Air Weapons

Fighter (1941)

Bell

P-39 Airacobra

P-39 Airacobra
P-39 Airacobra

A very radical aircraft, the Bell P-39 Airacobra was built around a massive hub-firing 37 mm cannon which required the engine to be situated quite unconventionally behind the cockpit and the propeller driven by an extension shaft which passed between the pilot's legs (it also housed a tricycle landing gear). Along with the P-40, the Airacobra was the USAAF's main fighter for the first months of the war but was hard pressed against the superior Japanese Zero in the Pacific and German fighters in Europe. Still, despite the fact it was a quite unforgiving aircraft to fly almost half of all P-39s (4,773 in all) ended in Soviet hands as part of Lend-Lease aid where they found a more appropriate low-altitude environment more suitable to its performance characteristics. In USAAF service they fought in the Aleutians, South Pacific and the Mediterranean but were also used by the RAF as well as the Free French and Italian Co-Belligerent air forces. Meanwhile, a slightly redesigned version known as the P-63 Airacobra was built explicitly as a 'Lend-Lease fighter', mostly for the Soviet Union. None served with US forces except in secondary roles.

The prototype XP-39 was first flown in April 1939 and contracts were made for the French though in the event these aircraft were taken over by the British as the Airacobra Mk. I with the 37-mm cannon replaced by a 20-mm version. For the USAAF, production P-39Cs entered service in 1941 though the first actual operational version was the P-39D which became available shortly after. Subsequent variants included upgraded engines: the P-39J with a V-1710-59, the P-39K with a -63 and the P-39M with a -83. The last and most produced variants were the P-39N and Q which had V-1710-85 engines and generally improved perfomance. A successor, the P-63 Kingcobra was very similar to the P-39 but designed for export via Lend-Lease. Variants included the main P-63A and P-63C which only differed in terms of powerplant and the RP-63A, B, and G used by the USAAF as manned target aircraft with toughened skin.

Preceded by:

None

Succeeded by:

P-59 Airacomet (1944)

Datafile

DesignP-39DP-39QP-63A
NameAiracobraAiracobraKingcobra
TypeFighterFighterFighter
Year194119421943
Crew111
Dimensions
Length9.19 m9.19 m9.96 m
Height3.607 m3.785 m3.835 m
Wing Span10.36 m10.36 m11.68 m
Wing Arean/an/an/a
Weight
Empty2,478 kg2,574 kg2,892 kg
Maximum3,720 kg3,765 kg4,763 kg
Wing Loading188.0 kg/m²190.3 kg/m²206.7 kg/m²
Performance
Speed539 km/h620 km/h660 km/h
Ceiling9,784 m10,668 m13,106 m
Range966-1,770 km845-1,730 km724 km
Powerplant
Engine1 x V-1710-35
Allison
858 kW
1 x V-1710-85
Allison
895 kW
1 x V-1170-93
Allison
988 kW
Thrust/Weight0.420.420.42
Armament
Guns1 x 37-mm
2 x .50-in
M2 Browning
4 x .30-in
M1919 Browning
1 x 37-mm
M4 (30)
4 x .50-in
M2 Browning (200)
1 x 37-mm
M10 (58)
4 x .50-in
M2 Browning (200)
Payload227 kg227 kg680 kg
Production
Built9234,9051,725
Total9,558
P-63 (All): Total production of 3,303 (not included in P-39 totals)

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