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Lockheed P-38 Lightning

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 (USAAC) 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.[4] 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.[5] Used in the aerial reconnaissance role, the P-38 accounted for 90 percent of American aerial film captured over Europe.[6] Although it was not designated a heavy fighter or a bomber destroyer by the USAAC, the P-38 filled those roles and more; unlike German heavy fighters crewed by two or three airmen, the P-38 with its lone pilot was nimble enough to compete with single-engine fighters.[7]

P-38 Lightning
A P-38 Lightning warbird over Chino Airport in 2009
Role
National origin United States
Manufacturer Lockheed Corporation
First flight 27 January 1939
Introduction July 1941[1]
Retired 1949 (United States Air Force)
1965 (Honduran Air Force)[2]
Primary users United States Army Air Forces
Free French Air Force
Produced 1941–45
Number built 10,037[3]
Developed into Lockheed XP-49
Lockheed XP-58

The P-38 was used most successfully in the Pacific and the China-Burma-India Theaters 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.[8] Unusual for an early-war fighter design, both engines were supplemented by turbosuperchargers, making it one of the earliest Allied fighters capable of performing well at high altitudes.[9] The turbosuperchargers also muffled the exhaust, making the P-38's operation relatively quiet.[10] The Lightning was extremely forgiving in flight and could be mishandled in many ways, but the initial 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.[11] 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.[12]

Design and development edit

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."[13] 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.[14] Kelsey and Saville aimed to get a more capable fighter, better at dog fighting and at high-altitude combat. Specifications called for a maximum airspeed of at least 360 mph (580 km/h) at altitude, and a climb to 20,000 ft (6,100 m) within six minutes,[15] the toughest set of specifications USAAC had ever presented. The unbuilt Vultee XP1015 design was offered to fill this requirement, but was not advanced enough to merit further investigation. A similar proposal for a single-engined fighter was issued at the same time, Circular Proposal X-609, in response to which the Bell P-39 Airacobra was designed.[16] Both proposals required liquid-cooled Allison V-1710 engines with turbosuperchargers and gave extra points for tricycle landing gear.

 
Preliminary Lockheed twin-engine P-38 fighter concepts
 
P-38 armament, concentrated in the nose of the aircraft

Lockheed formed a secretive engineering team to implement the project apart from the main factory; this approach later became known as Skunk Works.[17][18] The Lockheed design team, under the direction of Hall Hibbard and Clarence "Kelly" Johnson, considered a range of twin-engined configurations, including both engines in a central fuselage with push–pull propellers.[19]

The eventual configuration was rare in terms of contemporary production fighter aircraft design, with the Dutch Fokker G.I heavy fighter, and the later Northrop P-61 Black Widow night fighter and Swedish SAAB 21 having a similar planform. The Lockheed team chose twin booms to accommodate the tail assembly, engines, and turbosuperchargers, with a central nacelle for the pilot and armament. The XP-38 gondola mockup was designed to mount two .50-caliber (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns with 200 rounds per gun (rpg), two .30-caliber (7.62 mm) Brownings with 500 rpg, and a United States Army Ordnance Department prototype T1 23 mm (.90 in) autocannon with a rotary magazine as a substitute for the nonexistent 25 mm Hotchkiss aircraft autocannon specified by Kelsey and Saville.[16] In the prototype YP-38s, an Army Ordnance Department T9 37 mm (1.46 in) autocannon (later designated as the M4 in production) with 15 rounds replaced the 23 mm T1.[20][21] The 15 rounds were in three five-round clips, an unsatisfactory arrangement according to Kelsey, and the T9/M4 did not perform reliably in flight. Further armament experiments from March to June 1941 resulted in the P-38E combat configuration of four M2 Browning machine guns, and one Hispano 20 mm (.79 in) autocannon with 150 rounds.[22]

Clustering all the armament in the nose was unusual in U.S. aircraft, which typically used wing-mounted guns with trajectories set up to crisscross at one or more points in a convergence zone. The P-38 cannon used heavier 20 mm rounds, creating a different trajectory, so it was inclined upward slightly more than the four machine guns such that the trajectories of the cannon rounds and .50-caliber bullets came together between 350 and 400 yards.[23] Nose-mounted guns did not suffer as much from having their useful ranges limited by pattern convergence, meaning that good pilots could shoot much farther. A Lightning could reliably hit targets at any range up to 1,000 yd (910 m), whereas the wing guns of other fighters were optimized for a specific range.[24] The rate of fire was about 650 rounds per minute for the 20×110 mm cannon round (130-gram shell) at a muzzle velocity of about 2,850 ft/s (870 m/s), and for the .50-caliber machine guns (43-gram rounds), about 850 rpm at 2,900 ft/s (880 m/s) velocity. Combined rate of fire was over 4,000 rpm with roughly every sixth projectile a 20 mm shell.[25] The duration of sustained firing for the 20 mm cannon was about 14 seconds, while the .50-caliber machine guns worked for 35 seconds if each magazine were fully loaded with 500 rounds, or for 21 seconds if 300 rounds were loaded to save weight for long-distance flying.

The Lockheed design incorporated tricycle undercarriage and a bubble canopy, and featured two 1,000 hp (750 kW) turbosupercharged 12-cylinder Allison V-1710 engines fitted with counter-rotating propellers to eliminate the effect of engine torque, with the turbochargers positioned behind the engines, the exhaust side of the units exposed along the dorsal surfaces of the booms.[26] Counter-rotation was achieved by the use of "handed" engines; the crankshafts of the engines turned in opposite directions, a relatively easy task for the V-1710 modular-design aircraft powerplant.[27]

The P-38 was the first American fighter to make extensive use of stainless steel and smooth, flush-riveted, butt-jointed aluminum skin panels.[28][page needed] It was also the first military airplane to fly faster than 400 mph (640 km/h) in level flight.[29][30]

XP-38 and YP-38 prototypes edit

Lockheed won the competition on 23 June 1937 with its Model 22 and was contracted to build a prototype XP-38[31] for US$163,000, though Lockheed's own costs on the prototype would add up to US$761,000.[32] Construction began in July 1938 in an old bourbon distillery purchased by Lockheed to house expanding operations. This secure and remote site was later identified by Johnson as the first of five Lockheed Skunk Works locations.[17][18][33] The XP-38 first flew on 27 January 1939 at the hands of Ben Kelsey.[34][Note 1]

 
One of 13 YP-38s constructed

Kelsey then proposed a speed dash to Wright Field on 11 February 1939 to relocate the aircraft for further testing. General Henry "Hap" Arnold, commander of the USAAC, approved of the record attempt and recommended a cross-country flight to New York. The flight set a speed record by flying from California to New York in seven hours and two minutes, not counting two refueling stops.[26] Kelsey flew conservatively for most of the way, working the engines gently, even throttling back during descent to remove the associated speed advantage. Bundled up against the cold, Arnold congratulated Kelsey at Wright Field during his final refueling stop, and said, "don't spare the horses" on the next leg.[36] After climbing out of Wright Field and reaching altitude, Kelsey pushed the XP-38 to 420 miles per hour (680 km/h).[37] Nearing his destination, Kelsey was ordered by Mitchel Field tower ( Hempstead, New York) into a slow landing pattern behind other aircraft. Carburetor icing caused it to be brought down short of the Mitchel runway, and it was wrecked. However, on the basis of the record flight, the Air Corps ordered 13 YP-38s on 27 April 1939 for US$134,284 (~$2.31 million in 2023) each.[3][38] (The "Y" in "YP" was the USAAC's designation for service test, i.e. small numbers of early production aircraft, while the "X" in "XP" was for experimental.) Lockheed's chief test pilot, Tony LeVier, angrily characterized the accident as an unnecessary publicity stunt,[39] but according to Kelsey, the loss of the prototype, rather than hampering the program, sped the process by cutting short the initial test series. The success of the aircraft design contributed to Kelsey's promotion to captain in May 1939.[17]

 
Mechanized P-38 assembly lines in Burbank, California[40]

Manufacture of YP-38s fell behind schedule, at least partly because of changes to meet the need for mass production, making them substantially different in construction from the prototype. Another factor was the sudden required expansion of Lockheed's facility in Burbank, taking it from a specialized civilian firm dealing with small orders to a large government defense contractor making Venturas, Harpoons, Lodestars, and Hudsons, and designing the Constellation for TWA. The first YP-38 was not completed until September 1940, with its maiden flight on 17 September.[41] The 13th and final YP-38 was delivered to the USAAC in June 1941; 12 aircraft were retained for flight testing and one for destructive stress testing. The YPs were substantially redesigned and differed greatly in detail from the hand-built XP-38. They were lighter and included changes in engine fit. The propeller rotation was reversed, with the blades spinning outward (away from the cockpit) at the top of their arc, rather than inward as before. This improved the aircraft's stability as a gunnery platform.[42]

High-speed compressibility problems edit

 
The P-38 was flown with a yoke, rather than the more-usual stick.

