, cut-down rear fuselage and ], four guns, squared-off wingtips and tail surfaces, and improved engine with two-speed supercharger. Even with these changes, its performance was not enough of an improvement to merit production when compared to the contemporary late model '''P-47D'''s and '''P-51D'''s pouring off production lines. The XP-40Q was, however, the fastest of the P-40 series with a top speed of {{convert|422|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} as a result of the introduction of a high-altitude supercharger gear. (No P-40 model with a single-speed supercharger could even approach {{convert|400|mph|km/h|abbr=on}}) | |||
*'''P-40R''': The designation of P-40F and P-40L aircraft that had Allison engines retrofitted in the field for standardization and logistics. | |||
*'''RP-40''': Some American P-40s were converted into reconnaissance aircraft. | |||
*'''TP-40''': Some P-40s were converted into two-seat trainers. | |||
*'''Twin P-40''': A single photo exists of a P-40 mocked up with two Merlin engines, mounted atop the wings, over the main landing gear.<ref>Donald 1997, p. 291.</ref> | |||
==Operators== | |||
|crew=1 | |||
] | |||
|length main=31 ft 8 in | |||
] | |||
|length alt=9.66 m | |||
] | |||
|span main=37 ft 4 in | |||
;{{AUS}} | |||
|span alt=11.38 m | |||
* ] | |||
|height main=12 ft 4 in | |||
;{{Flag|Brazil|1889}} | |||
|height alt=3.76 m | |||
* ] | |||
|area main=235.94 ft² | |||
;{{Flag|Canada|1921}} | |||
|area alt=21.92 m² | |||
* ] | |||
|empty weight main=6,350 lb | |||
;{{Flagcountry|Nationalist government}} | |||
|empty weight alt=2,880 kg | |||
* ] | |||
|loaded weight main=8,280 lb | |||
;{{Flag|Egypt|1922}} | |||
|loaded weight alt=3,760 kg | |||
* ] | |||
|max takeoff weight main=8,810 lb | |||
;{{FIN}} | |||
|max takeoff weight alt=4,000 kg | |||
* ] | |||
;{{Flagcountry|French Third Republic}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{Flag|Indonesia}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{flag|Empire of Japan}} | |||
*] – Captured P-40s. | |||
;{{NLD}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{NZL}}: ] | |||
;{{POL}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{Flag|South Africa|1928}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{USSR}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
;{{TUR}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{UK}} | |||
* ] | |||
;{{Flag|United States|1912}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Surviving aircraft== | |||
|engine (prop)=]-39 | |||
{{Main|List of surviving Curtiss P-40s}} | |||
|type of prop=liquid-cooled ] | |||
]]] | |||
|number of props=1 | |||
|power main=1,150 hp | |||
|power alt=860 kW | |||
Of the 13,738 P-40s built, only 28 remain airworthy, with three of them being converted to dual-controls/dual-seat configuration. Approximately 13 aircraft are on static display and another 36 airframes are under restoration for either display or flight.<ref name="pioneeraero">{{cite web |last=McSweeny |first=Paul |title=Surviving Hawk 75, P-36 and P-40 series aircraft |url=http://www.pioneeraero.co.nz/p-40_serial_numbers.htm |website=Surviving Curtiss Fighters |access-date=12 April 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120514044625/http://www.pioneeraero.co.nz/p-40_serial_numbers.htm |archive-date=14 May 2012 |date=3 June 2004}}</ref> | |||
|max speed main=360 mph | |||
{{clear}} | |||
|max speed alt=310 knots, 580 km/h | |||
|cruise speed main=270 mph | |||
|cruise speed alt=235 knots, 435 km/h | |||
|range main=650 mi | |||
|range alt=560 nm, 1,100 km | |||
|ceiling main=29,000 ft | |||
|ceiling alt=8,800 m | |||
|climb rate main=2,100 ft/min | |||
|climb rate alt=11 m/s | |||
|loading main=35.1 lb/ft² | |||
|loading alt=171.5 kg/m² | |||
|power/mass main=0.14 hp/lb | |||
|power/mass alt=230 W/kg | |||
==Notable P-40 pilots== | |||
|guns=6× .50 in (12.7 mm) ]s, 281 rounds per gun | |||
] in the cockpit of a P-40 fighter aircraft. She was head of the ] (WASP).]] | |||
|bombs=1,500 lb (680 kg) on three hardpoints | |||
] | |||
*]: RAAF ace (11 victories); also a member of the ]. | |||
*]: AVG/US Marine Corps; later commanded USMC ], the "Black Sheep Squadron". | |||
*]: RAAF, highest-scoring P-40 pilot from any air force (22 victories); highest-scoring Allied pilot in North Africa;<ref name="Alexander">{{cite book |last1=Alexander |first1=Kristin |title=Clive Caldwell, air ace |url=https://archive.org/details/clivecaldwellair00alex |url-access=limited |date=2006 |publisher=Allen & Unwin |location=Crows Nest, NSW |isbn=1-74114-705-0 |page=}}</ref> Australia's highest-scoring ace in World War II (28.5 victories). | |||
*]: USAAF; leading US P-40 ace in the Mediterranean theater, with 10 claims; CO 60th Fighter Squadron, 33rd Fighter Group; retired with the rank of Major General. | |||
*]: commander, 1st American Volunteer Group (AVG; better known as the "Flying Tigers"), Chinese Air Force. | |||
*], the CO of the Chinese Air Force P-40E-equipped ] and ace who famously "hijacked" a USAAF ] at ] as it was being raided by ] aircraft; he pursued the raiders shooting down two ] bombers, while 11 of his comrade's P-40Es were destroyed on the ground in that raid.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Chen|first=C. Peter|date=2016|title=Zhou Zhikai|url=https://ww2db.com/person_bio.php?person_id=969|access-date=2021-01-05|website=WW2DB|quote=Captain Zhou Zhikai (Chou Chih-kai) who had just landed in a P-40E fighter after a ground support mission, commandeered a P-66 Vanguard fighter belonging to US Army Air Forces parked nearby and shot down two Ki-48 aircraft and damaged another. Zhou was later awarded the Order of Blue Sky and White Sun for this action.}}</ref> | |||
*Daniel H. David: USAAF; later famous as the comedian and actor ]; scored two victories and was wounded, while flying P-40s in the South West Pacific. | |||
*]: RAF, the leading British P-40 ace, with 13 victories. | |||
*]: RAF Leading Allied ace in the Mediterranean theater with 27 victories (including eight in P-40); post-war a test pilot and holder of the world air speed record. | |||
*]: RCAF, 15.75 victories (12 on the P-40); also wrote two books about British Commonwealth Kittyhawk pilots.<ref name="Shores">Shores and Ring 1969</ref>{{page needed|date=November 2023}} | |||
*]: RNZAF, the highest scoring British Commonwealth ace in the Pacific theater (11 victories), including five victories in Kittyhawks. | |||
*]: SAAF, the highest scoring air ace in a South African unit, with 15 victories (seven on the P-40); missing in action since 16 June 1942.<ref name="Shores"/> | |||
*]: USAAF; 18 victory claims (including three in P-40s) while flying for the 325th Fighter Group in North Africa and Italy. | |||
*]: RAAF; ], 1968–1971. Gorton survived a near-fatal crash in a Hurricane IIb at Singapore in 1942; later flew Kittyhawks with ] in New Guinea and became an instructor on the type. | |||
*]: USAAF; equal top-scoring US P-40 pilot (13 victory claims), all over China with the 75th FS (23rd FG), 1942–1943; killed in action. | |||
*]: AVG/USAAF, 2nd Squadron AVG and 23rd FG USAAF, 12¼ P-40 victories (18¼ total). | |||
*]: AVG/USAAF, equal top-scoring US P-40 pilot (13 victories); later commander of USAF ] and retired with the rank of General (four star).<ref>''United States Air Force Museum'' 1975, p. 26.</ref> | |||
*]: AVG/USAAF, six victories in P-40s; later, the only fighter pilot to receive the ] for service over Europe, while flying a P-51; retired with the rank of Brigadier-General in 1966. | |||
*]: VVS; the highest-scoring Soviet P-40 ace;<ref name="Romanenko"/> credited with 22 victories while flying Hurricanes, P-40s and P-39s; twice awarded ] (''GSS''); also awarded the British ]. | |||
*]: (Pyotr Afanasyevich Pokryshev) AV-MF (Soviet Naval); twice awarded ''GSS''; 11 victory claims (out of a total of 22) made while flying P-40s, as commander of 154th IAP.<ref name="Romanenko"/> | |||
*]: AV-MF (Soviet Naval Aviation); Soviet quadruple (25 victory) ace and twice awarded ''GSS''; shot down three Ju-88 bombers in one engagement while flying a P-40E, over the Baltic.<ref name="Romanenko"/> | |||
*]: USAAF, commander of the 23rd FG, China; more than 10 victories in P-40s. | |||
*]: USAAF; one of only two US pilots to get airborne (in a P-40) during the ] (7 December 1941), during which he shot down two aircraft and was wounded in the arm. | |||
*]: RAAF; pre-war star of ]; became an ace flying Spitfires in the UK during 1941, before flying Kittyhawks over New Guinea and Australia; commanded 76 Sqn RAAF at the ] (1942); killed in an accident while flying a P-40 (1943). | |||
*]: USAAF; six victory claims while flying P-40s over China. | |||
* ]: RAAF; 12½ victory claims while flying P-40s over North Africa. | |||
*]: USAAF; while flying P-40s, Wagner became the first USAAF ace of the war, during the Philippines campaign (1941–1942). | |||
*]: RAAF, the only ] fighter pilot of World War II. | |||
*]: USAAF; one of only two US fighter pilots to get airborne during the first attack on Pearl Harbor, in a P-40; Welch claimed three Japanese aircraft that day. | |||
==Specifications (P-40E)== | |||
] | |||
{{Aircraft specs | |||
|ref=Curtiss Aircraft 1907–1947,<ref name=Bowers>Bowers 1979 pp 474–504</ref> America's hundred thousand : the U.S. production fighter aircraft of World War II<ref name="Dean">{{cite book |last1=Dean |first1=Francis H. |title=America's hundred thousand : the U.S. production fighter aircraft of World War II |date=1997 |publisher=Schiffer Pub |location=Atglen, Pennsylvania |isbn=0-7643-0072-5 |page=235}}</ref> | |||
|prime units?=imp | |||
|crew=One | |||
|length ft=31 | |||
|length in=8.5 | |||
|span ft=37 | |||
|span in=3.5 | |||
|height ft=10 | |||
|height in=8 | |||
|wing area sqft=236 | |||
|airfoil=root: ]; tip :] | |||
|empty weight lb=5922|gross weight lb=8515 | |||
<!--Powerplant--> | |||
|eng1 number=1|eng1 name=] | |||
|eng1 type=V-12 liquid-cooled ] | |||
|eng1 hp=1240 | |||
|prop blade number=3 | |||
|prop name=] electric constant-speed propeller | |||
|prop dia ft=|prop dia in= | |||
<!--Performance--> | |||
|max speed mph=361 | |||
|max speed note=at {{cvt|15000|ft}}<ref>, United States War Department (December 1, 1941)</ref> | |||
|cruise speed mph=308 | |||
|range miles=716 | |||
|range note=at 70% power | |||
|ceiling ft=29100 | |||
|time to altitude={{cvt|15000|ft}} in 6 minutes 15 seconds | |||
|wing loading lb/sqft=35.1 | |||
|power/mass={{cvt|0.14|hp/lb}} | |||
<!--Armament--> | |||
|guns=6 × {{cvt|0.5|in|1}} ]s in the wings | |||
|bombs={{cvt|250|to|1000|lb}} bombs to a total of {{cvt|2000|lb}} on hardpoints under the fuselage and two underwing | |||
}} | }} | ||
==Notable appearances in media== | |||
==Popular culture== | |||
<!-- ===============({{NoMoreCruft}})===============--> | |||
*In the ] movie: '']'', (1942) real P-40s are featured, along with some inaccurate studio models. | |||
<!-- Please READ ] and ] before adding any "Popular culture" items. | |||
* Ronald Reagan appears in the ''Identification Of The Japanese Zero (Training Film)'' (1942) as a young pilot learning to recognize the difference between a P-40 and a Japanese Zero. In this film Reagan mistakes a friend's P-40 for a Japanese Zero and tries to shoot it down. In the end, Reagan gets a chance to shoot down a real Zero. | |||
* In the film, '']'' (1945) about the Flying Tigers and the USAAF pilots who replaced them in the ] and ], real P-40s are featured. | |||
* In '']'' (1970), P-40s are depicted at the ], both being shot up on the ground and shooting down Zeros. | |||
* ]'s comedy '']''(1979) features a P-40E in the less-than-capable hands of ]'s character, "Wild Bill" Kelso. | |||
* ] featured the Curtiss P-40 as a controlable airplane, called a ]. | |||
* In the film: '']'' (2001) P-40Es are the main aircraft seen in the film besides Japanese Zeros. Rafe Macauley and Danny Walker fly P-40s during the raid on Pearl Harbor being the only two pilots able to get in the air, recreating the actual event where ] and Ken Taylor operated from a satellite field. A P-40N and a P-40E in this movie came from the in ]. | |||
* The ]/] ], '']'' (2004), has a ] twin-seat fighter aircraft patterned after the P-40 performing amazing feats, including doubling as a submarine. | |||
*In the play written by ], ''],'' Joe Keller and his partner, Steve Deever, knowingly sold cracked cylinder heads to the Army Air Force. As a result, 21 P-40s crashed in Australia. For this, Keller and Deever served time in prison, although Keller was released shortly after when he was found innocent. At the beginning of the play, his partner is still in prison. | |||
Please do not add the many minor appearances of the aircraft. This section is only for major cultural appearances where the aircraft plays a MAJOR part in the story line, or has an "especially notable" role in what is listed. A verifiable source proving the appearance's notability may be required. Random cruft, including ALL Ace Combat, Battlefield, and Metal Gear Solid appearances, and ALL anime/fiction lookalike speculation, WILL BE removed. | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
