by James Hood » Sat May 14, 2011 6:19 pm
The North American FJ-1 Fury jet was not far behind, production-wise, and the much superior Grumman Panther was coming.
In this opinion, the XP-72 was fast only in a straight line and some of its speed would have been sapped by refitting for naval use. In addition, that 472 or so mph was the aerodynamic "wall" many designs seemed to hit; the practical speed limit of prop-driven reciprocating engined aircraft. (Bearcat, Super-Corsair, P-51H Mustang, P-82 Twin Mustang, Spiteful, Sea Hornet, Tempest II....)
The North American FJ-1 Fury jet was not far behind, production-wise, and the much superior Grumman Panther was coming.
In this opinion, the XP-72 was fast only in a straight line and some of its speed would have been sapped by refitting for naval use. In addition, that 472 or so mph was the aerodynamic "wall" many designs seemed to hit; the practical speed limit of [u]prop-driven [/u]reciprocating engined aircraft. (Bearcat, Super-Corsair, P-51H Mustang, P-82 Twin Mustang, Spiteful, Sea Hornet, Tempest II....)