Test flights revealed problems initially believed to be tail flutter. During high-speed flight approaching Mach 0.68, especially during dives, the aircraft's tail would begin to shake violently and the nose would tuck under (see Mach tuck), steepening the dive. Once caught in this dive, the fighter would enter a high-speed compressibility stall and the controls would lock up, leaving the pilot no option but to bail out (if possible) or remain with the aircraft until it got down to denser air, where he might have a chance to pull out. During a test flight in May 1941, USAAC Major Signa Gilkey managed to stay with a YP-38 in a compressibility lockup, riding it out until he recovered gradually using elevator trim.[26] Lockheed engineers were very concerned by this limitation, but first had to concentrate on filling the current order of aircraft. In late June 1941, the Army Air Corps was renamed the U.S. Army Air Forces (USAAF), and 65 Lightnings were finished for the service by September 1941, with more on the way for the USAAF, the Royal Air Force (RAF), and the Free French Air Force operating from England.

By November 1941, many of the initial assembly-line challenges had been met, which freed up time for the engineering team to tackle the problem of frozen controls in a dive. Lockheed had a few ideas for tests that would help them find an answer. The first solution tried was the fitting of spring-loaded servo tabs on the elevator trailing edge designed to aid the pilot when control yoke forces rose over 30 pounds-force (130 N), as would be expected in a high-speed dive. At that point, the tabs would begin to multiply the effort of the pilot's actions. Expert test pilot Ralph Virden was given a specific high-altitude test sequence to follow and was told to restrict his speed and fast maneuvering in denser air at low altitudes, since the new mechanism could exert tremendous leverage under those conditions. A note was taped to the instrument panel of the test craft underscoring this instruction. On 4 November 1941, Virden climbed into YP-38 #1 and completed the test sequence successfully, but 15 minutes later, was seen in a steep dive followed by a high-G pullout. The tail unit of the aircraft failed at about 3,500 ft (1,000 m) during the high-speed dive recovery; Virden was killed in the subsequent crash. The Lockheed design office was justifiably upset, but their design engineers could only conclude that servo tabs were not the solution for loss of control in a dive. Lockheed still had to find the problem; the Army Air Forces personnel were sure it was flutter and ordered Lockheed to look more closely at the tail.

In 1941, flutter was a familiar engineering problem related to a too-flexible tail, but the P-38's empennage was completely skinned in aluminum rather than fabric and was quite rigid. At no time did the P-38 suffer from true flutter.[43] To prove a point, one elevator and its vertical stabilizers were skinned with metal 63% thicker than standard, but the increase in rigidity made no difference in vibration. Army Lieutenant Colonel Kenneth B. Wolfe (head of Army Production Engineering) asked Lockheed to try external mass balances above and below the elevator, although the P-38 already had large mass balances elegantly placed within each vertical stabilizer. Various configurations of external mass balances were equipped, and dangerously steep test flights were flown to document their performance. Explaining to Wolfe in Report No. 2414, Kelly Johnson wrote, "the violence of the vibration was unchanged and the diving tendency was naturally the same for all conditions." The external mass balances did not help at all. Nonetheless, at Wolfe's insistence, the additional external balances were a feature of every P-38 built from then on.[44]

 
The P-38 pilot training manual compressibility chart shows speed limit vs. altitude.

Johnson said in his autobiography[45] that he pleaded with National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics to do model tests in its wind tunnel. They already had experience of models thrashing around violently at speeds approaching those requested and did not want to risk damaging their tunnel. Gen. Arnold, head of Army Air Forces, ordered them to run the tests, which were done up to Mach 0.74.[46] The P-38's dive problem was revealed to be the center of pressure moving back toward the tail when in high-speed airflow. The solution was to change the geometry of the wing's lower surface when diving to keep lift within bounds of the top of the wing. In February 1943, quick-acting dive flaps were tried and proven by Lockheed test pilots. The dive flaps were installed outboard of the engine nacelles, and in action, they extended downward 35° in 1.5 seconds. The flaps did not act as a speed brake; they affected the pressure distribution in a way that retained the wing's lift.[47]

Late in 1943, a few hundred dive flap field-modification kits were assembled to give North African, European, and Pacific P-38s a chance to withstand compressibility and expand their combat tactics. The kits did not always reach their destination. In March 1944, 200 dive flap kits intended for the European Theater of Operations (ETO) P-38Js were destroyed in a mistaken identification incident in which an RAF fighter shot down the Douglas C-54 Skymaster (mistaken for a German Focke-Wulf Fw 200) taking the shipment to England. Back in Burbank, P-38Js coming off the assembly line in spring 1944 were towed out to the ramp and modified in the open air. The flaps were finally incorporated into the production line in June 1944 on the last 210 P-38Js. Despite testing having proved the dive flaps effective in improving tactical maneuvers, a 14-month delay in production limited their implementation, with only the final half of all Lightnings built having the dive flaps installed as an assembly-line sequence.[48]

Johnson later recalled:

I broke an ulcer over compressibility on the P-38 because we flew into a speed range where no one had ever been before, and we had difficulty convincing people that it wasn't the funny-looking airplane itself, but a fundamental physical problem. We found out what happened when the Lightning shed its tail and we worked during the whole war to get 15 more kn [28 km/h] of speed out of the P-38. We saw compressibility as a brick wall for a long time. Then we learned how to get through it.[49]

Buffeting was another early aerodynamic problem. Distinguishing it from compressibility was difficult, as both were reported by test pilots as "tail shake". Buffeting came about from airflow disturbances ahead of the tail; the airplane would shake at high speed. Leading-edge wing slots were tried, as were combinations of filleting between the wing, cockpit, and engine nacelles. Air-tunnel test number 15 solved the buffeting completely and its fillet solution was fitted to every subsequent P-38 airframe. Fillet kits were sent out to every squadron flying Lightnings. The problem was traced to a 40% increase in air speed at the wing-fuselage junction where the thickness/chord ratio was highest. An airspeed of 500 mph (800 km/h) at 25,000 ft (7,600 m) could push airflow at the wing-fuselage junction close to the speed of sound. Filleting solved the buffeting problem for the P-38E and later models.[43]

 
Airfield crew working on Lockheed P-38 fighter plane engines, c. 1944

Another issue with the P-38 arose from its unique design feature of outwardly rotating (at the "tops" of the propeller arcs) counter-rotating propellers. Losing one of two engines in any twin-engined, non-centerline thrust aircraft on takeoff creates sudden drag, yawing the nose toward the dead engine and rolling the wingtip down on the side of the dead engine. Normal training in flying twin-engined aircraft when losing an engine on takeoff is to push the remaining engine to full throttle to maintain airspeed; if a pilot did that in the P-38, regardless of which engine had failed, the resulting engine torque and p-factor force produced a sudden, uncontrollable yawing roll, and the aircraft would flip over and hit the ground. Eventually, procedures were taught to allow a pilot to deal with the situation by reducing power on the running engine, feathering the prop on the failed engine, and then increasing power gradually until the aircraft was in stable flight. Single-engined takeoffs were possible, though not with a full fuel and ammunition load.[50]

The engines were unusually quiet because the exhausts were muffled by the General Electric turbosuperchargers on the twin Allison V12s.[51] Early problems with cockpit temperature regulation occurred; pilots were often too hot in the tropical sun as the canopy could not be fully opened without severe buffeting, and were often too cold in Northern Europe and at high altitude, as the distance of the engines from the cockpit prevented easy heat transfer. Later variants received modifications (such as electrically heated flight suits) to solve these problems.[citation needed]

On 20 September 1939, before the YP-38s had been built and flight tested, the USAAC ordered 66 initial-production P-38 Lightnings, 30 of which were delivered to the (renamed) USAAF in mid-1941, but not all these aircraft were armed. The unarmed aircraft were subsequently fitted with four .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns (instead of the two .50 in/12.7 mm and two .30 in/7.62 mm of their predecessors) and a 37 mm (1.46 in) cannon. They also had armored glass, cockpit armor, and fluorescent instrument lighting.[52] One was completed with a pressurized cabin on an experimental basis and designated XP-38A.[53] Due to reports the USAAF was receiving from Europe, the remaining 36 in the batch were upgraded with small improvements such as self-sealing fuel tanks and enhanced armor protection to make them combat-capable. The USAAF specified that these 36 aircraft were to be designated P-38D. As a result, no P-38Bs or P-38Cs were designated. The P-38D's main role was to work out bugs and give the USAAF experience with handling the type.[54]