* Alexander, Kristin. ''Clive Caldwell: Air Ace''. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2006. ISBN 1-74114-705-0. | |||
* Bowers, Peter M. and Angellucci, E. ''The American Fighter''. New York: Orion Books, 1987. ISBN 0-517-56588-9. | |||
* Brown, Russell. ''Desert Warriors: Australian P-40 Pilots at War in the Middle East and North Africa, 1941-1943''. Maryborough, Australia: Banner Books, 1983. ISBN 1-875-59322-5. | |||
* Higham, Robin. ''Flying American Combat Aircraft of WW II''. Manhattan, Kansas: Sunflower University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-8117-3124-3. | |||
* Horn, Alex. ''Wings Over the Pacific: The RNZAF in the Pacific Air War''. Auckland: Random House New Zealand, 1992. ISBN 1-86941-152-8. | |||
* Johnsen, F.A. ''P-40 Warhawk (Warbird History)''. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbooks International, 1999. ISBN 0-7603-0253-7. | |||
* Lavigne, J.P.A. Michel and Edwards, James F. ''Kittyhawk Pilot''. Battleford, Saskatchewan : Turner-Warwick, 1983. ISBN 0-919899-10-2. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Warhawk Aces of the MTO (Osprey Aircraft of the Aces No 43)''. London:Osprey Publishing, 2002. ISBN 1-84176-288-1. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Warhawk Aces of the Pacific (Aircraft of the Aces)''. London: Osprey, 2003. ISBN 1-84176-536-8. | |||
* Scott, Robert L. ''Damned to Glory''. New York: Scribner's, 1944. No ISBN. | |||
* Shores, Christopher and Ring, Hans. ''Fighters over the Desert''. London: Neville Spearman Limited, 1969. ISBN 0-668-02070-9. | |||
* Thomas, Andrew. ''Tomahawk and Kittyhawk Aces of the RAF and Commonwealth''. London: Osprey Books, 2002. ISBN 1-84176-083-8. | |||
==External links== | |||
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If your item has been removed, please discuss it on the talk page FIRST. A verifiable source proving the appearance's notability may be required. If a consensus is reached to include your item, a regular editor of this page will add it back. Thank you for your cooperation.--> | |||
==Related content== | |||
<!-- ===============({{NoMoreCruft}})=============== --> | |||
{{Commons|Curtiss P-40}} | |||
{{Main|Aircraft in fiction#P-40 Warhawk|l1=P-40 Warhawk}} | |||
{{aircontent | |||
<!-- | |||
READ note at top about notability, major roles and look-a-likes before adding anything; take any potentially contentious submissions to the talk page. See ] for ] in ]. --> | |||
==See also== | |||
{{Portal|Aviation}} | |||
{{Aircontent | |||
|related= | |related= | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
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* ], homebuilt replica | |||
* ], homebuilt replica | |||
* ], homebuilt replica | |||
* ], homebuilt replica | |||
}} | |||
==References== | |||
|sequence= | |||
===Footnotes=== | |||
] - ] - ] - '''P-40''' - ] - ] - ] | |||
{{reflist|group=N}} | |||
===Notes=== | |||
|lists= | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
===Bibliography=== | |||
|see also= | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
* Angelucci, Enzo and Paolo Matricardi. ''World Aircraft: World War II, Volume II'' (Sampson Low Guides). Maidenhead, UK: Sampson Low, 1978. {{ISBN|0-562-00096-8}}. | |||
* Arena, Nino. ''Macchi 205 "Veltro" (in Italian)''. Modena: Stem Mucchi Editore, 1994. | |||
* Berliner, Don. ''Surviving Fighter Aircraft of World War Two: Fighters''. London: Pen & Sword Aviation, 2011. {{ISBN|978-1-8488-4265-6}}. | |||
* Boyne, Walter J. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994. {{ISBN|0-671-79370-5}}. | |||
* Boyne, Walter J. and Michael Fopp. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2002. {{ISBN|1-57607-345-9}}. | |||
* Bowers, Peter M. ''Curtiss Aircraft, 1907–1947''. London: Putnam & Company Ltd., 1979. {{ISBN|0-370-10029-8}}. | |||
* Bowers, Peter M. and Enzo Angellucci. ''The American Fighter''. New York: Orion Books, 1987. {{ISBN|0-517-56588-9}}. | |||
* Brown, Russell. ''Desert Warriors: Australian P-40 Pilots at War in the Middle East and North Africa, 1941–1943''. Maryborough, Australia: Banner Books, 1983. {{ISBN|1-875593-22-5}}. | |||
* Coyle, Brendan. ''War on Our Doorstep: The Unknown Campaign on North America's West Coast''. Victoria, BC: Heritage House Publishing Co. Ltd., 2002. {{ISBN|978-1-894384-46-9}}. | |||
* Crawford, Jerry L. ''Messerschmitt Bf 110 Zerstörer in action''. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1977. {{ISBN|0-89747-029-X}}. | |||
* Donald, David, ed. "Curtiss Model 81/87 (P-40 Warhawk)"''Encyclopedia of World Aircraft''. Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada: Prospero, 1997. {{ISBN|1-85605-375-X}}. | |||
* Drabkin, Artem. ''The Red Air Force at War: Barbarossa and the Retreat to Moscow – Recollections of Fighter Pilots on the Eastern Front''. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK: Pen & Sword Military, 2007. {{ISBN|1-84415-563-3}}. | |||
* Ford, Daniel. ''Flying Tigers: Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941–1942''. Washington, D.C.: HarperCollins|Smithsonian Books, 2007. {{ISBN|0-06-124655-7}}. | |||
* Ethell, Jeffrey L. and Joe Christy. ''P-40 Hawks at War''. Shepperton, UK: Ian Allan Ltd., 1979. {{ISBN|0-7110-0983-X}}. | |||
* Ford, Daniel. ''100 Hawks for China: The Story of the Shark-Nosed P-40 That Made the Flying Tigers Famous''. Warbird Books, 2014 | |||
* Glancey, Jonathan. ''Spitfire: The Illustrated Biography''. London: Atlantic Books, 2006. {{ISBN|978-1-84354-528-6}}. | |||
* Gordon, Yefim. ''Soviet Air Power in World War 2''. Hinckley, Leicestershire, UK: Midland Ian Allan Publishing, 2008. {{ISBN|978-1-85780-304-4}}. | |||
* Green, William. ''War Planes of the Second World War, Volume Four: Fighters''. London: MacDonald & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., 1961 (Sixth impression 1969). {{ISBN|0-356-01448-7}}. | |||
* Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. ''WW2 Aircraft Fact Files: US Army Air Force Fighters, Part 1''. London: Macdonald and Jane's Publishers Ltd., 1977. {{ISBN|0-356-08218-0}}. | |||
* Gunston, Bill. ''Gli aerei della 2a Guerra Mondiale''. Milan: Alberto Peruzzo Editore, 1984. | |||
* Gunston, Bill, ed. ''The Illustrated History of Fighters''. New York, New York: Exeter Books Division of Simon & Schuster, 1981. {{ISBN|0-89673-103-0}}. | |||
* Hardesty, Von. ''Red Phoenix: The Rise of Soviet Air Power 1941–1945''. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1982. {{ISBN|0-87474-510-1}}. | |||
* Higham, Robin. ''Flying American Combat Aircraft of WW II''. Manhattan, Kansas: Sunflower University Press, 2004. {{ISBN|0-8117-3124-3}}. | |||
* Horn, Alex. ''Wings Over the Pacific: The RNZAF in the Pacific Air War''. Auckland, NZ: Random House New Zealand, 1992. {{ISBN|1-86941-152-8}} | |||
* Johnsen, F.A. ''P-40 Warhawk'' (Warbird History). St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbooks International, 1999. {{ISBN|0-7603-0253-7}} | |||
* King, John. ''The Whole Nine Yards: The Story of an Anzac P-40''. Auckland, NZ: Reed Books, 2002. {{ISBN|0-7900-0835-1}}. (A P-40 with ]) | |||
* Kinzey, Bert. ''Attack on Pearl Harbor: Japan Awakens a Sleeping Giant''. Blacksburg, Virginia: Military Aviation Archives, 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-9844665-0-4}}. | |||
* {{cite web |first= Klemen |last= L |date= 2000 |title= Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942 |url= https://warfare.gq/dutcheastindies/index.html |access-date= 30 March 2021 |archive-date= 26 July 2011 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110726053035/http://www.dutcheastindies.webs.com/index.html |url-status= dead }} | |||
*{{cite journal |last1=Kulikov|first1=Victor|title=Le Curtiss P-40 sur le Front de l'Est |journal=Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire |date=May 2000 |issue=86 |pages=2–16 |trans-title= The Curtiss P-40 on the Eastern Front |language=fr |issn=1243-8650}} | |||
* Lavigne, J. P. A. Michel and James F. Edwards. ''Kittyhawk Pilot''. Battleford, Saskatchewan, Canada: Turner-Warwick, 1983. {{ISBN|0-919899-10-2}}. | |||
* {{cite book |last = Lawrence |first = Joseph |title = The Observer's Book Of Airplanes |location = London and New York |publisher = Frederick Warne & Co |year = 1945}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last1=Ledet|first1=Michel|title=Des avions alliés aux couleurs japonais |journal=Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire |date=April 2002 |issue=109 |pages=17–21 |trans-title=Allied Aircraft in Japanese Colors|language=fr |issn=1243-8650}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last1=Ledet|first1=Michel|title=Des avions alliés aux couleurs japonais |journal= Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire |date=May 2002 |issue=110 |pages=16–23|language=fr |issn=1243-8650}} | |||
* Matricardi, Paolo. ''Aerei Militari: Caccia e Ricognitori – Volume 1'' (in Italian). Milan: Electa Mondadori, 2006. | |||
* McDowell, Earnest R. ''Famous Aircraft: The P-40 Kittyhawk''. New York: ARCO Publishing Company, 1968. | |||
* Mellinger, George. ''Soviet Lend-Lease Fighter Aces of World War 2'' (Aircraft of the Aces No. 74). Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2006. {{ISBN|1-84603-041-2}}. | |||
* Merriam, Ray. ''U. S. Warplanes of World War II''. Bennington, Virginia: Merriam Press, 2000. {{ISBN|1-57638-167-6}}. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Warhawk Aces of the MTO'' (Aircraft of the Aces No. 43). London: Osprey Publishing, 2002. {{ISBN|1-84176-288-1}}. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Warhawk Aces of the Pacific'' (Aircraft of the Aces). London: Osprey Publishing, 2003. {{ISBN|1-84176-536-8}}. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Warhawk Aces of the CBI'' (Aircraft of the Aces No. 35). Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2000. {{ISBN|1-84176-079-X}}. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Warhawk vs Ki-43 Oscar: China 1944–45''. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2008. {{ISBN|1-84603-295-4}}. | |||
* Molesworth, Carl. ''P-40 Soviet Lend-Lease Fighter Aces of World War 2'' (Aircraft of the Aces No. 74). Oxford, UL: Osprey Publishing, 2006. {{ISBN|1-84603-041-2}}. | |||
* Müller, Rolf-Dieter. ''Der Bombenkrieg 1939–1945'' (in German). Berlin: Links Verlag, 2004. {{ISBN|3-86153-317-0}}. | |||
* Murphy, Justin D. and Matthew A. McNiece. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2009. {{ISBN|978-1-85109-498-1}}. | |||
* Neulen, Hans Werner. Ramsbury, Marlborough, UK: The Crowood Press, 2005. {{ISBN|1-86126-799-1}}. | |||
* Pentland, Geoffrey. ''The P-40 Kittyhawk in Service''. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: Kookaburra Technical Publications Pty. Ltd., 1974. {{ISBN|0-85880-012-8}}. | |||
* Snedden, Robert. ''World War II Combat Aircraft''. Bristol, UK: Factfinders Parragon, 1997. {{ISBN|0-7525-1684-1}}. | |||
* Rudge, Chris. ''Air-To-Air: The Story Behind the Air-to-Air Combat Claims of the RNZAF''. Lyttelton, Canterbury, New Zealand: Adventure Air, 2003 {{ISBN|0-473-09724-9}}. | |||
* Scott, Robert L. ''Damned to Glory''. New York: Scribner's, 1944. No ISBN. | |||
* Scutts, Jerry. ''Bf 109 Aces of North Africa and the Mediterranean''. London: Osprey Publishing, 1994. {{ISBN|1-85532-448-2}}. | |||
* Shamburger, Page and Joe Christy. ''The Curtiss Hawk Fighters''. New York: Sports Car Press Ltd., 1971. {{ISBN|0-87112-041-0}}. | |||
*{{cite magazine|last=Shores|first=Christopher|title=The Annals of the Kittyhawks|magazine=] |date=1977|issue=3 |pages=70–79 |issn=0143-5450}} | |||
* Shores, Christopher and Hans Ring. ''Fighters over the Desert''. London: Neville Spearman Limited, 1969. {{ISBN|0-668-02070-9}}. | |||
* Shores, Christopher and Clive Williams. ''Aces High: A Further Tribute to the Most Notable Fighter Pilots of the British and Commonwealth Air Forces in WWII, v. 2''. London: Grub Street, 1994. {{ISBN|1-898697-00-0}}. | |||
* Thomas, Andrew. ''Tomahawk and Kittyhawk Aces of the RAF and Commonwealth''. London: Osprey Books, 2002. {{ISBN|1-84176-083-8}}. | |||
* ''United States Air Force Museum Guidebook''. Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio: Air Force Museum Foundation, 1975. | |||
* Vader, John. ''Pacific Hawk''. London: MacDonald & Co, 1970. | |||
* Weal, John. ''Jagdgeschwader 27 'Afrika' ''. Oxford, UK: Osprey, 2003. {{ISBN|1-84176-538-4}}. | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==External links== | |||
}} | |||
{{Commons category|Curtiss P-40 Warhawk|Curtiss P-40}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 03:58, 21 January 2025
American WWII fighter "P-40" redirects here. For other uses, see P-40 (disambiguation).
