The P-40 Warhawk Story: Once an Ace, Now Almost Forgotten

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The Curtiss P-40 Warhawk is not as well-known or as liked as the beautiful P-51 Mustang or the powerful P-47 Thunderbolt by general aviation fans, but it keeps on telling a great story to those who are familiar with WWII air fights. Normally, the P-40 was not among the most visually attractive or aerobatic planes; however, it had the characteristics of being dependable, rugged, and in the hands of some of the most fiercely undertook pilots.

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Its ancestry goes back to the Curtiss P-36 Hawk. Instead of beginning anew, Curtiss designers used the P-36 airframe as a starting point, substituting the Allison V-1710 liquid-cooled engine in place of the P-36’s radial. The product of this was a single-engine, single-seat fighter with an unusual appearance and the image of taking a tremendous amount of battle damage and still returning its pilot safely to base.

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On paper, the P-40 was a good performer. It had a top speed of about 318 knots (589 km/h) because of its 1,240-horsepower Allison engine. Its standard armament was two .50 caliber Browning machine guns in the nose and four .303 caliber guns in the wings.

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The Warhawk had a ceiling of 29,000 feet, could climb at 2,100 feet per minute, and was used for a range of missions. Though it did not surpass the most agile or quickest fighters, it excelled at durability and reach, traits that made it a tremendous asset for air defense as well as for attacking the ground. Pilots returned from missions in planes riddled with bullets, their Warhawks beaten but still flyable.

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The P-40 engaged in almost every theater of the war—North Africa, the Pacific, and the China-Burma-India Theater. It could escort bombers, dive-bomb enemy ground targets, or engage enemy fighters.

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The plane’s most legendary pilots were the Flying Tigers, a unit of American volunteer pilots who helped protect China prior to the U.S. entering the war officially. Their shark-toothed nose art is one of the most iconic images of the war.

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One of the P-40’s pilots, Keith Bissonnette, was the epitome of the kind of toughness the P-40 is known for. A professional minor leaguer before the war, Bissonnette enlisted in the Army Air Forces in 1942 and flew with the 88th Fighter Squadron, 80th Fighter Group.

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He flew P-40s and then P-47 Thunderbolts on over 200 combat missions in the China-Burma-India Theater—bombs, strafing, and even hazardous supply flights over the Himalayas referred to as “the Hump.” His service ended in tragedy in March of 1945 when his P-47 crashed near Keng Tung, Burma. He received the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal, and Purple Heart for bravery.

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Pitted against its German equivalent, the Messerschmitt Bf 109, the P-40 did not always win on sheer performance. The Bf 109’s 1,455-horsepower Daimler-Benz engine provided it with more speed, superior altitude performance, and superior climb rates.

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But the Warhawk responded with toughness, more protection, and greater resistance to damage—traits which frequently made the difference between living and dying. The two pilots embodied different philosophies: German concepts of agility and quickness, and American ideals of hardness and flexibility.

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As the war ended, the advent of jet aircraft sent the P-0 and other piston-driven fighters into retirement. Only a few survived, and now only a few Warhawks exist in museums or have been returned to flight status.

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Though it was never the darling of the limelight, the Curtiss P-40 Warhawk forged its reputation through reliability, versatility, and the determination of the flyers who flew it. It is an icon of the lesser-known air war heroes—men and machines that fought as hard as the greats but without as much acclaim.

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Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons
Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

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