 
P-38 rear view

In March 1940, the French and British, through the Anglo-French Purchasing Committee, ordered 667 P-38s for US$100M,[55] designated Model 322F for the French and Model 322B for the British. The aircraft was a variant of the P-38E. The overseas Allies wished for complete commonality of Allison engines with the large numbers of Curtiss P-40 Tomahawks both nations had on order, so they ordered the aircraft fitted with two right-handed engines (not counter-rotating) without turbosuperchargers.[56][Note 2] Performance was supposed to be 400 mph (640 km/h) at 16,900 ft (5,200 m).[57] After the fall of France in June 1940, the British took over the entire order and gave the aircraft the service name "Lightning". By June 1941, the War Ministry had cause to reconsider their earlier aircraft specifications based on experience gathered in the Battle of Britain and The Blitz.[58] British displeasure with the Lockheed order came to the fore in July, and on 5 August 1941, they modified the contract such that 143 aircraft would be delivered as previously ordered, to be known as "Lightning (Mark) I", and 524 would be upgraded to US-standard P-38E specifications with a top speed of 415 mph (668 km/h) at 20,000 ft (6,100 m) guaranteed, to be called "Lightning II", for British service.[58] Later that summer, an RAF test pilot reported back from Burbank with a poor assessment of the "tail flutter" situation, and the British cancelled all but three of the 143 Lightning Is.[58] As a loss around US$15M was involved, Lockheed reviewed their contracts and decided to hold the British to the original order. Negotiations grew bitter and stalled.[58] Everything changed after Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, after which the United States government seized some 40 of the Model 322s for West Coast defense;[59] subsequently all British Lightnings were delivered to the USAAF starting in January 1942. The USAAF lent the RAF three of the aircraft, which were delivered by sea in March 1942[60] and were test flown no earlier than May[61] at Cunliffe-Owen Aircraft Swaythling, the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE) and the Royal Aircraft Establishment.[58] The A&AEE example was unarmed, lacked turbochargers and restricted to 300 mph (480 km/h); though the undercarriage was praised and flight on one engine described as comfortable.[62] These three were subsequently returned to the USAAF; one in December 1942 and the others in July 1943.[60] Of the remaining 140 Lightning Is, 19 were not modified and were designated by the USAAF as RP-322-I ('R' for 'Restricted', because noncounter-rotating propellers were considered more dangerous on takeoff), while 121 were converted to counter-rotating V-1710F-2 engines without turbosuperchargers and designated P-322-II. All 121 were used as advanced trainers; a few were still serving that role in 1945.[61] A few RP-322s were later used as test modification platforms such as for smoke-laying canisters. The RP-322 was a fairly fast aircraft below 16,000 ft (4,900 m) and well-behaved as a trainer.[61][Note 3]

Many of the British order of 524 Lightning IIs were fitted with stronger F-10 Allison engines as they became available, and all were given wing pylons for fuel tanks or bombs. The upgraded aircraft were deployed to the Pacific as USAAC F-5A reconnaissance or P-38G fighter models, the latter used with great effect in the operation that shot down Admiral Yamamoto in April 1943. Robert Petit's G model named Miss Virginia was on that mission, borrowed by Rex Barber, who was later credited with the kill. Petit had already used Miss Virginia to defeat two Nakajima A6M2-N "Rufe" floatplanes in February and to heavily damage a Japanese submarine chaser in March, which he mistakenly claimed as a destroyer sunk. Murray "Jim" Shubin used a less powerful F model he named "Oriole" to down five confirmed and possibly six Zeros over Guadalcanal in June 1943 to become ace in a day.[63]

The British name was retained over Lockheed's original name 'Atalanta', the swift-running Greek goddess, following the company tradition of using mythological and celestial figures.[64]

Range extension edit

The strategic bombing proponents within the USAAF, nicknamed the Bomber Mafia by their ideological opponents, had established in the early 1930s a policy against research to create long-range fighters, which they thought would not be practical; this kind of research was not to compete for bomber resources. Aircraft manufacturers understood that they would not be rewarded if they installed subsystems on their fighters to enable them to carry drop tanks to provide more fuel for extended range. Lieutenant Kelsey, acting against this policy, risked his career in late 1941 when he convinced Lockheed to incorporate such subsystems in the P-38E model, without putting his request in writing. It is possible that Kelsey was responding to Colonel George William Goddard's observation that the US sorely needed a high-speed, long-range photo reconnaissance plane. Along with a change order specifying some P-38Es be produced with guns replaced by photoreconnaissance cameras, to be designated the F-4-1-LO, Lockheed began working out the problems of drop-tank design and incorporation. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, eventually about 100 P-38Es were sent to a modification center near Dallas, Texas, or to the new Lockheed assembly plant B-6 (today the Burbank Airport), to be fitted with four K-17 aerial photography cameras. All of these aircraft were also modified to be able to carry drop tanks. P-38Fs were modified, as well. Every Lightning from the P-38G onward was capable of being fitted with drop tanks straight off the assembly line.[65]

In March 1942, General Arnold made an off-hand comment that the US could avoid the German U-boat menace by flying fighters to the UK rather than packing them onto ships. President Roosevelt pressed the point, emphasizing his interest in the solution. Arnold was likely aware of the flying radius extension work being done on the P-38, which by this time had seen success with small drop tanks in the range of 150 to 165 US gal (570 to 620 L), the difference in capacity being the result of subcontractor production variation. Arnold ordered further tests with larger drop tanks in the range of 300 to 310 US gal (1,100 to 1,200 L); the results were reported by Kelsey as providing the P-38 with a 2,500-mile (4,000 km) ferrying range.[65] Because of available supply, the smaller drop tanks were used to fly Lightnings to the UK, the plan called Operation Bolero.

Led by two Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses, the first seven P-38s, each carrying two small drop tanks, left Presque Isle Army Air Field in Maine on 23 June 1942 for RAF Heathfield in Scotland. Their first refueling stop was made in far northeast Canada at Goose Bay. The second stop was a rough airstrip in Greenland called Bluie West One, and the third refueling stop was in Iceland at Keflavik. Other P-38s followed this route with some lost in mishaps, usually due to poor weather, low visibility, radio difficulties, and navigational errors. Nearly 200 of the P-38Fs (and a few modified Es) were successfully flown across the Atlantic in July–August 1942, making the P-38 the first USAAF fighter to reach Britain and the first fighter ever to be delivered across the Atlantic under its own power.[66] Kelsey himself piloted one of the Lightnings, landing in Scotland on 25 July.[67]

Operational history edit

 
Cocooned Lockheed P-38 Lightnings and North American Aviation P-51 Mustangs line the decks of a U.S. Navy Escort "Jeep" Carrier (CVE) ready for shipment to Europe from New York.

The first unit to receive P-38s was the 1st Fighter Group. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the unit joined the 14th Pursuit Group in San Diego to provide West Coast defense.[68]

Entry to the war edit

The first Lightning to see active service was the F-4 version, a P-38E in which the guns were replaced by four K17 cameras.[69] They joined the 8th Photographic Squadron in Australia on 4 April 1942.[42] Three F-4s were operated by the Royal Australian Air Force in this theater for a short period beginning in September 1942.

On 29 May 1942, 25 P-38s began operating in the Aleutian Islands in Alaska. The fighter's long range made it well-suited to the campaign over the almost 1,200-mile (1,900 km)-long island chain, and it was flown there for the rest of the war. The Aleutians were some of the most rugged environments available for testing the new aircraft under combat conditions. More Lightnings were lost due to severe weather and other conditions than enemy action; cases occurred where Lightning pilots, mesmerized by flying for hours over gray seas under gray skies, simply flew into the water. On 9 August 1942, two P-38Es of the 343rd Fighter Group, 11th Air Force, at the end of a 1,000-mile (1,600 km) long-range patrol, happened upon a pair of Japanese Kawanishi H6K "Mavis" flying boats and destroyed them,[42] making them the first Japanese aircraft to be shot down by Lightnings.

European theater edit

North Africa and Italy edit

 
Reconnaissance P-38 with bold black and white invasion stripes participating in the Normandy Campaign

After the Battle of Midway, the USAAF began redeploying fighter groups to Britain as part of Operation Bolero and Lightnings of the 1st Fighter Group were flown across the Atlantic via Iceland. On 14 August 1942, Second Lieutenant Elza Shahan of the 27th Fighter Squadron, and Second Lieutenant Joseph Shaffer of the 33rd Squadron operating out of Iceland shot down a Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor over the Atlantic. Shaffer, flying either a P-40C or a P-39, scored the first hit, causing a fire on the Condor; Shahan in his P-38F finished it off with a high-speed gunnery pass.[70] This was the first Luftwaffe aircraft destroyed by the USAAF.[71]

After 347 sorties with no enemy contact, the 1st and 14th Fighter Groups transferred from the UK to the 12th Air Force in North Africa as part of the force being built up for Operation Torch. The Lightning's long range allowed the pilots to fly their fighters over the Bay of Biscay, skirting neutral Spain and Portugal to refuel in Morocco. The P-38s were initially based at Tafaroui Airfield in Algeria alongside P-40 Warhawks and the rest of the 12th Air Force. P-38s were first involved in North African combat operations on 11 November 1942. The first North African P-38 kill was on 22 November, when Lieutenant Mark Shipman of the 14th downed an Italian airplane with twin engines. Shipman later made two more kills – a Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter and a very large Me 323 Gigant transport.[72]