P-40 Warhawk Tomahawk / Kittyhawk | |
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A restored P-40M Warhawk landing at Season Premier Airshow, in Shuttleworth, UK | |
General information | |
Type | Fighter aircraft |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Curtiss-Wright |
Primary users | United States Army Air Forces Royal Air Force Royal Australian Air Force Royal Canadian Air Force |
Number built | 13,738 |
History | |
Manufactured | 1939–1944 |
Introduction date | 1939 |
First flight | 14 October 1938 |
Retired | Brazilian Air Force (1958) |
Developed from | Curtiss P-36 Hawk |
Variants | Curtiss XP-46 |
The Curtiss P-40 Warhawk is an American single-engined, single-seat, all-metal fighter-bomber that first flew in 1938. The P-40 design was a modification of the previous Curtiss P-36 Hawk which reduced development time and enabled a rapid entry into production and operational service. The Warhawk was used by most Allied powers during World War II, and remained in frontline service until the end of the war. It was the third most-produced American fighter of World War II, after the North American P-51 Mustang and Republic P-47 Thunderbolt; by November 1944, when production of the P-40 ceased, 13,738 had been built, all at Curtiss-Wright Corporation's main production facilities in Buffalo, New York.
P-40 Warhawk was the name the United States Army Air Corps gave the plane, and after June 1941, the USAAF adopted the name for all models, making it the official name in the U.S. for all P-40s. The British Commonwealth and Soviet air forces used the name Tomahawk for models equivalent to the original P-40, P-40B, and P-40C, and the name Kittyhawk for models equivalent to the P-40D and all later variants. P-40s first saw combat with the British Commonwealth squadrons of the Desert Air Force in the Middle East and North African campaigns, during June 1941. No. 112 Squadron Royal Air Force, was among the first to operate Tomahawks in North Africa and the unit was the first Allied military aviation unit to feature the "shark mouth" logo, copying similar markings on some Luftwaffe Messerschmitt Bf 110 twin-engine fighters.
The lack of a two-speed supercharger for the P-40's Allison V-1710 engine's made it inferior to Luftwaffe fighters such as the Messerschmitt Bf 109 or the Focke-Wulf Fw 190 in high-altitude combat and it was rarely used in operations in Northwest Europe. However, between 1941 and 1944, the P-40 played a critical role with Allied air forces in three major theaters: North Africa, the Southwest Pacific, and China. It also had a significant role in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, Alaska and Italy. The P-40's performance at high altitudes was not as important in those theaters, where it served as an air superiority fighter, bomber escort and fighter-bomber.
Although it gained a postwar reputation as a mediocre design, suitable only for close air support, more recent research including scrutiny of the records of Allied squadrons indicates that this was not the case; the P-40 performed surprisingly well as an air superiority fighter, at times suffering severe losses, but also inflicting a very heavy toll on enemy aircraft. Based on war-time victory claims, over 200 Allied fighter pilots – from the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa, the US and the Soviet Union – became aces flying the P-40. These included at least 20 double aces, mostly over North Africa, China, Burma and India, the South West Pacific and Eastern Europe. The P-40 offered the additional advantages of low cost and durability, which kept it in production as a ground-attack aircraft long after it was obsolescent as a fighter.
Design and development
Origins
On 14 October 1938, Curtiss test pilot Edward Elliott flew the prototype XP-40 on its first flight in Buffalo. The XP-40 was the 10th production Curtiss P-36 Hawk, with its Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp 14-cylinder air-cooled radial engine replaced at the direction of Chief Engineer Don R. Berlin by a liquid-cooled, supercharged Allison V-1710 V-12 engine. The first prototype placed the glycol coolant radiator in an underbelly position on the fighter, just aft of the wing's trailing edge. USAAC Fighter Projects Officer Lieutenant Benjamin S. Kelsey flew this prototype some 300 miles in 57 minutes, approximately 315 miles per hour (507 km/h). Hiding his disappointment, he told reporters that future versions would likely go 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) faster. Kelsey was interested in the Allison engine because it was sturdy and dependable, and it had a smooth, predictable power curve. The V-12 engine offered as much power as a radial engine but had a smaller frontal area and allowed a more streamlined cowl than an aircraft with a radial engine, promising a theoretical 5% increase in top speed.
Curtiss engineers worked to improve the XP-40's speed by moving the radiator forward in steps. Seeing little gain, Kelsey ordered the aircraft to be evaluated in a NACA wind tunnel to identify solutions for better aerodynamic qualities. From 28 March to 11 April 1939, the prototype was studied by NACA. Based on the data obtained, Curtiss moved the glycol coolant radiator forward to the chin; its new air scoop also accommodated the oil cooler air intake. Other improvements to the landing gear doors and the exhaust manifold combined to give performance that was satisfactory to the USAAC. Without beneficial tail winds, Kelsey flew the XP-40 from Wright Field back to Curtiss's plant in Buffalo at an average speed of 354 mph (570 km/h). Further tests in December 1939 proved the fighter could reach 366 mph (589 km/h).
An unusual production feature was a special truck rig to speed delivery at the main Curtiss plant in Buffalo, New York. The rig moved the newly built P-40s in two main components, the main wing and the fuselage, the eight miles from the plant to the airport where the two units were mated for flight and delivery.
Performance characteristics
The P-40 was conceived as a pursuit aircraft and was agile at low and medium altitudes but suffered from a lack of power at higher altitudes. At medium and high speeds it was one of the tightest-turning early monoplane designs of the war, and it could out-turn most opponents it faced in North Africa and the Russian Front. In the Pacific Theater it was out-turned at lower speeds by the lightweight fighters Mitsubishi A6M Zero and Nakajima Ki-43 Hayabusa (known to Allies as "Oscar"). The American Volunteer Group Commander Claire Chennault advised against prolonged dog-fighting with the Japanese fighters due to speed reduction favoring the Japanese.
Allison's V-1710 engines produced 1,040 hp (780 kW) at sea level and 14,000 ft (4,300 m). This was not powerful compared with contemporary fighters, and the early P-40 variants' top speeds were only average. The single-stage, single-speed supercharger meant that the P-40 was a poor high-altitude fighter. Later versions, with 1,200 hp (890 kW) Allisons or more powerful 1,400 hp Packard Merlin engines were more capable. Climb performance was fair to poor, depending on the subtype. Dive acceleration was good and dive speed was excellent. The highest-scoring P-40 ace, Clive Caldwell (RAAF), who claimed 22 of his 28½ kills in the type, said that the P-40 had "almost no vices", although "it was a little difficult to control in terminal velocity". The P-40 had one of the fastest maximum dive speeds of any fighter of the early war period, and good high-speed handling.
The P-40 tolerated harsh conditions and a variety of climates. Its semi-modular design was easy to maintain in the field. It lacked innovations such as boosted ailerons or automatic leading edge slats, but its strong structure included a five-spar wing, which enabled P-40s to pull high-G turns and survive some midair collisions. Intentional ramming attacks against enemy aircraft were occasionally recorded as victories by the Desert Air Force and Soviet Air Forces. Caldwell said P-40s "would take a tremendous amount of punishment, violent aerobatics as well as enemy action". Operational range was good by early war standards and was almost double that of the Supermarine Spitfire or Messerschmitt Bf 109, although inferior to the Mitsubishi A6M Zero, Nakajima Ki-43 and Lockheed P-38 Lightning.
Caldwell found the P-40C Tomahawk's armament of two .50-inch (13 mm) Browning AN/M2 "light-barrel" dorsal nose-mount synchronized machine guns and two .303-inch (7.7 mm) Browning machine guns in each wing to be inadequate. This was improved with the P-40D (Kittyhawk I) which abandoned the synchronized gun mounts and instead had two .50-inch (13 mm) guns in each wing, although Caldwell still preferred the earlier Tomahawk in other respects. The D had armor around the engine and the cockpit, which enabled it to withstand considerable damage. This allowed Allied pilots in Asia and the Pacific to attack Japanese fighters head on, rather than try to out-turn and out-climb their opponents. Late-model P-40s were well armored. Visibility was adequate, although hampered by a complex windscreen frame, and completely blocked to the rear in early models by a raised turtledeck. Poor ground visibility and relatively narrow landing gear track caused many losses on the ground.
Curtiss tested a follow-on design, the Curtiss XP-46, but it offered little improvement over newer P-40 models and was cancelled.
Operational history
In April 1939, the U.S. Army Air Corps, having witnessed the new, sleek, high-speed, in-line-engined fighters of the European air forces, placed the largest fighter order it had ever made for 524 P-40s.
French Air Force
An early order came from the French Armée de l'Air, which was already operating P-36s. The Armée de l'Air ordered 100 (later the order was increased to 230) as the Hawk 81A-1 but the French were defeated before the aircraft had left the factory and the aircraft were diverted to British and Commonwealth service (as the Tomahawk I), in some cases complete with metric flight instruments.
In late 1942, as French forces in North Africa split from the Vichy government to side with the Allies, U.S. forces transferred P-40Fs from 33rd FG to GC II/5, a squadron that was historically associated with the Lafayette Escadrille. GC II/5 used its P-40Fs and Ls in combat in Tunisia and later for patrol duty off the Mediterranean coast until mid-1944, when they were replaced by Republic P-47D Thunderbolts.
