A definitive technical guide to the long-nosed Curtiss P-40 Warhawk variants.

The initial version of the Curtiss P-40, designated by the manufacturer as the Hawk H-81, combined the established airframe of the earlier radial-powered H-75 (P-36) fighter with the Allison V-1710 liquid-cooled engine. The year was 1939, and the marriage was one of expediency. With the threat of war in Europe growing by the day, the US Army Air Corps brass wanted a modern fighter that would combine the sterling handling qualities of the P-36 with a boost in performance that would make it competitive with the new types emerging in Germany and England, and the generals wanted the new plane immediately.

As this book details, the P-40 delivered admirably, and though it never reached the performance levels of the Bf 109 or Spitfire, the sturdy fighter nevertheless made a place in history for itself as the Army's frontline fighter when the US entered World War II. Long-nosed P-40s initially saw combat in North Africa, flying in Royal Air Force squadrons. They also fought in the skies over Pearl Harbor and the Philippines. But the long-nosed P-40 is best known as the shark-faced fighter flown by the American Volunteer Group – the legendary "Flying Tigers" – over Burma and China during 1941–42.

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A definitive technical guide to the long-nosed Curtiss P-40 Warhawk variants.

Introduction
Design and development
Technical specifications
Operational history
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

A definitive technical guide to the long-nosed Curtiss P-40 Warhawk variants.

Product details

ISBN
9781780969091
Published
2013-05-20
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Osprey Publishing
Weight
240 gr
Height
244 mm
Width
174 mm
Thickness
8 mm
Age
G, P, 01, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
64

Illustrated by

Biographical note

Carl Molesworth, a resident of Mount Vernon, Washington, USA, is a former newspaper and magazine editor now working as a publicist and freelance writer. A graduate of the University of Maryland with a BA in English, Carl served as an enlisted man in the United States Air Force, 1968–72. He has been researching and writing about fighter operations in World War II for more than 30 years. His eleven previous titles include three books in Osprey’s Aircraft of the Aces series, three in the Elite Units series and two in the Duel series.