Early results in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations were mixed. Some P-38 pilots scored multiple kills to become aces, while many others were shot down due to inexperience or tactical strictures. Overall, the P-38 suffered its highest losses in the Mediterranean Theater. The primary function of the P-38 in North Africa was to escort bombers,[73] but the fighters also targeted transport aircraft, and later in the campaign, they were sometimes tasked with ground-attack missions. When tied to bomber-escort duties, the P-38 squadrons were vulnerable to attack from above by German fighters, who selected the most advantageous position and timing. The initial tactical doctrine of the American units was for the P-38s to fly near the bombers at all times rather than to defend aggressively or to fly ahead and clear the airspace for the bombers, and many American pilots were downed because of this limitation. Losses mounted, and all available P-38s in the UK were flown over to North Africa to restore squadron strength.[72] After this painful experience, the American leadership changed tactics, and in February 1943, the P-38s were given free rein in their battles.[74]

The first German success against the P-38 was on 28 November 1942, when Bf 109 pilots of Jagdgeschwader 53 claimed seven Lightnings for no loss of their own.[74] Further one-sided German victories were noted on several occasions through January 1943.[75] The first P-38 pilots to achieve ace status were Virgil Smith of the 14th FG and Jack Illfrey of the 1st FG, both credited with five wins by 26 December. Smith got a sixth enemy aircraft on 28 December, but was killed two days later in a crash landing, likely after taking fire from Oberfeldwebel Herbert Rollwage of JG 53, who survived the war with at least 71 kills. This was Rollwage's first victory over a P-38, and his 35th claim at the time.[76]

The two squadrons of the 14th Fighter Group were reduced so badly in December 1942 that the 82nd FG was flown from the UK to North Africa to cover the shortage. The first kill by the 82nd was during a bomber-escort mission on 7 January 1943, when William J. "Dixie" Sloan broke formation and turned toward six attacking Bf 109s to shoot one of them down. Known for his maverick style, Sloan racked up 12 victories by July 1943.[76] After another heavy toll in January 1943, 14th FG had to be withdrawn from the front to reorganize, with surviving pilots sent home and the few remaining Lightnings transferred to the 82nd.[73] The 14th was out of action for three months, returning in May.[77]

On 5 April 1943, 26 P-38Fs of the 82nd claimed 31 enemy aircraft destroyed, helping to establish air superiority in the area and allegedly earning it the German nickname "der Gabelschwanz Teufel" – the Fork-tailed Devil, coming from a recently downed German aviator, as described by Life magazine in August 1943. However, the reliability of this attribution is doubtful as the clear intent of the article was to rehabilitate the P-38's reputation in the minds of the American public. No earlier independent or German attestation exists for this claim.[78] The P-38s remained active in the Mediterranean for the rest of the war, continuing to deliver and receive damage in combat. On 30 August 1943, 13 P-38s were shot down by German and Italian fighters while escorting B-26 and B-17 bombers on raids against targets in Italy.[79][80] On 2 September, 10 P-38s were shot down in combat with Bf 109s of JG 53, with four Bf 109s, including that of 67-victory ace Franz Schieß, who had been the leading "Lightning killer" in the Luftwaffe with 17 destroyed.[80][81]

The Mediterranean Theater had the first aerial combat between German fighters and P-38s. German fighter pilot appraisal of the P-38 was mixed. Some observers dismissed the P-38 as an easy kill, while others gave it high praise, a deadly enemy worthy of respect. Johannes Steinhoff, commander of JG 77 in North Africa, said that the unit's old Bf 109s were "perhaps, a little faster" than the P-38, but a dogfight with the twin-engined fighter was daunting because its turning radius was much smaller, and it could quickly get on the tail of the Bf 109. Franz Stigler, an ace with 28 kills, flew Bf 109s against the P-38 in North Africa. Stigler said the Lightning "could turn inside us with ease and they could go from level flight to climb almost instantaneously. We lost quite a few pilots who tried to make an attack and then pull up... One cardinal rule we never forgot was to avoid fighting the P-38 head on. That was suicide." Stigler said the best defense was to flick-roll the Bf 109 and dive, as the Lightning was slow in the first 10° of roll, and it was not as fast in a dive.[82] Herbert Kaiser, eventually a 68-kill ace, shot down his first P-38 in January 1943. Kaiser said that the P-38 should be respected as a formidable opponent, that it was faster and more maneuverable than the Bf 109G-6 model he flew, especially since the G-6 was slowed by underwing cannon pods. Johann Pichler, another high-scoring ace, said that the P-38 in 1943 was much faster in a climb than the Bf 109.[77] Kurt Bühligen, third-highest scoring German pilot on the Western front with 112 victories, recalled: "The P-38 fighter (and the B-24) were easy to burn. Once in Africa, we were six, and met eight P-38s and shot down seven. One sees a great distance in Africa and our observers and flak people called in sightings and we could get altitude first and they were low and slow."[83] General der Jagdflieger Adolf Galland was unimpressed with the P-38, declaring "it had similar shortcomings in combat to our Bf 110, our fighters were clearly superior to it."[84] Heinz Bäer said that P-38s "were not difficult at all. They were easy to outmaneuver and were generally a sure kill".[85]

On 12 June 1943, a P-38G, while flying a special mission between Gibraltar and Malta, or perhaps, just after strafing the radar station of Capo Pula, landed on the airfield of Capoterra (Cagliari), in Sardinia, from navigation error due to a compass failure. Regia Aeronautica chief test pilot Colonnello (Lieutenant Colonel) Angelo Tondi flew the captured aircraft to Guidonia airfield, where the P-38G was evaluated. On 11 August 1943, Tondi took off to intercept a formation of about 50 bombers, returning from the bombing of Terni (Umbria). Tondi attacked B-17G Bonny Sue, 42–30307, that fell off the shore of Torvaianica, near Rome, while six airmen parachuted out. According to US sources, he also damaged three more bombers on that occasion. On 4 September, the 301st BG reported the loss of B-17 "The Lady Evelyn," 42–30344, downed by "an enemy P-38".[86] War missions for that plane were limited, as the Italian petrol was too corrosive for the Lockheed's tanks.[87] Other Lightnings were eventually acquired by Italy for postwar service.

 
Herbert Hatch pointing to the five victory marks on his P-38

In a particular case when faced by more agile fighters at low altitudes in a constricted valley, Lightnings suffered heavy losses. On the morning of 10 June 1944, 96 P-38Js of the 1st and 82nd Fighter Groups took off from Italy for Ploiești, the third-most heavily defended target in Europe, after Berlin and Vienna.[88] Instead of bombing from high altitude as had been tried by the Fifteenth Air Force, USAAF planning had determined that a dive-bombing surprise attack, beginning at about 7,000 feet (2,100 m) with bomb release at or below 3,000 feet (900 m),[88] performed by 46 82nd Fighter Group P-38s, each carrying one 1,000-pound (500 kg) bomb, would yield more accurate results.[89] All of 1st Fighter Group and a few aircraft in 82nd Fighter Group were to fly cover, and all fighters were to strafe targets of opportunity on the return trip; a distance of some 1,255 miles (2,020 km), including a circuitous outward route made in an attempt to achieve surprise.[88] Some 85 or 86 fighters arrived in Romania to find enemy airfields alerted, with a wide assortment of aircraft scrambling for safety. P-38s shot down several, including heavy fighters, transports, and observation aircraft. At Ploiești, defense forces were fully alert, the target was concealed by smoke screen, and antiaircraft fire was very heavy, seven Lightnings were lost to antiaircraft fire at the target, and two more during strafing attacks on the return flight. German Bf 109 fighters from I./JG 53 and 2./JG 77 fought the Americans. Sixteen P-38s, called "Indieni cu două pene" (Indians with two feathers) by the Romanians, of the 71st Fighter Squadron were challenged by a large formation of Romanian IAR.81C fighters of the 6th Fighter Group. The fight took place below 300 feet (100 m) in a narrow valley and lasted 12 minutes.[90][91] Herbert Hatch saw two IAR 81Cs that he misidentified as Focke-Wulf Fw 190s hit the ground after taking fire from his guns, and his fellow pilots confirmed three more of his kills. Three of his victories were confirmed by gun camera. However, the outnumbered 71st Fighter Squadron took more damage than it dished out, losing nine aircraft. In all, the USAAF lost 22 aircraft on the mission. The Americans claimed 23 aerial victories. The Romanians and Germans lost five Bf 110s, four Ju 52s, and one Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 on the ground, as well as three Focke-Wulf Fw 58, three IAR 38, and three IAR.81C in the air.[92][93] Eleven enemy locomotives were strafed and left burning, and flak emplacements were destroyed, along with fuel trucks and other targets. Results of the bombing were not observed by the USAAF pilots because of the smoke. The dive-bombing mission profile was not repeated, though the 82nd Fighter Group was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for its part.[94]