British Commonwealth
Deployment
In all, 18 Royal Air Force (RAF) squadrons, four Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), three South African Air Force (SAAF) and two Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) squadrons serving with RAF formations, used P-40s. The first units to convert were Hawker Hurricane squadrons of the Desert Air Force (DAF), in early 1941. The first Tomahawks delivered came without armor, bulletproof windscreens or self-sealing fuel tanks, which were installed in subsequent shipments. Pilots used to British fighters sometimes found it difficult to adapt to the P-40's rear-folding landing gear, which was more prone to collapse than the lateral-folding landing gear of the Hurricane or Supermarine Spitfire. In contrast to the "three-point landing" commonly employed with British types, P-40 pilots were obliged to use a "wheels landing": a longer, low angle approach that touched down on the main wheels first.
Testing showed the aircraft did not have the performance needed for use in Northwest Europe at high-altitude, due to the service ceiling limitation. Spitfires used in the theater operated at heights around 30,000 ft (9,100 m), while the P-40's Allison engine, with its single-stage, low altitude rated supercharger, worked best at 15,000 ft (4,600 m) or lower. When the Tomahawk was used by Allied units based in the UK from February 1941, this limitation relegated the Tomahawk to low-level reconnaissance with RAF Army Cooperation Command and only No. 403 Squadron RCAF was used in the fighter role for a mere 29 sorties, before being replaced by Spitfires. Air Ministry deemed the P-40 unsuitable for the theater. UK P-40 squadrons from mid-1942 re-equipped with aircraft such as Mustangs
The Tomahawk was superseded in North Africa by the more powerful Kittyhawk ("D"-mark onwards) types from early 1942, though some Tomahawks remained in service until 1943. Kittyhawks included many improvements and were the DAF's air superiority fighter for the critical first few months of 1942, until "tropicalised" Supermarine Spitfires were available. DAF units received nearly 330 Packard V-1650 Merlin-powered P-40Fs, called Kittyhawk IIs, most of which went to the USAAF and the majority of the 700 "lightweight" L models, also powered by the Packard Merlin, in which the armament was reduced to four .50 in (12.7 mm) Brownings (Kittyhawk IIA). The DAF also received some 21 of the later P-40K and the majority of the 600 P-40Ms built; these were known as Kittyhawk IIIs. The "lightweight" P-40Ns (Kittyhawk IV) arrived from early 1943 and were used mostly as fighter-bombers. From July 1942 until mid-1943, elements of the U.S. 57th Fighter Group (57th FG) were attached to DAF P-40 units. The British government also donated 23 P-40s to the Soviet Union.
Combat performance
Tomahawks and Kittyhawks bore the brunt of Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica fighter attacks during the North African campaign. The P-40s were considered superior to the Hurricane, which they replaced as the primary fighter of the Desert Air Force.
I would evade being shot at accurately by pulling so much g-force...that you could feel the blood leaving the head and coming down over your eyes... And you would fly like that for as long as you could, knowing that if anyone was trying to get on your tail they were going through the same bleary vision that you had and you might get away... I had deliberately decided that any deficiency the Kittyhawk had was offset by aggression. And I'd done a little bit of boxing – I beat much better opponents simply by going for . And I decided to use that in the air. And it paid off.
— Nicky Barr, 3 Sqn RAAF
The P-40 initially proved quite effective against Axis aircraft and contributed to a slight shift of advantage in the Allies' favor. The gradual replacement of Hurricanes by the Tomahawks and Kittyhawks led to the Luftwaffe accelerating retirement of the Bf 109E and introducing the newer Bf 109F; these were to be flown by the veteran pilots of elite Luftwaffe units, such as Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG27), in North Africa. The P-40 was generally considered roughly equal or slightly superior to the Bf 109 at low altitude but inferior at high altitude, particularly against the Bf 109F. Most air combat in North Africa took place well below 16,000 ft (4,900 m), negating much of the Bf 109's superiority. The P-40 usually had an advantage over the Bf 109 in turning, dive speed and structural strength, was roughly equal in firepower but was slightly inferior in speed and outclassed in rate of climb and operational ceiling.
The P-40 was generally superior to early Italian fighter types, such as the Fiat G.50 Freccia and the Macchi C.200. Its performance against the Macchi C.202 Folgore elicited varying opinions. Some observers consider the Macchi C.202 superior. Caldwell, who scored victories against them in his P-40, felt that the Folgore was superior to the P-40 and the Bf 109 except that its armament of only two or four machine guns was inadequate. Other observers considered the two equally matched or favored the Folgore in aerobatic performance, such as turning radius. The aviation historian Walter J. Boyne wrote that over Africa, the P-40 and the Folgore were "equivalent". Against its lack of high-altitude performance, the P-40 was considered to be a stable gun platform and its rugged construction meant that it was able to operate from rough front line airstrips with a good rate of serviceability.
The earliest victory claims by P-40 pilots include Vichy French aircraft, during the 1941 Syria-Lebanon campaign, against Dewoitine D.520s, a type often considered to be the best French fighter of the war. The P-40 was deadly against Axis bombers in the theater, as well as against the Bf 110 twin-engine fighter. In June 1941, Caldwell, of 250 Squadron in Egypt, flying as flying Officer (F/O) Jack Hamlyn's wingman, recorded in his log book that he was involved in the first air combat victory for the P-40. This was a CANT Z.1007 bomber on 6 June. The claim was not officially recognized, as the crash of the CANT was not witnessed. The first official victory occurred on 8 June, when Hamlyn and Flight Sergeant (Flt Sgt) Tom Paxton destroyed a CANT Z.1007 from 211 Squadriglia of the Regia Aeronautica, over Alexandria. Several days later, the Tomahawk was in action over Syria with No. 3 Squadron RAAF, which claimed 19 aerial victories over Vichy French aircraft during June and July 1941, for the loss of one P-40 (and one lost to ground fire).
Some DAF units initially failed to use the P-40's strengths or used outdated defensive tactics such as the Lufbery circle. The superior climb rate of the Bf 109 enabled fast, swooping attacks, neutralizing the advantages offered by conventional defensive tactics. Various new formations were tried by Tomahawk units from 1941 to 1942, including "fluid pairs" (similar to the German rotte); the Thach Weave (one or two "weavers") at the back of a squadron in formation and whole squadrons bobbing and weaving in loose formations. Werner Schröer, who was credited with destroying 114 Allied aircraft in only 197 combat missions, referred to the latter formation as "bunches of grapes", because he found them so easy to pick off. The leading German expert in North Africa, Hans-Joachim Marseille, claimed as many as 101 P-40s during his career.
From 26 May 1942, Kittyhawk units operated primarily as fighter-bomber units, giving rise to the nickname "Kittybomber". As a result of this change in role and because DAF P-40 squadrons were frequently used in bomber escort and close air support missions, they suffered relatively high losses; many Desert Air Force P-40 pilots were caught flying low and slow by marauding Bf 109s.
Unit | 3 Sqn RAAF | 112 Sqn RAF | 450 Sqn RAAF | |
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Claims with Tomahawks | 41 | 36 | – | |
Claims with Kittyhawks | 74.5 | 82.5 | 49 | |
Total P-40 claims | 115.5 | 118.5 | 49 | |
P-40 losses (total) | 34 | 38 | 28 | |
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Caldwell believed that Operational Training Units did not properly prepare pilots for air combat in the P-40 and as a commander, stressed the importance of training novice pilots properly.
Competent pilots who took advantage of the P-40's strengths were effective against the best of the Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica. In August 1941, Caldwell was attacked by two Bf 109s, one of them piloted by German ace Werner Schröer. Although Caldwell was wounded three times and his Tomahawk was hit by more than 100 7.92 mm (0.312 in) bullets and five 20 mm cannon shells, Caldwell shot down Schröer's wingman and returned to base. Some sources also claim that in December 1941, Caldwell killed a prominent German Experte, Erbo von Kageneck (69 kills), while flying a P-40. Caldwell's victories in North Africa included 10 Bf 109s and two Macchi C.202s. Billy Drake of 112 Squadron was the leading British P-40 ace with 13 victories. James "Stocky" Edwards (RCAF), who achieved 12 kills in the P-40 in North Africa, shot down German ace Otto Schulz (51 kills) while flying a Kittyhawk with No. 260 Squadron RAF. Caldwell, Drake, Edwards and Nicky Barr were among at least a dozen pilots who achieved ace status twice over while flying the P-40. A total of 46 British Commonwealth pilots became aces in P-40s, including seven double aces.
Chinese Air Force
Flying Tigers (American Volunteer Group)
The Flying Tigers, known officially as the 1st American Volunteer Group (AVG), were a unit of the Chinese Air Force, recruited from amongst U.S. Navy, Marine Corps and Army aviators and ground crew.
AVG leader Claire Chennault received crated Model Bs which his airmen assembled in Burma at the end of 1941, adding self-sealing fuel tanks and a second pair of wing guns, such that the aircraft became a hybrid of B and C models. These were not well-liked by their pilots: they lacked drop tanks for extra range, and there were no bomb racks on the wings. Chennault considered the liquid-cooled engine vulnerable in combat because a single bullet through the coolant system would cause the engine to overheat in minutes. The Tomahawks also had no radios, so the AVG improvised by installing a fragile radio transceiver, the RCA-7-H, which had been built for a Piper Cub. Because the plane had a single-stage low-altitude supercharger, its effective ceiling was about 25,000 feet (7,600 m). The most critical problem was the lack of spare parts; the only source was from damaged aircraft. The planes were viewed as cast-offs that no one else wanted, dangerous and difficult to fly. But the pilots did appreciate some of the planes' features. There were two heavy sheets of steel behind the pilot's head and back that offered solid protection, and overall the planes were ruggedly constructed.
Compared to opposing Japanese fighters, the P-40B's strengths were that it was sturdy, well armed, faster in a dive and possessed an excellent rate of roll. While the P-40s could not match the maneuverability of the Japanese Army air arm's Nakajima Ki-27s and Ki-43s, nor the much more famous Zero naval fighter in slow, turning dogfights, at higher speeds the P-40s were more than a match. Chennault trained his pilots to use the P-40's particular performance advantages. The P-40 had a higher dive speed than any Japanese fighter aircraft of the early war years, for example, and could exploit so-called "boom-and-zoom" tactics. The AVG was highly successful, and its feats were widely publicized by an active cadre of international journalists to boost sagging public morale at home. According to its official records, in just 6+1⁄2 months, the Flying Tigers destroyed 297 enemy aircraft for the loss of just four of its own in air-to-air combat.
In the spring of 1942, the AVG received a small number of Model E's. Each came equipped with a radio, six .50-caliber machine guns, and auxiliary bomb racks that could hold 35-lb fragmentation bombs. Chennault's armorer added bomb racks for 570-lb Russian bombs, which the Chinese had in abundance. These planes were used in the battle of the Salween River Gorge in late May 1942, which kept the Japanese from entering China from Burma and threatening Kunming. Spare parts, however, remained in short supply. "Scores of new planes...were now in India, and there they stayed—in case the Japanese decided to invade... the AVG was lucky to get a few tires and spark plugs with which to carry on its daily war."
4th Air Group
China received 27 P-40E models in early 1943. These were assigned to squadrons of the 4th Air Group.
United States Army Air Forces
A total of 15 USAAF pursuit/fighter groups (FG), along with other pursuit/fighter squadrons and a few tactical reconnaissance (TR) units, operated the P-40 during 1941–45. As was also the case with the Bell P-39 Airacobra, many USAAF officers considered the P-40 exceptional but it was gradually replaced by the Lockheed P-38 Lightning, the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt and the North American P-51 Mustang. The bulk of the fighter operations by the USAAF in 1942–43 were borne by the P-40 and the P-39. In the Pacific, these two fighters, along with the U.S. Navy Grumman F4F Wildcat, contributed more than any other U.S. types to breaking Japanese air power during this critical period.
Pacific theaters
The P-40 was the main USAAF fighter aircraft in the South West Pacific and Pacific Ocean theaters during 1941–42. At Pearl Harbor and in the Philippines, USAAF P-40 squadrons suffered crippling losses on the ground and in the air to Japanese fighters such as the A6M Zero and Ki-43 Hayabusa respectively. During the attack on Pearl Harbor, most of the USAAF fighters were P-40Bs, the majority of which were destroyed. However, a few P-40s managed to get in the air and shoot down several Japanese aircraft, most notably by George Welch and Kenneth Taylor.
