
Originally Posted by
JDNSW
Yes. The P39 was a late 1930s concept to improve maneuverability by putting the major mass closer to the centre of gravity, and pilot visibility by putting the engine behind the pilot. Primarily because of the lack of an American engine with power/weight comparable to European engines at the time, the performance was disappointing. And because most of its initial deployment was in the tropics, it soon became apparent that the cooling system did not like hot weather. However, the Russians, who got them via lend-lease, loved them, and this is where most ended up.
Because of these problems the P39 was redesigned as the P63 with a lot of changes, including increased size, and a change to the wing section, and better engines. But still the same basic layout. Not very many made though, mainly because by this time better designs were being mass produced (e.g P47), and jets were in the wings.
I remember reading Samurai! by Saburo Sakai. He described the P-39 as easy victims of the Mitsubishi A6M in New Guinea. It wasn't all one sided though.
JayTee
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