Western Europe edit

Experiences over Germany had shown a need for long-range escort fighters to protect the Eighth Air Force's heavy-bomber operations. The P-38Hs of the 55th Fighter Group were transferred to the Eighth in England in September 1943, and were joined by the 20th Fighter Group, 364th Fighter Group, and 479th Fighter Group soon after. P-38s and Spitfires escorted Flying Fortress raids over Europe.[95]

Because its distinctive shape was less prone to cases of mistaken identity and friendly fire,[96] Lieutenant General Jimmy Doolittle, commander of the 8th Air Force, chose to pilot a P-38 during the invasion of Normandy, so he could watch the progress of the air offensive over France.[97] At one point in the mission, Doolittle flick-rolled through a hole in the cloud cover, but his wingman, then–Major General Earle E. Partridge, was looking elsewhere and failed to notice Doolittle's quick maneuver, leaving Doolittle to continue on alone on his survey of the crucial battle. Of the P-38, Doolittle said that it was "the sweetest-flying plane in the sky".[98]

 
P-38s of the 370th Fighter Group at RAF Andover in southern England

A little-known role of the P-38 in the European theater was that of fighter-bomber during the invasion of Normandy and the Allied advance across France into Germany. Assigned to the IX Tactical Air Command, the 370th Fighter Group and 474th Fighter Group and their P-38s initially flew missions from England, dive-bombing radar installations, enemy armor, troop concentrations, and flak towers, and providing air cover.[99] The 370th's group commander Howard F. Nichols and a squadron of his P-38 Lightnings attacked Field Marshal Günther von Kluge's headquarters in July 1944; Nichols himself skipped a 500 lb (230 kg) bomb through the front door.[100] The 370th later operated from Cardonville, France, and the 474th from various bases in France, flying ground-attack missions against gun emplacements, troops, supply dumps, and tanks near Saint-Lô in July and in the FalaiseArgentan area in August 1944.[99] The 370th participated in ground-attack missions across Europe until February 1945, when the unit changed over to the P-51 Mustang. The 474th operated out of bases in France, Belgium, and Germany in primarily the ground-attack missions until November–December 1945.[101]

After some disastrous raids in 1944 with B-17s escorted by P-38s and Republic P-47 Thunderbolts, Doolittle, then head of the U.S. Eighth Air Force, went to the Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough, asking for an evaluation of the various American fighters. Test pilot Captain Eric Brown, Fleet Air Arm, recalled:

We had found out that the Bf 109 and the FW 190 could fight up to a Mach of 0.75, three-quarters the speed of sound. We checked the Lightning and it couldn't fly in combat faster than 0.68. So, it was useless. We told Doolittle that all it was good for was photoreconnaissance and had to be withdrawn from escort duties. And the funny thing is that the Americans had great difficulty understanding this because the Lightning had the two top aces in the Far East.[102]

After evaluation tests at Farnborough, the P-38 was kept in fighting service in Europe for a while longer. Although many failings were remedied with the introduction of the P-38J, by September 1944, all but one of the Lightning groups in the Eighth Air Force had converted to the P-51 Mustang. The Eighth Air Force continued to conduct reconnaissance missions using the F-5 variant.[68]

Pacific theater edit

 
Wartime poster encouraging greater production of P-38s

The P-38 was used most extensively and successfully in the Pacific Theater, where it proved more suited, combining exceptional range with the reliability of two engines for long missions over water. The P-38 was used in a variety of roles, especially escorting bombers at altitudes of 18,000–25,000 ft (5,500–7,600 m). The P-38 was credited with destroying more Japanese aircraft than any other USAAF fighter.[3] Freezing cockpit temperatures were not a problem at low altitude in the tropics. In fact, the cockpit was often too hot since opening a window while in flight caused buffeting by setting up turbulence through the tailplane. Pilots taking low-altitude assignments often flew stripped down to shorts, tennis shoes, and parachute. While the P-38 could not out-turn the A6M Zero and most other Japanese fighters when flying below 200 mph (320 km/h), its superior speed coupled with a good rate of climb meant that it could use energy tactics, making multiple high-speed passes at its target. In addition, its tightly grouped guns were even more deadly to lightly armored Japanese warplanes than to German aircraft. The concentrated, parallel stream of bullets allowed aerial victory at much longer distances than fighters carrying wing guns. Dick Bong, the United States' highest-scoring World War II air ace (40 victories in P-38s), flew directly at his targets to ensure he hit them, in some cases flying through the debris of his target (and on one occasion colliding with an enemy aircraft, which was claimed as a "probable" victory). The twin Allison engines performed admirably in the Pacific.

 
Col. MacDonald and Al Nelson in the Pacific with MacDonald's P-38J

General George C. Kenney, commander of the USAAF 5th Air Force operating in New Guinea, could not get enough P-38s; they had become his favorite fighter in November 1942 when one squadron, the 39th Fighter Squadron of the 35th Fighter Group, joined his assorted P-39s and P-40s. The Lightnings established local air superiority with their first combat action on 27 December 1942.[103][104][105][106][107] Kenney sent repeated requests to Arnold for more P-38s, and was rewarded with occasional shipments, but Europe was a higher priority in Washington.[108] Despite their small force, Lightning pilots began to compete in racking up scores against Japanese aircraft.

On 2–4 March 1943, P-38s flew top cover for 5th Air Force and Australian bombers and attack aircraft during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea, in which eight Japanese troop transports and four escorting destroyers were sunk. Two P-38 aces from the 39th Fighter Squadron were killed on the second day of the battle: Bob Faurot and Hoyt "Curley" Eason (a veteran with five victories who had trained hundreds of pilots, including Dick Bong). In one notable engagement on 3 March 1943, P-38s escorted 13 B-17s (part of an attack including B-25 Mitchells and Beaufighters) as they bombed the Japanese convoy from a medium altitude of 7,000 ft (2,100 m), which dispersed the convoy formation and reduced their concentrated antiaircraft firepower. A B-17 was shot down and when Japanese Zero fighters machine-gunned some of the B-17 crew members who bailed out in parachutes, three P-38s promptly dived into action, claiming five Zeros.[109][110][111][112]

Killing of Admiral Yamamoto edit

Because of its ability to fly long distances, the Lightning figured in one of the most significant operations in the Pacific Theater – the interception, on 18 April 1943, of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the architect of Japan's naval strategy in the Pacific including the attack on Pearl Harbor. When American codebreakers found out that he was flying to Bougainville Island to conduct a front-line inspection, 16 P-38G Lightnings were sent on a long-range fighter-intercept mission, flying 435 miles (700 km) from Guadalcanal at heights of 10 to 50 ft (3 to 20 m) above the ocean to avoid detection. The Lightnings met Yamamoto's two Mitsubishi G4M "Betty" fast bomber transports and six escorting Zeros just as they arrived at the island. The first Betty crashed in the jungle and the second ditched near the coast. The Americans lost one P-38. Japanese search parties found Yamamoto's body at the jungle crash site the next day.[113]

Service record edit

 
Pilot and aircraft armorer inspect ammunition for the central 20 mm cannon

The P-38's service record shows mixed results, which may reflect more on its employment than on flaws with the aircraft. The P-38's engine troubles at high altitudes only occurred with the Eighth Air Force. One reason for this was the inadequate cooling systems of the G and H models; the improved P-38 J and L had tremendous success flying out of Italy into Germany at all altitudes.[68] Until the -J-25 variant, P-38s were easily avoided by German fighters because of the lack of dive flaps to counter compressibility in dives. German fighter pilots not wishing to fight would perform the first half of a Split S and continue into steep dives because they knew the Lightnings would be reluctant to follow.

On the positive side, having two engines was a built-in insurance policy. Many pilots arrived safely back to base after having an engine failure en route or in combat. On 3 March 1944, the first Allied fighters reached Berlin on a frustrated escort mission. Lieutenant Colonel Jack Jenkins of 55th Fighter Group led the group of P-38H pilots, arriving with only half his force after flak damage and engine trouble took their toll. On the way into Berlin, Jenkins reported one rough-running engine, causing him to wonder if he would ever make it back. The B-17s he was supposed to escort never showed up, having turned back at Hamburg. Jenkins and his wingman were able to drop tanks and outrun enemy fighters to return home with three good engines between them.[114]

 
P-38J 42-68008 flying over Southern California

In the European Theater, P-38s made 130,000 sorties with a loss of 1.3% overall, comparing favorably with P-51s, which posted a 1.1% loss, considering that the P-38s were vastly outnumbered and suffered from poorly thought-out tactics. Most of the P-38 sorties were made in the period prior to Allied air superiority in Europe, when pilots fought against a very determined and skilled enemy.[115] Lieutenant Colonel Mark Hubbard, a vocal critic of the aircraft, rated it the third-best Allied fighter in Europe.[116] The Lightning's greatest virtues were long range, heavy payload, high speed, fast climb, and concentrated firepower. The P-38 was a formidable fighter, interceptor, and attack aircraft.