In the Dutch East Indies campaign, the 17th Pursuit Squadron (Provisional), formed from USAAF pilots evacuated from the Philippines, claimed 49 Japanese aircraft destroyed, for the loss of 17 P-40s The seaplane tender USS Langley was sunk by Japanese airplanes while delivering P-40s to Tjilatjap, Java. In the Solomon Islands and New Guinea Campaigns and the air defence of Australia, improved tactics and training allowed the USAAF to better use the strengths of the P-40. Due to aircraft fatigue, scarcity of spare parts and replacement problems, the US Fifth Air Force and Royal Australian Air Force created a joint P-40 management and replacement pool on 30 July 1942 and many P-40s went back and forth between the air forces.
The 49th Fighter Group was in action in the Pacific from the beginning of the war. Robert M. DeHaven scored 10 kills (of 14 overall) in the P-40 with the 49th FG. He compared the P-40 favorably with the P-38:
- "If you flew wisely, the P-40 was a very capable aircraft. could outturn a P-38, a fact that some pilots didn't realize when they made the transition between the two aircraft. The real problem with it was lack of range. As we pushed the Japanese back, P-40 pilots were slowly left out of the war. So when I moved to P-38s, an excellent aircraft, I did not that the P-40 was an inferior fighter, but because I knew the P-38 would allow us to reach the enemy. I was a fighter pilot and that was what I was supposed to do."
The 8th, 15th, 18th, 24th, 49th, 343rd and 347th PGs/FGs, flew P-40s in the Pacific theaters between 1941 and 1945, with most units converting to P-38s from 1943 to 1944. In 1945, the 71st Reconnaissance Group employed them as armed forward air controllers during ground operations in the Philippines, until it received delivery of P-51s. They claimed 655 aerial victories.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, with sufficient altitude, the P-40 could turn with the A6M and other Japanese fighters, using a combination of a nose-down vertical turn with a bank turn, a technique known as a low yo-yo. Robert DeHaven describes how this tactic was used in the 49th Fighter group:
- ou could fight a Jap on even terms, but you had to make him fight your way. He could outturn you at slow speed. You could outturn him at high speed. When you got into a turning fight with him, you dropped your nose down so you kept your airspeed up, you could outturn him. At low speed he could outroll you because of those big ailerons ... on the Zero. If your speed was up over 275, you could outroll . His big ailerons didn't have the strength to make high speed rolls... You could push things, too. Because ... f you decided to go home, you could go home. He couldn't because you could outrun him. That left you in control of the fight.
China Burma India Theater
USAAF and Chinese P-40 pilots performed well in this theater against many Japanese types such as the Ki-43, Nakajima Ki-44 "Tojo" and the Zero. The P-40 remained in use in the China Burma India Theater (CBI) until 1944 and was reportedly preferred over the P-51 Mustang by some US pilots flying in China. The American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers) was integrated into the USAAF as the 23rd Fighter Group in June 1942. The unit continued to fly newer model P-40s until 1944, achieving a high kill-to-loss ratio. In the Battle of the Salween River Gorge of May 1942 the AVG used the P-40E model equipped with wing racks that could carry six 35-pound fragmentation bombs and Chennault's armorer developed belly racks to carry Russian 570-pound bombs, which the Chinese had in large quantity.
Units arriving in the CBI after the AVG in the 10th and 14th Air Forces continued to perform well with the P-40, claiming 973 kills in the theater, or 64.8 percent of all enemy aircraft shot down. Aviation historian Carl Molesworth stated that "...the P-40 simply dominated the skies over Burma and China. They were able to establish air superiority over free China, northern Burma and the Assam valley of India in 1942, and they never relinquished it." The 3rd, 5th, 23rd, 51st and 80th FGs, along with the 10th TRS, operated the P-40 in the CBI. CBI P-40 pilots used the aircraft very effectively as a fighter-bomber. The 80th Fighter Group in particular used its so-called B-40 (P-40s carrying 1,000-pound high-explosive bombs) to destroy bridges and kill bridge repair crews, sometimes demolishing their target with one bomb. At least 40 U.S. pilots reached ace status while flying the P-40 in the CBI.
Europe and Mediterranean theaters
On 14 August 1942, the first confirmed victory by a USAAF unit over a German aircraft in World War II was initiated by a P-40C pilot. 2nd Lt Joseph D. Shaffer, of the 33rd Fighter Squadron, intercepted a Focke-Wulf Fw 200C-3 maritime patrol aircraft that overflew his base at Reykjavík, Iceland. Shaffer damaged the Fw 200, which was finished off by a P-38F. Warhawks were used extensively in the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II by USAAF units, including the 33rd, 57th, 58th, 79th, 324th and 325th Fighter Groups. While the P-40 suffered heavy losses in the MTO, many USAAF P-40 units achieved high kill-to-loss ratios against Axis aircraft; the 324th FG scored better than a 2:1 ratio in the MTO. In all, 23 U.S. pilots became aces in the MTO on the P-40, most of them during the first half of 1943.
P-40 pilots from the 57th FG were the first USAAF fliers to see action in the MTO, while attached to Desert Air Force Kittyhawk squadrons, from July 1942. The 57th was also the main unit involved in the "Palm Sunday Massacre", on 18 April 1943. Decoded Ultra signals revealed a plan for a large formation of Junkers Ju 52 transports to cross the Mediterranean, escorted by German and Italian fighters. Between 1630 and 1830 hours, all wings of the group were engaged in an intensive effort against the enemy air transports. Of the four Kittyhawk wings, three had left the patrol area before a convoy of a 100+ enemy transports were sighted by 57th FG, which tallied 74 aircraft destroyed. The group was last in the area, and intercepted the Ju 52s escorted by large numbers of Bf 109s, Bf 110s and Macchi C.202s. The group claimed 58 Ju 52s, 14 Bf 109s and two Bf 110s destroyed, with several probables and damaged. Between 20 and 40 of the Axis aircraft landed on the beaches around Cap Bon to avoid being shot down; six Allied fighters were lost, five of them P-40s.
On 22 April, in Operation Flax, a similar force of P-40s attacked a formation of 14 Messerschmitt Me 323 Gigant ("Giant") six-engine transports, covered by seven Bf 109s from II./JG 27. All the transports were shot down, for a loss of three P-40s. The 57th FG was equipped with the Curtiss fighter until early 1944, during which time they were credited with at least 140 air-to-air kills. On 23 February 1943, during Operation Torch, the pilots of the 58th FG flew 75 P-40Ls off the aircraft carrier USS Ranger to the newly captured Vichy French airfield, Cazas, near Casablanca, in French Morocco. The aircraft supplied the 33rd FG and the pilots were reassigned.
The 325th FG (known as the "Checkertail Clan") flew P-40s in the MTO and was credited with at least 133 air-to-air kills from April–October 1943, of which 95 were Bf 109s and 26 were Macchi C.202s, for the loss of 17 P-40s in combat. The 325th FG historian Carol Cathcart wrote:
on 30 July, 20 P-40s of the 317th ... took off on a fighter sweep ... over Sardinia. As they turned to fly south over the west part of the island, they were attacked near Sassari... The attacking force consisted of 25 to 30 Bf 109s and Macchi C.202s... In the brief, intense battle that occurred ... 21 enemy aircraft.
— Cathcart
Cathcart wrote that Lt. Robert Sederberg assisted a comrade being attacked by five Bf 109s, destroyed at least one German aircraft, and may have shot down as many as five. Sederberg was shot down and became a prisoner of war.
A famous African-American unit, the 99th FS, better known as the "Tuskegee Airmen" or "Redtails", flew P-40s in stateside training and for their initial eight months in the MTO. On 9 June 1943, they became the first African-American fighter pilots to engage enemy aircraft, over Pantelleria, Italy. A single Focke-Wulf Fw 190 was reported damaged by Lieutenant Willie Ashley Jr. On 2 July the squadron claimed its first verified kill; a Fw 190 destroyed by Captain Charles Hall. The 99th continued to score with P-40s until February 1944, when they were assigned P-39s and P-51 Mustangs.
The much-lightened P-40L was most heavily used in the MTO, primarily by U.S. pilots. Many US pilots stripped down their P-40s even further to improve performance, often removing two or more of the wing guns to improve the roll rate.
Royal Australian Air Force
The Kittyhawk was the main fighter used by the RAAF in World War II, in greater numbers than the Spitfire. Two RAAF squadrons serving with the Desert Air Force, No. 3 and No. 450 Squadrons, were the first Australian units to be assigned P-40s. Other RAAF pilots served with RAF or SAAF P-40 squadrons in the theater.
Many RAAF pilots achieved high scores in the P-40. At least five reached "double ace" status: Clive Caldwell, Nicky Barr, John Waddy, Bob Whittle (11 kills each) and Bobby Gibbes (10 kills) in the Middle East, North African and/or New Guinea campaigns. In all, 18 RAAF pilots became aces while flying P-40s.
Nicky Barr, like many Australian pilots, considered the P-40 a reliable mount: "The Kittyhawk became, to me, a friend. It was quite capable of getting you out of trouble more often than not. It was a real warhorse."
At the same time as the heaviest fighting in North Africa, the Pacific War was also in its early stages, and RAAF units in Australia were completely lacking in suitable fighter aircraft. Spitfire production was being absorbed by the war in Europe; P-38s were trialled, but were difficult to obtain; Mustangs had not yet reached squadrons anywhere, and Australia's tiny and inexperienced aircraft industry was geared towards larger aircraft. USAAF P-40s and their pilots originally intended for the U.S. Far East Air Force in the Philippines, but diverted to Australia as a result of Japanese naval activity were the first suitable fighter aircraft to arrive in substantial numbers. By mid-1942, the RAAF was able to obtain some USAAF replacement shipments.
RAAF Kittyhawks played a crucial role in the South West Pacific theater. They fought on the front line as fighters during the critical early years of the Pacific War, and the durability and bomb-carrying abilities (1,000 lb/454 kg) of the P-40 also made it ideal for the ground attack role. During the Battle of Port Moresby RAAF 75 destroyed or damaged some 33 Japanese aircraft of various types, with another 30 probables. General Henry H. Arnold said of No 75 squadron: "Victory in the entire air war against Japan can be traced back to the actions which took place from that dusty strip at Port Moresby in early 1942." For example, 75, and 76 Squadrons played a critical role during the Battle of Milne Bay, fending off Japanese aircraft and providing effective close air support for the Australian infantry, negating the initial Japanese advantage in light tanks and sea power. The Kittyhawks fired "nearly 200,000 rounds of half-inch ammunition" during the course of the battle.
The RAAF units that most used Kittyhawks in the South West Pacific were 75, 76, 77, 78, 80, 82, 84 and 86 Squadrons. These squadrons saw action mostly in the New Guinea and Borneo campaigns.
Late in 1945, RAAF fighter squadrons in the South West Pacific began converting to P-51Ds. However, Kittyhawks were in use with the RAAF until the end of the war, in Borneo. In all, the RAAF acquired 841 Kittyhawks (not counting the British-ordered examples used in North Africa), including 163 P-40E, 42 P-40K, 90 P-40 M and 553 P-40N models. In addition, the RAAF ordered 67 Kittyhawks for use by No. 120 (Netherlands East Indies) Squadron (a joint Australian-Dutch unit in the South West Pacific). The P-40 was retired by the RAAF in 1947.
Royal Canadian Air Force
A total of 13 Royal Canadian Air Force units operated the P-40 in the North West European or Alaskan theaters.
In mid-May 1940, Canadian and US officers watched comparative tests of a XP-40 and a Spitfire, at RCAF Uplands, Ottawa. While the Spitfire was considered to have performed better, it was not available for use in Canada and the P-40 was ordered to meet home air defense requirements. In all, eight Home War Establishment Squadrons were equipped with the Kittyhawk: 72 Kittyhawk I, 12 Kittyhawk Ia, 15 Kittyhawk III and 35 Kittyhawk IV aircraft, for a total of 134 aircraft. These aircraft were mostly diverted from RAF Lend-Lease orders for service in Canada. The P-40 Kittyhawks were obtained in lieu of 144 P-39 Airacobras originally allocated to Canada but reassigned to the RAF.
However, before any home units received the P-40, three RCAF Article XV squadrons operated Tomahawk aircraft from bases in the United Kingdom. No. 403 Squadron RCAF, a fighter unit, used the Tomahawk Mk II briefly before converting to Spitfires. Two Army Co-operation (close air support) squadrons: 400 and 414 Sqns trained with Tomahawks, before converting to Mustang Mk. I aircraft and a fighter/reconnaissance role. Of these, only No. 400 Squadron used Tomahawks operationally, conducting a number of armed sweeps over France in the late 1941. RCAF pilots also flew Tomahawks or Kittyhawks with other British Commonwealth units based in North Africa, the Mediterranean, South East Asia and (in at least one case) the South West Pacific.
