Curtiss P-40
Snub-nosed Kittyhawks and Warhawks
Carl Molesworth author Adam Tooby illustrator Richard Chasemore illustrator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:20th Nov '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A definitive technical guide to the snub-nosed Curtiss P-40 Warhawk variants.
The second in a pair of books on the Curtiss P-40, a definitive technical guide to the snub-nosed Warhawk variants.
An improved version of the Allison V-1710 engine gave rise to the Curtiss H-87, which began life in 1941 as the P-40D and featured a completely redesigned fuselage. The shorter and deeper nose of the new fighter gave it a decidedly snub-nosed appearance compared to the earlier P-40 models. Curtiss continued to tweak the H-87 for the next two years in the search for better performance, but the last major version, the P-40N, was only marginally faster than the first. In the process, Curtiss even tried an engine change to the Packard Merlin in the P-40F and L but to no avail.
What the late model P-40s lacked in speed and service ceiling, they traded for maneuverability, durability and availability. Their niche became fighter-bomber operations, and they fought on fronts as varied as the arctic wastes of the Aleutian Islands and Iceland, the steaming jungles of the South Pacific and the barren deserts of North Africa. P-40s were a common sight in the skies over Burma and China, Sicily and Italy, and western Russia as well.
This compact, illustration volume covers the whole history of these variants until production ceased in 1944, by which time Curtiss had produced nearly 14,000 P-40s.
ISBN: 9781780969121
Dimensions: 248mm x 184mm x 7mm
Weight: 250g
64 pages