In the Pacific Theater, the P-38 downed over 1,800 Japanese aircraft, with more than 100 pilots becoming aces by downing five or more enemy aircraft.[113] American fuel supplies contributed to a better engine performance and maintenance record, and range was increased with leaner mixtures. In the second half of 1944, the P-38L pilots out of Dutch New Guinea were flying 950 mi (1,530 km), fighting for 15 minutes and returning to base.[117] Such long legs were invaluable until the P-47N and P-51D entered service.

Postwar operations edit

The end of the war left the USAAF with thousands of P-38s rendered obsolete by the jet age. Orders for 1,887 more were cancelled.[118] The last P-38s in service with the United States Air Force were retired in 1949.[119] One-hundred late-model P-38L and F-5 Lightnings were acquired by Italy through an agreement dated April 1946. Delivered, after refurbishing, at the rate of one per month, they finally were all sent to the Aeronautica Militare by 1952. The Lightnings served in the 4° Stormo and other units including 3° Stormo, flying reconnaissance over the Balkans, ground attack, naval cooperation, and air-superiority missions. Due to old engines, pilot errors, and lack of experience in operations, large numbers of P-38s were lost in at least 30 accidents, many of them fatal. Despite this, many Italian pilots liked the P-38 because of its excellent visibility on the ground and stability on takeoff. The Italian P-38s were phased out in 1956; none survived the scrapyard.[120]

Surplus P-38s were also used by other foreign air forces, with 12 sold to Honduras and 15 retained by China. Six F-5s and two unarmed black two-seater P-38s were operated by the Dominican Air Force based in San Isidro Airbase, Dominican Republic, in 1947. Most of the wartime Lightnings present in the continental U.S. at the end of the war were put up for sale for US$1,200 apiece; the rest were scrapped. P-38s in distant theaters of war were bulldozed into piles and abandoned or scrapped; very few avoided that fate.

The CIA "Liberation Air Force" flew one P-38M to support the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'etat. On 27 June 1954, this aircraft dropped napalm bombs that destroyed the British cargo ship SS Springfjord, which was loading Guatemalan cotton[121] and coffee[122] for Grace Line[123][failed verification] in Puerto San José.[124] In 1957, five Honduran P-38s bombed and strafed a village occupied by Nicaraguan forces during a border dispute between these two countries concerning part of Gracias a Dios Department.[125]

P-38s were popular contenders in the air races from 1946 through 1949, with brightly colored Lightnings making screaming turns around the pylons at Reno and Cleveland. Lockheed test pilot Tony LeVier was among those who bought a Lightning, choosing a P-38J model and painting it red to make it stand out as an air racer and stunt flyer. Lefty Gardner, former B-24 and B-17 pilot and associate of the Confederate Air Force, bought a mid-1944 P-38L-1-LO that had been modified into an F-5G. Gardner painted it white with red and blue trim and named it White Lightnin'; he reworked its turbo systems and intercoolers for optimum low-altitude performance and gave it P-38F-style air intakes for better streamlining. White Lightnin' was severely damaged in a crash landing following an engine fire on a transit flight, and was bought and restored with a brilliant polished-aluminum finish by the company that owns Red Bull. The aircraft is now located in Austria.

F-5s were bought by aerial survey companies and employed for mapping. From the 1950s on, the use of the Lightning steadily declined, and only a few more than two dozen still exist, with few still flying. One example is a P-38L owned by the Lone Star Flight Museum in Galveston, Texas, painted in the colors of Charles H. MacDonald's Putt Putt Maru. Two other examples are F-5Gs, which were owned and operated by Kargl Aerial Surveys in 1946, and are now located in Chino, California, at Yanks Air Museum, and in McMinnville, Oregon, at Evergreen Aviation Museum. The earliest-built surviving P-38, Glacier Girl, was recovered from the Greenland ice cap in 1992, 50 years after she crashed there on a ferry flight to the UK, and after a complete restoration, flew once again 10 years after her recovery.

Production edit

Version and total manufactured or converted[126]
Variant Built or
converted
Comment
XP-38 1 Prototype
YP-38 13 Evaluation aircraft
P-38 30 Initial production aircraft
XP-38A 1 Pressurized cockpit
P-38D 36 Fitted with self-sealing fuel tanks/armored windshield
P-38E 210 First combat-ready variant, revised armament
F-4 100+ Reconnaissance aircraft based on P-38E
Model 322 3 RAF order: twin right-hand props and no turbo
RP-322 147 USAAF trainers
P-38F 527 First fully[citation needed] combat-capable P-38 fighter
F-4A 20 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P-38F
P-38G 1,082 Improved P-38F fighter
F-5A 180 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P-38G
XF-5D 1 A one-off converted F-5A
P-38H 601 Automatic cooling system; improved P-38G fighter
P-38J 2,970 New cooling and electrical systems
F-5B 200 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P-38J
F-5C 123 Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P-38J
F-5E 705 Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P-38J/L
P-38K 2 Paddle blade props; up-rated engines with a different propeller reduction ratio
P-38L-LO 3,810 Improved P-38J new engines; new rocket pylons
P-38L-VN 113 P-38L built by Vultee
F-5F Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P-38L
P-38M 75 Night fighter converted from P-38L
F-5G Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P-38L

Over 10,000 Lightnings were manufactured, becoming the only U.S. combat aircraft that remained in continuous production throughout the duration of American participation in World War II. The Lightning had a major effect on other aircraft; its wing, in a scaled-up form, was used on the Lockheed Constellation.[127]

P-38D and P-38Es edit

Delivered and accepted Lightning production variants began with the P-38D model. The few "hand made" YP-38s initially contracted were used as trainers and test aircraft. No Bs or Cs were delivered to the government as the USAAF allocated the 'D' suffix to all aircraft with self-sealing fuel tanks and armor.[39] Many secondary but still initial teething tests were conducted using the earliest D variants.[39]

The first combat-capable Lightning was the P-38E (and its photo-recon variant the F-4) which featured improved instruments, electrical, and hydraulic systems. Part-way through production, the older Hamilton Standard Hydromatic hollow steel propellers were replaced by new Curtiss Electric duraluminum propellers. The definitive (and now famous) armament configuration was settled upon, featuring four .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns with 500 rpg, and a 20 mm (.79 in) Hispano autocannon with 150 rounds.[128]

While the machine guns had been arranged symmetrically in the nose on the P-38D, they were "staggered" in the P-38E and later versions, with the muzzles protruding from the nose in the relative lengths of roughly 1:4:6:2. This was done to ensure a straight ammunition-belt feed into the weapons, as the earlier arrangement led to jamming.

The first P-38E rolled out of the factory in October 1941 as the Battle of Moscow filled the news wires of the world. Because of the versatility, redundant engines, and especially high-speed and high-altitude characteristics of the aircraft, as with later variants, over a hundred P-38Es were completed in the factory or converted in the field to a photoreconnaissance variant, the F-4, in which the guns were replaced by four cameras. Most of these early reconnaissance Lightnings were retained stateside for training, but the F-4 was the first Lightning to be used in action in April 1942.[citation needed]

P-38Fs and P-38Gs edit

After 210 P-38Es were built, they were followed, starting in February 1942, by the P-38F, which incorporated racks inboard of the engines for fuel tanks or a total of 2,000 lb (910 kg) of bombs. Early variants did not enjoy a high reputation for maneuverability, though they could be agile at low altitudes if flown by a capable pilot, using the P-38's forgiving stall characteristics to their best advantage. From the P-38F-15 model onwards, a "combat maneuver" setting was added to the P-38's Fowler flaps. When deployed at the 8° maneuver setting, the flaps allowed the P-38 to out-turn many contemporary single-engined fighters at the cost of some added drag. However, early variants were hampered by high aileron control forces and a low initial rate of roll,[129] and all such features required a pilot to gain experience with the aircraft,[39] which in part was an additional reason Lockheed sent its representative to England, and later to the Pacific Theater.

The aircraft was still experiencing extensive teething troubles, as well as being victimized by "urban legends", mostly involving inapplicable twin-engined factors which had been designed out of the aircraft by Lockheed.[39] In addition to these, the early versions had a reputation as a "widow maker" as it could enter an unrecoverable dive due to a sonic surface effect at high subsonic speeds. The 527 P-38Fs were heavier, with more powerful engines that used more fuel, and were unpopular in the air war in Northern Europe.[39] Since the heavier engines were having reliability problems and with them, without external fuel tanks, the range of the P-38F was reduced, and since drop tanks themselves were in short supply as the fortunes in the Battle of the Atlantic had not yet swung the Allies' way, the aircraft became relatively unpopular in minds of the bomber command planning staffs despite being the longest-ranged fighter first available to the 8th Air Force in sufficient numbers for long-range escort duties.[39] Nonetheless, General Spaatz, then commander of the 8th Air Force in the UK, said of the P-38F: "I'd rather have an airplane that goes like hell and has a few things wrong with it, than one that won't go like hell and has a few things wrong with it."[98]

 
Lockheed P-38G-1-LO Lightning, serial 42-12723

The P-38F was followed in June 1942 by the P-38G, using more powerful Allisons of 1,400 hp (1,000 kW) each and equipped with a better radio. A dozen of the planned P-38G production were set aside to serve as prototypes for what became the P-38J with further uprated Allison V-1710F-17 engines (1,425 hp (1,063 kW) each) in redesigned booms, which featured chin-mounted intercoolers in place of the original system in the leading edge of the wings and more efficient radiators. Lockheed subcontractors, however, were initially unable to supply both of Burbank's twin production lines with a sufficient quantity of new core intercoolers and radiators. War Production Board planners were unwilling to sacrifice production, and one of the two remaining prototypes received the new engines, but retained the old leading-edge intercoolers and radiators.