In 1942, the Imperial Japanese Navy occupied two islands, Attu and Kiska, in the Aleutians, off Alaska. RCAF home defense P-40 squadrons saw combat over the Aleutians, assisting the USAAF. The RCAF initially sent 111 Squadron, flying the Kittyhawk I, to the US base on Adak island. During the drawn-out campaign, 12 Canadian Kittyhawks operated on a rotational basis from a new, more advanced base on Amchitka,75 mi (121 km) southeast of Kiska. 14 and 111 Sqns took "turn-about" at the base. During a major attack on Japanese positions at Kiska on 25 September 1942, Squadron Leader Ken Boomer shot down a Nakajima A6M2-N ("Rufe") seaplane. The RCAF also purchased 12 P-40Ks directly from the USAAF while in the Aleutians. After the Japanese threat diminished, these two RCAF squadrons returned to Canada and eventually transferred to England without their Kittyhawks.
In January 1943, a further Article XV unit, 430 Squadron was formed at RAF Hartford Bridge, England and trained on obsolete Tomahawk IIA. The squadron converted to the Mustang I before commencing operations in mid-1943.
In early 1945 pilots from No. 133 Squadron RCAF, operating the P-40N out of RCAF Patricia Bay, (Victoria, British Columbia), intercepted and destroyed two Japanese balloon-bombs, which were designed to cause wildfires on the North American mainland. On 21 February, Pilot Officer E. E. Maxwell shot down a balloon, which landed on Sumas Mountain in Washington State. On 10 March, Pilot Officer J. 0. Patten destroyed a balloon near Saltspring Island, British Columbia. The last interception took place on 20 April 1945 when Pilot Officer P.V. Brodeur from 135 Squadron out of Abbotsford, British Columbia shot down a balloon over Vedder Mountain.
The RCAF units that operated P-40s were, in order of conversion:
- Article XV squadrons serving in the UK under direct command and control of the RAF, with RAF owned aircraft.
- 403 Squadron (Tomahawk IIA and IIB, March 1941)
- 400 Squadron (Tomahawk I, IIA and IIB, April 1941 – September 1942)
- 414 Squadron (Tomahawk I, IIA and IIB, August 1941 – September 1942)
- 430 Squadron (Tomahawk IIA and IIB, January 1943 – February 1943)
- Operational Squadrons of the Home War Establishment (HWE) (Based in Canada)
- 111 Squadron (Kittyhawk I, IV, November 1941 – December 1943 and P-40K, September 1942 – July 1943),
- 118 Squadron (Kittyhawk I, November 1941 – October 1943),
- 14 Squadron (Kittyhawk I, January 1942 – September 1943),
- 132 Squadron (Kittyhawk IA & III, April 1942 – September 1944),
- 130 Squadron (Kittyhawk I, May 1942 – October 1942),
- 163 Squadron (Kittyhawk I & III, October 1943 – March 1944),
- 133 Squadron (Kittyhawk I, March 1944 – July 1945) and
- 135 Squadron (Kittyhawk IV, May 1944 – September 1945).
Royal New Zealand Air Force
Some Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) pilots and New Zealanders in other air forces flew British P-40s while serving with DAF squadrons in North Africa and Italy, including the ace Jerry Westenra.
A total of 301 P-40s were allocated to the RNZAF under Lend-Lease, for use in the Pacific Theater, although four of these were lost in transit. The aircraft equipped 14 Squadron, 15 Squadron, 16 Squadron, 17 Squadron, 18 Squadron, 19 Squadron and 20 Squadron.
RNZAF P-40 squadrons were successful in air combat against the Japanese between 1942 and 1944. Their pilots claimed 100 aerial victories in P-40s, whilst losing 20 aircraft in combat Geoff Fisken, the highest scoring British Commonwealth ace in the Pacific, flew P-40s with 15 Squadron, although half of his victories were claimed with the Brewster Buffalo.
The overwhelming majority of RNZAF P-40 victories were scored against Japanese fighters, mostly Zeroes. Other victories included Aichi D3A "Val" dive bombers. The only confirmed twin engine claim, a Ki-21 "Sally" (misidentified as a G4M "Betty") fell to Fisken in July 1943.
From late 1943 and 1944, RNZAF P-40s were increasingly used against ground targets, including the innovative use of naval depth charges as improvised high-capacity bombs. The last front line RNZAF P-40s were replaced by Vought F4U Corsairs in 1944. The P-40s were relegated to use as advanced pilot trainers.
The remaining RNZAF P-40s, excluding the 20 shot down and 154 written off, were mostly scrapped at Rukuhia in 1948.
Soviet Union
The Soviet Air Forces and Soviet Naval Aviation also referred to P-40s as "Tomahawks" and "Kittyhawks". In fact, the Curtiss P-40 Tomahawk / Kittyhawk was the first Allied fighter supplied to the USSR under the Lend-Lease agreement. The USSR received 247 P-40B/Cs (equivalent to the Tomahawk IIA/B in RAF service) and 2,178 P-40E, -K, -L, and -N models between 1941 and 1944. The Tomahawks were shipped from Great Britain and directly from the US, many of them arriving incomplete, lacking machine guns and even the lower half of the engine cowling. In late September 1941, the first 48 P-40s were assembled and checked in the USSR. Test flights showed some manufacturing defects: generator and oil pump gears and generator shafts failed repeatedly, which led to emergency landings. The test report indicated that the Tomahawk was inferior to Soviet "M-105P-powered production fighters in speed and rate of climb. However, it had good short field performance, horizontal maneuverability, range, and endurance." Nevertheless, Tomahawks and Kittyhawks were used against the Germans. The 126th Fighter Aviation Regiment (IAP), fighting on the Western and Kalinin Fronts, were the first unit to receive the P-40. The regiment entered action on 12 October 1941. By 15 November 1941, the regiment had shot down 17 German aircraft. However, Lt (SG) Smirnov noted that the P-40 armament was sufficient for strafing enemy lines but rather ineffective in aerial combat. Another pilot, Stephan Ridny (a Hero of the Soviet Union), remarked that he had to shoot half the ammunition at 50–100 meters (165–340 ft) to shoot down an enemy aircraft.
In January 1942, some 198 aircraft sorties were flown (334 flying hours) and 11 aerial engagements were conducted, in which five Bf 109s, one Ju 88, and one He 111 were downed. These statistics reveal a surprising fact: it turns out that the Tomahawk was fully capable of successful air combat with a Bf 109. The reports of pilots about the circumstances of the engagements confirm this fact. On 18 January 1942, Lieutenants S. V. Levin and I. P. Levsha (in pair) fought an engagement with seven Bf 109s and shot down two of them without loss. On 22 January, a flight of three aircraft led by Lieutenant E. E. Lozov engaged 13 enemy aircraft and shot down two Bf 109Es, again without loss. Altogether, in January, two Tomahawks were lost; one downed by German anti-aircraft artillery and one lost to Messerschmitts.
The Soviets stripped down their P-40s significantly for combat, in many cases removing the wing guns altogether in P-40B/C types, for example. Soviet Air Force reports state that they liked the range and fuel capacity of the P-40, which were superior to most of the Soviet fighters, though they still preferred the P-39. Soviet pilot Nikolai G. Golodnikov recalled: "The cockpit was vast and high. At first it felt unpleasant to sit waist-high in glass, as the edge of the fuselage was almost at waist level. But the bullet-proof glass and armored seat were strong and visibility was good. The radio was also good. It was powerful, reliable, but only on HF (high frequency). The American radios did not have hand microphones but throat microphones. These were good throat mikes: small, light and comfortable." The biggest complaint of some Soviet airmen was its poor climb rate and problems with maintenance, especially with burning out the engines. VVS pilots usually flew the P-40 at War Emergency Power settings while in combat, which brought acceleration and speed performance closer to that of their German rivals, but could burn out engines in a matter of weeks. Tires and batteries also failed. The fluid in the engine's radiators often froze, cracking their cores, which made the Allison engine unsuitable for operations during harsh winter conditions. During the winter of 1941, the 126th Fighter Aviation Regiment suffered from cracked radiators on 38 occasions. Often, entire regiments were reduced to a single flyable aircraft because no replacement parts were available. They also had difficulty with the more demanding requirements for fuel and oil quality of the Allison engines. A fair number of burned-out P-40s were re-engined with Soviet Klimov M-105 engines, but these performed relatively poorly and were relegated to rear area use.
Actually, the P-40 could engage all Messerschmitts on equal terms, almost to the end of 1943. If you take into consideration all the characteristics of the P-40, then the Tomahawk was equal to the Bf 109F and the Kittyhawk was slightly better. Its speed and vertical and horizontal manoeuvre were good and fully competitive with enemy aircraft. Acceleration rate was a bit low, but when you got used to the engine, it was OK. We considered the P-40 a decent fighter plane.
— N. G. Golodnikov,
2nd Guards Fighter Regiment (GIAP),
Northern Aviation Fleet (VVS SF)
The P-40 saw the most front line use in Soviet hands in 1942 and early 1943. Deliveries over the Alaska-Siberia ALSIB ferry route began in October 1942. It was used in the northern sectors and played a significant role in the defense of Leningrad. The most numerically important types were P-40B/C, P-40E and P-40K/M. By the time the better P-40F and N types became available, production of superior Soviet fighters had increased sufficiently so that the P-40 was replaced in most Soviet Air Force units by the Lavochkin La-5 and various later Yakovlev types. In spring 1943, Lt D.I. Koval of the 45th IAP gained ace status on the North Caucasian front, shooting down six German aircraft flying a P-40. Some Soviet P-40 squadrons had good combat records. Some Soviet pilots became aces on the P-40, though not as many as on the P-39 Airacobra, the most numerous Lend-Lease fighter used by the Soviet Union. However, Soviet commanders thought the Kittyhawk significantly outclassed the Hurricane, although it was "not in the same league as the Yak-1".
Japan
The Japanese Army captured some P-40s and later operated a number in Burma. The Japanese appear to have had as many as 10 flyable P-40Es. For a brief period in 1943, a few of them were used operationally by 2 Hiko Chutai, 50 Hiko Sentai (2nd Air Squadron, 50th Air Regiment) in the defense of Rangoon. Testimony of this is given by Yasuhiko Kuroe, a member of the 64 Hiko Sentai. In his memoirs, he says one Japanese-operated P-40 was shot down in error by a friendly Mitsubishi Ki-21 "Sally" over Rangoon.
Other nations
The P-40 was used by over two dozen countries during and after the war. The P-40 was used by Brazil, Egypt, Finland and Turkey. The last P-40s in military service, used by the Brazilian Air Force (FAB), were retired in 1954.
In the air war over Finland, several Soviet P-40s were shot down or had to crash-land due to other reasons. The Finns, short of good aircraft, collected these and managed to repair one P-40M, P-40M-10-CU 43–5925, white 23, which received Finnish Air Force serial number KH-51 (KH denoting "Kittyhawk", as the British designation of this type was Kittyhawk III). This aircraft was attached to an operational squadron HLeLv 32 of the Finnish Air Force, but lack of spares kept it on the ground, with the exception of a few evaluation flights.
Several P-40Ns were used by the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army Air Force with No. 120 (Netherlands East Indies) Squadron RAAF against the Japanese before being used during the fighting in Indonesia until February 1949.
Variants and development stages
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- XP-40
- The original Curtiss XP-40, ordered July 1937, was converted from the 10th P-36A by replacing the radial engine with a new Allison V-1710-19 engine. It flew for the first time in October 1938.
This new liquid-cooled engine fighter had a radiator mounted under the rear fuselage but the prototype XP-40 was later modified and the radiator was moved forward under the engine.
- P-40
- The P-40 (Curtiss Model 81A-1) was the first production variant, 199 built.
- P-40A
- One P-40 was modified with a camera installation in the rear fuselage and re-designated P-40A.
- Revised versions of the P-40 soon followed: the P-40B or Tomahawk IIA had extra .30 in (7.62 mm) U.S., or .303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns in the wings and a partially protected fuel system; the P-40C or Tomahawk IIB added underbelly drop tank and bomb shackles, self-sealing fuel tanks and other minor revisions, but the extra weight did have a negative impact on aircraft performance. (All versions of the P-40 had a relatively low power-to-weight ratio compared to contemporary fighters.)
