P 38 Lightning | Lockheed single-seat, twin piston-engined fighter aircraft | Upscaled Video

The Lockheed P-38 Lightning is an American single-seat, twin piston-engined fighter aircraft that was used during World War II. Developed for the United States Army Air Corps by the Lockheed Corporation, the P-38 incorporated a distinctive twin-boom design with a central nacelle containing the cockpit and armament. Along with its use as a general fighter, the P-38 was used in various aerial combat roles, including as a highly effective fighter-bomber, a night fighter, and a long-range escort fighter when equipped with drop tanks. The P-38 was also used as a bomber-pathfinder, guiding streams of medium and heavy bombers, or even other P-38s equipped with bombs, to their targets. Used in the aerial reconnaissance role, the P-38 accounted for 90 percent of the aerial film captured over Europe The P-38 was used most successfully in the Pacific Theater of Operations and the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations as the aircraft of America's top aces, Richard Bong (40 victories), Thomas McGuire (38 victories), and Charles H. MacDonald (27 victories). In the South West Pacific theater, the P-38 was the primary long-range fighter of United States Army Air Forces until the introduction of large numbers of P-51D Mustangs toward the end of the war. Unusual for an early-war fighter design, both engines were supplemented by turbosuperchargers. This gave the P-38 excellent high-altitude performance, making it one of the earliest Allied fighters capable of performing well at high altitudes. The turbosuperchargers also muffled the exhaust, making the P-38's operation relatively quiet. The Lightning was extremely forgiving in-flight and could be mishandled in many ways, but the rate of roll in early versions was low relative to other contemporary fighters; this was addressed in later variants with the introduction of hydraulically boosted ailerons. The P-38 was the only American fighter aircraft in large-scale production throughout American involvement in the war, from the Attack on Pearl Harbor to Victory over Japan Day. The Lockheed Corporation designed the P-38 in response to a February 1937 specification from the United States Army Air Corps (USAAC). Circular Proposal X-608 was a set of aircraft performance goals authored by First Lieutenants Benjamin S. Kelsey and Gordon P. Saville for a twin-engined, high-altitude "interceptor" having "the tactical mission of interception and attack of hostile aircraft at high altitude." Forty years later, Kelsey explained that Saville and he drew up the specification using the word "interceptor" as a way to bypass the inflexible Army Air Corps requirement for pursuit aircraft to carry no more than 500 lb (230 kg) of armament including ammunition, and to bypass the USAAC restriction of single-seat aircraft to one engine. Kelsey was looking for a minimum of 1,000 lb (450 kg) of armament. General characteristics Crew: 1 Length: 37 ft 10 in (11.53 m) Wingspan: 52 ft 0 in (15.85 m) Height: 12 ft 10 in (3.91 m) Wing area: 327.5 sq ft (30.43 m2) Aspect ratio: 8.26 Airfoil: root: NACA 23016; tip: NACA 4412 Empty weight: 12,800 lb (5,806 kg) Gross weight: 17,500 lb (7,938 kg) Max takeoff weight: 21,600 lb (9,798 kg) Powerplant: 2 × Allison V-1710 (-111 left hand rotation and -113 right hand rotation) V-12 liquid-cooled turbo-supercharged piston engine, 1,600 hp (1,200 kW) each WEP at 60 inHg (2.032 bar) and 3,000 rpm Propellers: 3-bladed Curtiss electric constant-speed propellers (LH and RH rotation) Performance Maximum speed: 414 mph (666 km/h, 360 kn) on Military Power: 1,425 hp (1,063 kW) at 54 inHg (1.829 bar), 3,000 rpm and 25,000 ft (7,620 m) Cruise speed: 275 mph (443 km/h, 239 kn) Stall speed: 105 mph (169 km/h, 91 kn) Combat range: 1,300 mi (2,100 km, 1,100 nmi) Ferry range: 3,300 mi (5,300 km, 2,900 nmi) Service ceiling: 44,000 ft (13,000 m) Rate of climb: 4,750 ft/min (24.1 m/s) Lift-to-drag: 13.5 Wing loading: 53.4 lb/sq ft (261 kg/m2) Power/mass: 0.16 hp/lb (0.26 kW/kg) Drag area: 8.78 sq ft (0.82 m2) Zero-lift drag coefficient: 0.0268 Armament Guns: 1× Hispano M2(C) 20 mm cannon with 150 rounds 4× M2 Browning machine gun 0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns with 500 rpg. Rockets: 4× M10 three-tube 4.5 in (112 mm) M8 rocket launchers; or: Bombs: Inner hardpoints: 2× 2,000 lb (907 kg) bombs or drop tanks; or 2× 1,000 lb (454 kg) bombs or drop tanks, plus either 4× 500 lb (227 kg) bombs or 4× 250 lb (113 kg) bombs; or 6× 500 lb (227 kg) bombs; or 6× 250 lb (113 kg) bombs Outer hardpoints: 10× 5 in (127 mm) HVARs (High Velocity Aircraft Rockets); or 2× 500 lb (227 kg) bombs; or 2× 250 lb (113 kg) bombs #p38 #lightning #fighteraircraft

The Insane Engineering of the P-38 Lightning
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The Insane Engineering of the P-38 Lightning

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U.S. Ace of Aces Richard Bong And The Lockheed P-38 Lightning

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P 38 Lightning VS De Havilland Mosquito - Which Would You Want To Fight WW2 In?

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The Navy's Mach 2 Giant: The Rise and Fall of the A-5 Vigilante

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Lockheed P-38 Lightning Design Info

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The P 38 Lighting and the Bomber Mafia's Failure In World War Two

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Inside The Cockpit - P-38 Lightning ft. Scat III

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Luftwaffe Tested A Stolen American P-47 — His Words Shocked..

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The GREASE MACHINE - From American Rejection to Italian Perfection - StarFighter F-104 (Full Story)

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Curtiss P-40, Part 1 | The Most Underrated Fighter of WW2?

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A-10 Thunderbolt II Warthog | History, Controversy And Unknown Facts | Full Documentary

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P-38 Lightning Why Not Merlin Engines?

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German Pilots Tested A Captured Hawker Hurricane... Their Verdict Stunned The Luftwaffe

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The Misunderstood Saga of the P-38 Lightning

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Hitler’s Giant Aircraft That Could Carry Tanks - Secret Luftwaffe Film On The ME 321 Gigant

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Inside the Me-262 Jet Fighter

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P-39 Airacobra & P-63 Kingcobra | The American Aircraft Loved By The Soviets | Bell Aircraft

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From the Bf 109 to the World's First Jet — The Rise and Ruin of Willy Messerschmitt

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The P-38 Lightning Ace with Nine Lives: Dogfights, bailouts, and two days in a life raft | P.J. Dahl

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What RAF Pilots Said When They First Flew The American P-51 Mustang