 
A P-38H

As the P-38H, 600 of these stop-gap Lightnings with an improved 20 mm cannon and a bomb capacity of 3,200 lb (1,500 kg) were produced on one line beginning in May 1943 while the near-definitive P-38J began production on the second line in August 1943. The Eighth Air Force was experiencing high-altitude and cold-weather issues which, while not unique to the aircraft, were perhaps more severe as the turbosuperchargers upgrading the Allisons were having their own reliability issues, making the aircraft more unpopular with senior officers out of the line.[39] This was a situation unduplicated on all other fronts where the commands were clamoring for as many P-38s as they could get.[39] Both the P-38G and P-38H models' performances were restricted by an intercooler system integral to the wing's leading edge, which had been designed for the YP-38's less powerful engines. At the higher boost levels, the new engine's charge air temperature would increase above the limits recommended by Allison and would be subject to detonation if operated at high power for extended periods of time. Reliability was not the only issue, either. For example, the reduced power settings required by the P-38H did not allow the maneuvering flap to be used to good advantage at high altitude.[130] All these problems really came to a head in the unplanned P-38H and sped the Lightning's eventual replacement in the 8th Air Force; fortunately, the 15th Air Force was glad to get them.

Some P-38G production was diverted on the assembly line to F-5A reconnaissance aircraft. An F-5A was modified to an experimental two-seat reconnaissance configuration as the XF-5D, with a Plexiglas nose, two machine guns, and additional cameras in the tail booms.

P-38J, P-38L edit

 
Four P-38Hs flying in formation

The P-38J was introduced in August 1943. The turbosupercharger intercooler system on previous variants had been housed in the leading edges of the wings and had proven vulnerable to combat damage and could burst if the wrong series of controls was mistakenly activated. In the P-38J series, the streamlined engine nacelles of previous Lightnings were changed to fit the intercooler radiator between the oil coolers, forming a "chin" that visually distinguished the J model from its predecessors. While the P-38J used the same V-1710-89/91 engines as the H model, the new core-type intercooler more efficiently lowered intake manifold temperatures and permitted a substantial increase in rated power. The leading edge of the outer wing was fitted with 55 US gal (210 L) fuel tanks, filling the space formerly occupied by intercooler tunnels, but these were omitted on early P-38J blocks due to limited availability.[131]

The final 210 J models, designated P-38J-25-LO, alleviated the compressibility problem through the addition of a set of electrically actuated dive recovery flaps just outboard of the engines on the bottom centerline of the wings. With these improvements, a USAAF pilot reported a dive speed of almost 600 mph (970 km/h), although the indicated air speed was later corrected for compressibility error, and the actual dive speed was lower.[132] Lockheed manufactured over 200 retrofit modification kits to be installed on P-38J-10-LO and J-20-LO already in Europe, but the USAAF C-54 carrying them was shot down by an RAF pilot who mistook the Douglas transport for a German Focke-Wulf Condor.[133] Unfortunately, the loss of the kits came during Lockheed test pilot Tony LeVier's four-month morale-boosting tour of P-38 bases. Flying a new Lightning named Snafuperman, modified to full P-38J-25-LO specifications at Lockheed's modification center near Belfast, LeVier captured the pilots' full attention by routinely performing maneuvers during March 1944 that common 8th Air Force wisdom held to be suicidal. It proved too little, too late, because the decision had already been made to re-equip with Mustangs.[50]

The P-38J-25-LO production block also introduced hydraulically boosted ailerons, one of the first times such a system was fitted to a fighter. This significantly improved the Lightning's rate of roll and reduced control forces for the pilot. This production block and the following P-38L model are considered the definitive Lightnings, and Lockheed ramped up production, working with subcontractors across the country to produce hundreds of Lightnings each month.

Two P-38Ks were developed from 1942 to 1943, one official and one an internal Lockheed experiment. The first was actually a battered RP-38E "piggyback" test mule previously used by Lockheed to test the P-38J chin intercooler installation, now fitted with paddle-bladed "high activity" Hamilton Standard Hydromatic propellers similar to those used on the P-47. The new propellers required spinners of greater diameter, and the mule's crude, hand-formed sheet steel cowlings were further stretched to blend the spinners into the nacelles. It retained its "piggyback" configuration that allowed an observer to ride behind the pilot. With Lockheed's AAF representative as a passenger and the maneuvering flap deployed to offset Army Hot Day conditions, the old "K-Mule" still climbed to 45,000 feet (14,000 m). With a fresh coat of paint covering its crude, hand-formed steel cowlings, this RP-38E acts as stand-in for the "P-38K-1-LO" in the model's only picture.[134]

The 12th G model originally set aside as a P-38J prototype was redesignated P-38K-1-LO and fitted with the aforementioned paddle-blade propellers and new Allison V-1710-75/77 (F15R/L) powerplants rated at 1,875 bhp (1,398 kW) at War Emergency Power. These engines were geared 2.36 to 1, unlike the standard P-38 ratio of 2 to 1. The AAF took delivery in September 1943, at Eglin Field. In tests, the P-38K-1 achieved 432 mph (695 km/h) at military power and was predicted to exceed 450 mph (720 km/h) at War Emergency Power with a similar increase in load and range. The initial climb rate was 4,800 ft (1,500 m)/min and the ceiling was 46,000 ft (14,000 m). It reached 20,000 ft (6,100 m) in five minutes flat; this with a coat of camouflage paint, which added weight and drag. Although it was judged superior in climb and speed to the latest and best fighters from all AAF manufacturers, the War Production Board refused to authorize P-38K production due to the two- to three-week interruption in production necessary to implement cowling modifications for the revised spinners and higher thrust line.[134] Some had also doubted Allison's ability to deliver the F15 engine in quantity.[135] As promising as it had looked, the P-38K project came to a halt.

The P-38L was the most numerous variant of the Lightning, with 3,923 built, 113 by Consolidated-Vultee in their Nashville plant. It entered service with the USAAF in June 1944, in time to support the Allied invasion of France on D-Day. Lockheed production of the Lightning was distinguished by a suffix consisting of a production block number followed by "LO," for example "P-38L-1-LO", while Consolidated-Vultee production was distinguished by a block number followed by "VN," for example "P-38L-5-VN."

The P-38L was the first Lightning fitted with zero-length rocket launchers. Seven High Velocity Aircraft Rockets (HVARs) on pylons were placed beneath each wing, and later, five rockets were on each wing on "Christmas tree" launch racks, which added 1,365 lb (619 kg) to the aircraft.[136] The P-38L also had strengthened stores pylons to allow carriage of 2,000 lb (900 kg) bombs or 300 US gal (1,100 L) drop tanks.

 
F-5A Lightning of the 7th Photo Group, 8th Air Force based at Mount Farm: The national insignia was bordered in red with overall finish in synthetic haze.

Lockheed modified 200 P-38J airframes in production to become unarmed F-5B photo-reconnaissance aircraft, while hundreds of other P-38Js and P-38Ls were modified at Lockheed's Dallas Modification Center to become F-5Cs, F-5Es, F-5Fs, or F-5Gs. A few P-38Ls were field modified to become two-seat TP-38L familiarization trainers. During and after June 1948, the remaining J and L variants were designated ZF-38J and ZF-38L, with the "ZF" designator (meaning "obsolete fighter") replacing the "P for Pursuit" category.

Late-model Lightnings were delivered unpainted, per USAAF policy established in 1944. At first, field units tried to paint them, since pilots worried about being too visible to the enemy, but the reduction in weight and drag turned out to be a minor advantage in combat.

The P-38L-5, the most common subvariant of the P-38L, had a modified cockpit heating system consisting of a plug-socket in the cockpit into which the pilot could plug his heat-suit wire for improved comfort. These Lightnings also received the uprated V-1710-112/113 (F30R/L) engines, and this dramatically lowered the number of engine-failure problems experienced at high altitude so commonly associated with European operations.