- Only a small number of P-40D or Kittyhawk Mk Is were made, fewer than 50. With a new, larger Allison engine, slightly narrower fuselage, redesigned canopy, and improved cockpit, the P-40D eliminated the nose-mounted .50 in (12.7 mm) guns and instead had a pair of .50 in (12.7 mm) guns in each wing. The distinctive chin airscoop grew larger so they could adequately cool the large Allison engine.
- Retrospective designation for a single prototype. The P-40A was a single camera-carrying aircraft.
- The P-40E or P-40E-1 was similar in most respects to the P-40D, except for a slightly more powerful engine and an extra .50 in (12.7 mm) gun in each wing, bringing the total to six. Some aircraft also had small underwing bomb shackles. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the Kittyhawk Mk IA. The P-40E was the variant that bore the brunt of air-to-air combat by the type in the key period of early to mid 1942, for example with the first US squadrons to replace the AVG in China (the AVG was already transitioning to this type from the P-40B/C), the type used by the Australians at Milne Bay, by the New Zealand squadrons during most of their air-to-air combat, and by the RAF/Commonwealth in North Africa as the Kittyhawk IA.
- P-40F and P-40L, which both featured Packard V-1650 Merlin engine in place of the normal Allison, and thus did not have the carburetor scoop on top of the nose. Performance for these models at higher altitudes was better than their Allison-engined cousins. The L in some cases also featured a fillet in front of the vertical stabilizer, or a stretched fuselage to compensate for the higher torque. The P-40L was sometimes nicknamed "Gypsy Rose Lee", after a famous stripper of the era, due to its stripped-down condition. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces under the designation Kittyhawk Mk II, a total of 330 Mk IIs were supplied to the RAF under Lend-Lease. The first 230 aircraft are sometimes known as the Kittyhawk Mk IIA. The P-40F/L was extensively used by U.S. fighter groups operating in the Mediterranean Theater.
- P-40G: 43 P-40 aircraft fitted with the wings of the Tomahawk Mk IIA. A total of 16 aircraft were supplied to the Soviet Union, and the rest to the US Army Air Forces. It was later redesignated RP-40G.
- P-40K, an Allison-engined P-40L, with the nose-top scoop retained and the Allison-configured nose radiators scoop, cowl flaps and vertical-stabilizer-to-fuselage fillet. Supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the Kittyhawk Mk III, it was widely used by US units in the CBI.
- P-40M, version generally similar to the P-40K, with a stretched fuselage like the P-40L and powered by an Allison V-1710-81 engine giving better performance at altitude (compared to previous Allison versions). It had some detail improvements and it was characterized by two small air scoops just before the exhaust pipes. Most of them were supplied to Allied countries (mainly UK and USSR), while some others remained in the US for advanced training. It was also supplied to the Commonwealth air forces as the Kittyhawk Mk. III.
- P-40N (manufactured 1943–44), the final production model. The P-40N featured a stretched rear fuselage to counter the torque of the more powerful, late-war Allison engine, and the rear deck of the cockpit behind the pilot was cut down at a moderate slant to improve rearward visibility. A great deal of work was also done to try and eliminate excess weight to improve the Warhawk's climb rate. Early N production blocks dropped a .50 in (12.7 mm) gun from each wing, bringing the total back to four; later production blocks reintroduced it after complaints from units in the field. Supplied to Commonwealth air forces as the Kittyhawk Mk IV. A total of 553 P-40Ns were acquired by the Royal Australian Air Force, making it the variant most commonly used by the RAAF. Subvariants of the P-40N ranged widely in specialization from stripped down four-gun "hot rods" that could reach the highest top speeds of any production variant of the P-40 (up to 380 mph), to overweight types with all the extras intended for fighter-bombing or even training missions. The 15,000th P-40 was an N model decorated with the markings of 28 nations that had employed any of Curtiss-Wright's various aircraft products, not just P-40s. "These spectacular markings gave rise to the erroneous belief that the P-40 series had been used by all 28 countries." Since the P-40N was by 1944 used mainly as a ground attack aircraft in Europe, it was nicknamed B-40 by pilots. Survivors redesignated as ZF-40N in June 1948.
- P-40P: The designation of 1,500 aircraft ordered with V-1650-1 engines, but actually built as the P-40N with V-1710-81 engines.
- XP-40Q: Three P-40N modified with a 4-bladed prop, cut-down rear fuselage and bubble canopy, four guns, squared-off wingtips and tail surfaces, and improved engine with two-speed supercharger. Even with these changes, its performance was not enough of an improvement to merit production when compared to the contemporary late model P-47Ds and P-51Ds pouring off production lines. The XP-40Q was, however, the fastest of the P-40 series with a top speed of 422 mph (679 km/h) as a result of the introduction of a high-altitude supercharger gear. (No P-40 model with a single-speed supercharger could even approach 400 mph (640 km/h))
- P-40R: The designation of P-40F and P-40L aircraft that had Allison engines retrofitted in the field for standardization and logistics.
- RP-40: Some American P-40s were converted into reconnaissance aircraft.
- TP-40: Some P-40s were converted into two-seat trainers.
- Twin P-40: A single photo exists of a P-40 mocked up with two Merlin engines, mounted atop the wings, over the main landing gear.
Operators
- Japanese Army Air Force – Captured P-40s.
Surviving aircraft
Main article: List of surviving Curtiss P-40sOf the 13,738 P-40s built, only 28 remain airworthy, with three of them being converted to dual-controls/dual-seat configuration. Approximately 13 aircraft are on static display and another 36 airframes are under restoration for either display or flight.
Notable P-40 pilots
- Nicky Barr: RAAF ace (11 victories); also a member of the Australia national rugby union team.
- Gregory Boyington: AVG/US Marine Corps; later commanded USMC VMF-214, the "Black Sheep Squadron".
- Clive Caldwell: RAAF, highest-scoring P-40 pilot from any air force (22 victories); highest-scoring Allied pilot in North Africa; Australia's highest-scoring ace in World War II (28.5 victories).
- Levi R. Chase: USAAF; leading US P-40 ace in the Mediterranean theater, with 10 claims; CO 60th Fighter Squadron, 33rd Fighter Group; retired with the rank of Major General.
- Claire Chennault: commander, 1st American Volunteer Group (AVG; better known as the "Flying Tigers"), Chinese Air Force.
- Chikai Chou, the CO of the Chinese Air Force P-40E-equipped 23rd PS, 4th PG and ace who famously "hijacked" a USAAF P-66 at Liangshan Airbase as it was being raided by Imperial Japanese Army Air Service aircraft; he pursued the raiders shooting down two Kawasaki Ki-48 bombers, while 11 of his comrade's P-40Es were destroyed on the ground in that raid.
- Daniel H. David: USAAF; later famous as the comedian and actor Dan Rowan; scored two victories and was wounded, while flying P-40s in the South West Pacific.
- Billy Drake: RAF, the leading British P-40 ace, with 13 victories.
- Neville Duke: RAF Leading Allied ace in the Mediterranean theater with 27 victories (including eight in P-40); post-war a test pilot and holder of the world air speed record.
- James Francis Edwards: RCAF, 15.75 victories (12 on the P-40); also wrote two books about British Commonwealth Kittyhawk pilots.
- Geoff Fisken: RNZAF, the highest scoring British Commonwealth ace in the Pacific theater (11 victories), including five victories in Kittyhawks.
- Jack Frost: SAAF, the highest scoring air ace in a South African unit, with 15 victories (seven on the P-40); missing in action since 16 June 1942.
- Herschel "Herky" Green: USAAF; 18 victory claims (including three in P-40s) while flying for the 325th Fighter Group in North Africa and Italy.
- John Gorton: RAAF; Prime Minister of Australia, 1968–1971. Gorton survived a near-fatal crash in a Hurricane IIb at Singapore in 1942; later flew Kittyhawks with No. 77 Squadron in New Guinea and became an instructor on the type.
- John F. Hampshire: USAAF; equal top-scoring US P-40 pilot (13 victory claims), all over China with the 75th FS (23rd FG), 1942–1943; killed in action.
- David Lee "Tex" Hill: AVG/USAAF, 2nd Squadron AVG and 23rd FG USAAF, 12¼ P-40 victories (18¼ total).
- Bruce K. Holloway: AVG/USAAF, equal top-scoring US P-40 pilot (13 victories); later commander of USAF Strategic Air Command and retired with the rank of General (four star).
- James H. Howard: AVG/USAAF, six victories in P-40s; later, the only fighter pilot to receive the Medal of Honor for service over Europe, while flying a P-51; retired with the rank of Brigadier-General in 1966.
- Nikolai Fedorovitch Kuznetsov: VVS; the highest-scoring Soviet P-40 ace; credited with 22 victories while flying Hurricanes, P-40s and P-39s; twice awarded Hero of the Soviet Union (GSS); also awarded the British OBE.
- Pyotr Pokryshev: (Pyotr Afanasyevich Pokryshev) AV-MF (Soviet Naval); twice awarded GSS; 11 victory claims (out of a total of 22) made while flying P-40s, as commander of 154th IAP.
- Boris Safonov: AV-MF (Soviet Naval Aviation); Soviet quadruple (25 victory) ace and twice awarded GSS; shot down three Ju-88 bombers in one engagement while flying a P-40E, over the Baltic.
- Robert Lee Scott, Jr.: USAAF, commander of the 23rd FG, China; more than 10 victories in P-40s.
- Kenneth M. Taylor: USAAF; one of only two US pilots to get airborne (in a P-40) during the attack on Pearl Harbor (7 December 1941), during which he shot down two aircraft and was wounded in the arm.
- Keith Truscott: RAAF; pre-war star of Australian football; became an ace flying Spitfires in the UK during 1941, before flying Kittyhawks over New Guinea and Australia; commanded 76 Sqn RAAF at the Battle of Milne Bay (1942); killed in an accident while flying a P-40 (1943).
- Clinton D. "Casey" Vincent: USAAF; six victory claims while flying P-40s over China.
- John Waddy: RAAF; 12½ victory claims while flying P-40s over North Africa.
- Boyd Wagner: USAAF; while flying P-40s, Wagner became the first USAAF ace of the war, during the Philippines campaign (1941–1942).
- Len Waters: RAAF, the only Aboriginal Australian fighter pilot of World War II.
- George Welch: USAAF; one of only two US fighter pilots to get airborne during the first attack on Pearl Harbor, in a P-40; Welch claimed three Japanese aircraft that day.
Specifications (P-40E)
Data from Curtiss Aircraft 1907–1947, America's hundred thousand : the U.S. production fighter aircraft of World War II
General characteristics
- Crew: One
- Length: 31 ft 8.5 in (9.665 m)
- Wingspan: 37 ft 3.5 in (11.367 m)
- Height: 10 ft 8 in (3.25 m)
- Wing area: 236 sq ft (21.9 m)
- Airfoil: root: NACA2215; tip :NACA2209
- Empty weight: 5,922 lb (2,686 kg)
- Gross weight: 8,515 lb (3,862 kg)
- Powerplant: 1 × Allison V-1710-39 V-12 liquid-cooled piston engine, 1,240 hp (920 kW)
- Propellers: 3-bladed Curtiss-Wright electric constant-speed propeller
Performance
- Maximum speed: 361 mph (581 km/h, 314 kn) at 15,000 ft (4,600 m)
- Cruise speed: 308 mph (496 km/h, 268 kn)
- Range: 716 mi (1,152 km, 622 nmi) at 70% power
- Service ceiling: 29,100 ft (8,900 m)
- Time to altitude: 15,000 ft (4,600 m) in 6 minutes 15 seconds
- Wing loading: 35.1 lb/sq ft (171 kg/m)
- Power/mass: 0.14 hp/lb (0.23 kW/kg)
Armament
- Guns: 6 × 0.5 in (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns in the wings
- Bombs: 250 to 1,000 lb (110 to 450 kg) bombs to a total of 2,000 lb (910 kg) on hardpoints under the fuselage and two underwing
Notable appearances in media
Main article: P-40 WarhawkSee also
- Historical P-40C Tomahawk, homebuilt replica
- Jurca Pee-40, homebuilt replica
- Rowley P-40F, homebuilt replica
- W.A.R. P40E, homebuilt replica
Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
- Bell P-39 Airacobra
- Dewoitine D.520
- Hawker Hurricane
- Kawasaki Ki-61
- Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov LaGG-3
- Macchi C.202
- Messerschmitt Bf 109
- Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-3
- Supermarine Spitfire
- Yakovlev Yak-1
- Rogožarski IK-3
Related lists
- List of aircraft of World War II
- List of fighter aircraft
- List of military aircraft of the United States
References
Footnotes
- Inspired by 112 Squadron's usage of them in North Africa, and by the Luftwaffe's earlier use of it, both via Allied wartime newspaper and magazine article images, the "shark mouth" logo on the sides of the P-40's nose was most famously used on those of the Flying Tigers in China. The Bf 110s were from II Gruppe/Zerstörergeschwader 76. Shilling, an AVG pilot indicated, "I was looking through a British magazine one day and saw a photo of a Messerschmitt Bf 110 with a shark face on it."
- Due to the reporter's unfamiliarity with the type, the XP-40 was inaccurately identified as an upgraded P-36.
- The fighter was repaired and served out the war.
- Late P-40Fs and most Ks, Ls and the P-40Ms had lengthened rear fuselages; the F/Ls had no carburettor air scoop on the upper engine cowling.
- Kageneck's brother, August Graf von Kageneck, who corresponded with Caldwell after the war, was among those who believed that Caldwell shot down Erbo.
- Smith commented on the challenge of taking this photo while "scanning the surrounding sky every few seconds to make sure no Jap fighters were about to ambush us".
- Although part of the US 14th AF, the P-40s of 3rd and 5th FGs of the Chinese American Composite Wing were flown by both American and Chinese pilots.
- After being evacuated from Singapore to Australia in 1942, F/L Thomas W. Watson RCAF served for a period with No. 77 Squadron RAAF.
- In total, the RNZAF claimed 106 victories in the Pacific: three by 488(NZ) Sqn in Singapore and Malaya (all confirmed), three by Lockheed Hudsons (one confirmed) and the remaining 102 by P-40 pilots. A total of 99 victories were officially confirmed, including 95 by P-40s.
Notes
- Angelucci and Matricardi 1978, p. 48.
- Hagen, Brad. "XP-40". Curtiss P-40 Warhawk. Retrieved: 21 August 2011.
- Murphy and McNiece 2009, p. 83.
- ^ Alexander 2006, p. 25.
- ^ Brown 1983, p. 20.
- ^ Crawford 1977, p. 14.
- Vader 1970, p. 95.
- Erik Shilling–; Off on his Last Flight. Retrieved: 28 February 2008.
- ^ Masell, Patrick. "The P-40 and the Zero". Naval Aviation and Military History, 2002. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.
- See Molesworth 2000,2003,2006,2008
- "Chronology: The Army Air Corps to World War II". Air Force Historical Studies Office. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.
- Green 1957, p. 43.
- ^ Merriam 2000, p. 15.
- American Aviation, Volume 3, 1939, p. 2.
- Wilson, Randy. "The Heart of the Cobra: Development of the Allison V-1710 Engine". Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Allison Press Release on the Certification of its V-1710 Engine by the Air Corps via The Dispatch, Volume 22, Number 1, Spring, 1997. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.
- Wagner, Ray. "P-40". Archived 21 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine American Combat Planes of the 20th century. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.
- "America Creeps Up". The Aeroplane (Temple Press), Volume 56, 1938, p. 730.
- Molesworth 2008, p. 10.
- "New Army Warplane Rides a Trailer on Its First Trip to Airport". Popular Mechanics, January 1941, p. 91.
- Higam 2004, p. 3.
- Gunston 1981, p. 68.
- Alexander 2006, p. 22.
- "ADF Aircraft Serial Numbers - RAAF A29 Curtiss P-40N Kittyhawk IV". www.adf-serials.com. 13 January 2005. Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- ^ Romanenko, Valeriy and James F. Gebhardt. "The P-40 in Soviet Aviation". Archived 5 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine Lend-lease on airforce.ru. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.
- ^ Alexander 2006, p. 21.
- Berliner 2011, p. 18.
- "Aircraft of the RAF (M – T)". Archived 2 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine rafweb.org, 2007. Retrieved: 6 January 2008.
- rafweb.org, 2007, "Aircraft of the RAF (E – L)". Archived 2 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine rafweb.org, 2007. Retrieved: 6 January 2008.
- Green and Swanborough 1977, pp. 57–59.
- Hawkins, Belinda. "The Quiet Man". Australian Story via ABC-TV, 2002. Retrieved: 8 November 2007.
- ^ Scutts 1994, pp. 12–13.
- Pentland 1974, p. 22.
- Gunston 1984, p. 226.
- Ethell and Christy 1979, p. 51.
- Boyne 2002, p. 406.
- Snedden 1997, p. 51.
- Glancey 2006, p. 166.
- Pentland 1974, pp. 8, 20.
- Brown 1983, p. 17.
- ^ Brown 1983, pp. 28–29.
- Ratuszynski, Wilhelm. "Hans-Joachim Marseille: Desert Eagle". Archived 3 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine World War II Ace Stories. Retrieved: 8 March 1999.
- Brown 1983, pp. 257–258.
- Brown 1983, p. 259.
- Alexander 2006, pp. 55–56.
- ^ Thomas 2002
- Alexander 2006, pp. 224–228.
- Dragicevic, George. "Clive 'Killer' Caldwell: Stuka Party". Archived 12 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine elknet.pl, 17 July 1999. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.
- ^ Molesworth 2000
- Ford, Daniel. "R.T. Smith's photo of the AVG Tomahawks". warbirdforum.com. Retrieved: 20 July 2011.
- Rice, Earle (2003). Claire Chennault: Flying Tiger. Infobase. p. 47. ISBN 9780791072172.
- 02-5AD-1 V-1710-35 Operating and Flight Instructions dated 1941-10-25
- Schultz, Duane. 1987. The Maverick War, Chennault and the Flying Tigers. St. Martin's Press, 335 pp.
- Rossi, J.R. "History: The Flying Tigers - American Volunteer Group - Chinese Air Force". flyingtigersavg.22web.org, 1998. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.
- Schultz, Duane. 1987.
- Demin, Anatolii, translated by George M. Mellinger. "Changing from 'Donkeys' to 'Mustangs' Chinese Aviation In The War With Japan, 1940–1945". Planes and Pilots of World War Two, June 2000. Retrieved: 4 November 2011.
- Donselaar, Remco et al. "Curtiss P-40B Warhawk, 41-13297". Archived 22 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Touchdown Aviation, 2011. Retrieved: 4 November 2011.
- ^ Molesworth 2002
- ^ Molesworth 2003
- Jordan, Corey C. "The Amazing George Welch: Part One - The Tiger of Pearl Harbor". Archived 15 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Planes and Pilots of World War Two, 2000. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.
- ^ Klemen, L. "Chronology of the Dutch East Indies, 7 December 1941 – 11 December 1941". Archived 15 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942, 1999–2000. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.
- Klemen, L. "The United States Warship Losses in the Dutch East Indies". Archived 12 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942, 1999–2000. Retrieved: 4 August 2011.
- Birkett, Gordon. "USAAF/RAAF P40E/E-1, Operations in Australia Supplementary #2". adf-serials.com, 2005. Retrieved: 1 August 2007.
- "PTO/CBI Pilots of WWII". Archived 26 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine Acepilots.com, 2005. Retrieved: 7 March 2006.
- "23 Fighter Group (ACC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
- Schultz, Duane. 1987. The Maverick War, Chennault and the Flying Tigers. St. Martin's Press
- Moleseworth 2000, page 6
- "Playing Large Part in Burma Fighting Against Japs". CBI Roundup, Vol. II, No. 32, 20 April 1944.
- Higham 2004, pp. 3–4.
- Weal 2003, p. 91.
- USAAF General Orders; USAAF History of the 58th FG.
- Cathcart, Carol. "325th Fighter Group: Total Victories by Type of Aircraft". Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Official 325th Fighter Group WWII: "Checkertail Clan" Association. Retrieved: 25 March 2006.
- ^ Cathcart, Carol. "History of the 317th Fighter Squadron". Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Official 325th Fighter Group WWII "Checkertail Clan" Association. Retrieved: 5 September 2006.
- "Tuskegee Airmen". Archived 14 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the USAF. Retrieved: 19 June 2010.
- "The combat record speaks for itself". Archived 30 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the USAF. Retrieved: 19 June 2010.
- Barr, Nicky. "Interview Transcript". ABC Australia. Retrieved: 8 November 2007.
- 44 days, 75 Squadron and the Battle for Australia, Michael Veitch, Hachette Australia; 1st edition (25 July 2017), ISBN 978-0733638817, pp 15
- 44 days, 75 Squadron and the Battle for Australia, Michael Veitch, Hachette Australia; 1st edition (25 July 2017), ISBN 978-0733638817, pp 371
- "Australia's War 1939–1945". Archived 9 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Official Australian Government, Department of Veterans Affairs. Retrieved: 8 January 2007.
- Pentland 1974, pp. 27–39.
- Turning Point: The Battle for Milne Bay 1942 - Japan's first land defeat in World War II, Michael Veitch, Hachette Australia; 1st edition (23 July 2019), ISBN 978-0733640551, pp 325
- RAAF Museum, 2007, "A29 Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawk". defence.gov.au. Retrieved: 1 August 2007.
- Canadian Forces, "430 Squadron – History". Archived 7 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine airforce.forces.gc. Retrieved: 3 March 2011.
- ^ "Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawks of the RCAF". rcaf.com, 2010. Retrieved: 3 March 2011.
- Coyle 2002, pp. 214–215.
- ^ Rudge 2003
- Horn 1992
- Mossong, Peter. "The Curtiss P-40 in RNZAF Service". Royal New Zealand Air Force Pacific WWII Homepage. Retrieved: 4 September 2006.
- "Curtiss P-40N Kittyhawk". Archived 7 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine New Zealand Warbirds Family Album. Retrieved: 4 September 2006.
- Gordon 2008, p. 435.
- Gordon 2008, pp 436–437.
- Hill, Alexander (2007). "British Lend Lease Aid and the Soviet War Effort, June 1941 – June 1942". The Journal of Military History. 71 (3): 773–808. doi:10.1353/jmh.2007.0206. JSTOR 30052890. S2CID 159715267.
- ^ Gordon 2008, p. 437.
- Drabkin 2007, p. 129.
- Mellinger 2006, pp. 24–25
- ^ Drabkin 2007, p. 130.
- Sokhorukov, Andrey, (translation) and James F. Gebhardt. "Conversations with N. G. Golodnikov Part One. I-16 and Hurricane". Archived 4 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine lend-lease.airforce.ru, 2008. Retrieved: 26 January 2009.
- Gordon 2008, pp. 437–438.
- "Japanese Captured P-40". J-Aircraft.com. Retrieved: 19 June 2010.
- Baugher, Joseph. "P-40N Warhawk, Kittyhawk IV". p40warhawk.com, 14 November 2015. Retrieved: 17 April 2016.
- McDowell 1968, p. 68.
- Vader 1970, p. 137.
- Donald 1997, p. 291.
- McSweeny, Paul (3 June 2004). "Surviving Hawk 75, P-36 and P-40 series aircraft". Surviving Curtiss Fighters. Archived from the original on 14 May 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
- Alexander, Kristin (2006). Clive Caldwell, air ace. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin. p. 85. ISBN 1-74114-705-0.
- Chen, C. Peter (2016). "Zhou Zhikai". WW2DB. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
Captain Zhou Zhikai (Chou Chih-kai) who had just landed in a P-40E fighter after a ground support mission, commandeered a P-66 Vanguard fighter belonging to US Army Air Forces parked nearby and shot down two Ki-48 aircraft and damaged another. Zhou was later awarded the Order of Blue Sky and White Sun for this action.
- ^ Shores and Ring 1969
- United States Air Force Museum 1975, p. 26.
- Bowers 1979 pp 474–504
- Dean, Francis H. (1997). America's hundred thousand : the U.S. production fighter aircraft of World War II. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Pub. p. 235. ISBN 0-7643-0072-5.
- Memorandum Report On Single Engine (P-40E), A.C. 40-405, United States War Department (December 1, 1941)
Bibliography
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External links
- "Ways of the War Hawk: How to Fly the Curtiss P-40 Fighter (Color, 1944)" on YouTube
- (1944) AN 01-25CN-2 Erection and Maintenance Instructions for Army Model P-40N Series – British Model Kittyhawk IV Airplanes
- Bu #41-13297 P-40B-CU detailed virtual view of a restoration. Pearl Harbor survivor
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Lua error in Module:Navbox at line 535: attempt to get length of local 'arg' (a number value).
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