Pathfinders, night-fighter, and other variants edit

The Lightning was modified for other roles. In addition to the F-4 and F-5 reconnaissance variants, a number of P-38Js and P-38Ls were field modified as formation bombing "pathfinders" or "droopsnoots",[137] fitted with a Norden bombsight or an H2X radar system. Such pathfinders would lead a formation of other P-38s, each loaded with two 2,000 lb (907 kg) bombs; the entire formation releasing their ordnance when the pathfinder did.[138]

 
44-27234, a former P-38L converted as a P-38M Night Lightning

A number of Lightnings were modified as night fighters. Several field or experimental modifications with different equipment fits finally led to the "formal" P-38M night fighter, or Night Lightning. A total of 75 P-38Ls were modified to the Night Lightning configuration, painted flat-black with conical flash hiders on the guns, an AN/APS-6 radar pod below the nose, and a second cockpit with a raised canopy behind the pilot's canopy for the radar operator. The headroom in the rear cockpit was limited, requiring radar operators who were preferably short in stature.[139][page needed]

One of the initial production P-38s had its turbosuperchargers removed, with a secondary cockpit placed in one of the booms to examine how flight crews would respond to such an "asymmetric" cockpit layout.[136]Cross, Roy (1968). Lockheed P-38 Lightning. John W. Caler Publications. ISBN 9780858800038. Retrieved 25 January 2020. Another experiment was the modification of P-38 40-744 for pilot asymmetric flight tests...</ref>[page needed] One P-38E was fitted with an extended central nacelle to accommodate a tandem-seat cockpit with dual controls, and was later fitted with a laminar-flow wing.

 
P-38E testbed 41-1986 shown with second version of upswept tail designed to keep tail out of water upon takeoff for a proposed twin-float variant

Very early in the Pacific War, a scheme was proposed to fit Lightnings with floats to allow them to make long-range ferry flights. The floats would be removed before the aircraft went into combat. Concerns arose that saltwater spray would corrode the tailplane, so in March 1942, P-38E 41-1986 was modified with a tailplane raised some 16–18 in (41–46 cm), booms lengthened by 2 ft, and a rearward-facing second seat added for an observer to monitor the effectiveness of the new arrangement. A second version was crafted on the same airframe with the twin booms given greater sideplane area to augment the vertical rudders. This arrangement was removed and a final third version was fabricated that had the booms returned to normal length but the tail raised 33 in (84 cm). All three tail modifications were designed by George H. "Bert" Estabrook. The final version was used for a quick series of dive tests on 7 December 1942 in which Milo Burcham performed the test maneuvers and Kelly Johnson observed from the rear seat. Johnson concluded that the raised floatplane tail gave no advantage in solving the problem of compressibility. At no time was this P-38E testbed airframe actually fitted with floats, and the idea was quickly abandoned, as the U.S. Navy proved to have enough sealift capacity to keep up with P-38 deliveries to the South Pacific.[140]

Still another P-38E was used in 1942 to tow a Waco troop glider as a demonstration. However, there proved to be plenty of other aircraft, such as Douglas C-47 Skytrains, available to tow gliders, and the Lightning was spared this duty.

Standard Lightnings were used as crew and cargo transports in the South Pacific. They were fitted with pods attached to the underwing pylons, replacing drop tanks or bombs, that could carry a single passenger in a lying-down position, or cargo. This was a very uncomfortable way to fly. Some of the pods were not even fitted with a window to let the passenger see out or bring in light.

Lockheed proposed a carrier-based Model 822 version of the Lightning for the United States Navy. The Model 822 would have featured folding wings, an arresting hook, and stronger undercarriage for carrier operations. The navy was not interested, as they regarded the Lightning as too big for carrier operations and did not like liquid-cooled engines, anyway, and the Model 822 never went beyond the paper stage. However, the navy did operate four land-based F-5Bs in North Africa, inherited from the USAAF and redesignated FO-1.

A P-38J was used in experiments with an unusual scheme for midair refueling, in which the fighter snagged a drop tank trailed on a cable from a bomber. The USAAF managed to make this work, but decided it was not practical. A P-38J was also fitted with experimental retractable snow-ski landing gear, but this idea never reached operational service, either.

After the war, a P-38L was experimentally fitted with armament of three .60 in (15.2 mm) machine guns. The .60 in (15.2 mm) caliber cartridge had been developed early in the war for an infantry anti-tank rifle, a type of weapon developed by a number of nations in the 1930s when tanks were lighter, but by 1942, armor was too tough for this caliber.

Another P-38L was modified after the war as a "super strafer", with eight .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns in the nose and a pod under each wing with two .50 in (12.7 mm) guns, for a total of 12 machine guns. Nothing came of this conversion, either.

Variants edit

 
A 3-view line drawing of a P-38L
  • XP-38: United States Army Air Force designation for one prototype Lockheed Model 22 first flown in 1939[141]
  • YP-38: Redesigned preproduction batch with armament, 13 built[141]
  • P-38: First production variant with 0.5 in guns and a 37 mm cannon, 30 built[141][142]
  • XP-38A: Thirtieth P-38 modified with a pressurized cockpit[141][142]
  • Lightning I: Former Armée de l'air order for 667 aircraft (being reduced to 143 Lighting Is), it was taken by the Royal Air Force, three delivered to RAF, and the remainder of the order was delivered to USAAF. It used C-series V-1710-33 engines without turbochargers, and right-hand propeller rotation (not counter).[143][144]
  • Lightning II: The Royal Air Force designation for a cancelled order of 524 aircraft using F-series V-1710 engines, the only one built was retained by the USAAF for testing* the rest of the order was completed as P-38F-13-LO, P-38F-15-LO, P-38G-13-LO, and P-38G-15-LO aircraft.[143][144]
  • P-322-I: 22 Lightning Is of the 143 built were retained by the USAAF for training and testing. Most were unarmed, although some retained the Lighting I armament of two .50 cal and two .30 cal guns.[141][145]
  • P-322-II: 121 Lightning Is were re-engined with the V-1710-27/-29 and used for training. Most were unarmed.[141][145]
  • P-38B: Proposed variant of the P-38A, not built[141]
  • P-38C: Proposed variant of the P-38A, not built[141]
  • P-38D: Production variant with modified tailplane incidence, self-sealing fuel tanks, 36 built[141]
  • P-38E: Production variant with revised hydraulic system, 20 mm cannon rather than the 37 mm of earlier variants, 210 built[141]
  • P-38E Floatplane: A proposed floatplane variant of the P-38E with upswept tail booms and fitted with droppable and fuel-filled floats, one prototype was converted from P-38E 41-1986 with modified tail booms, but was not fitted with floats. It did not enter production.[146]
  • P-38F: Production variant with inboard underwing racks for drop tanks or 2000 lb of bombs, 527 built[141]
  • P-38G: Production variant with modified radio equipment, 1082 built[141]
  • P-38H: Production variant capable of carrying 3200 lb of underwing bombs, improved intercooler design along with automatic oil radiator flaps, 601 built[141]
  • P-38J: This production variant was built in 1943 with improvements to each batch, notably an increase of Hp that came with an improved turbo charger. It also included chin radiators, flat bullet-proof windshields, power-boosted ailerons, and increased fuel capacity* 2970 were built. Some were modified to pathfinder configuration and to F-5C, F-5E, and F-5F.[141]
  • P-38K: With 1425 hp engines, larger Hamilton Standard Paddle-bladed propellers were added to compensate for increased power, one was built* a single P-38E was additionally converted to the same propeller as the P-38K.[141]
  • P-38L: With 1600 hp engines, 3923 were built, which included 113 built at Vultee* later conversions to pathfinders and F-5G were made.[141]
  • TP-38L: Two P-38Ls were converted as tandem-seated operational trainers.[141]
  • P-38M: Conversion of P-38L as a radar-equipped night-fighter[141]
  • F-4: Photo-reconnaissance variant of the P-38E, 99 built[147]
  • F-4A: Photo-reconnaissance variant of the P-38F, 20 built[147]
  • F-5A: Reconnaissance variant of the P-38G, 181 built[147]
  • F-5B: Reconnaissance variant of the P-38J, 200 were built, and four were later sent to the United States Navy as FO-1s.[147]
  • F-5C: Reconnaissance variant of the P-38J, 123 conversions[147]
  • XF-5D: Prone-observer variant, one conversion from a F-5A[147]
  • F-5E: Reconnaissance variant converted from the P-38J and P-38L, 705 converted[147]
  • F-5F: Reconnaissance variant conversions of the P-38L[147]
  • F-5G: As reconnaissance variant conversions of the P-38L, they had a different camera configuration from the F-5F.[147]
  • XFO-1: United States Navy designation for four F-5Bs operated for evaluation.[148]

Operators edit

Military

Civil

Noted P-38s edit

 
P-38J Lightning YIPPEE

Yippee edit

The 5,000th Lightning built, a P-38J-20-LO, 44-23296, was painted bright vermilion red, and had the name YIPPEE painted on the underside of the wings in large white letters, as well as the signatures of hundreds of factory workers. This and other aircraft were used by a handful of Lockheed test pilots including Milo Burcham, Jimmie Mattern, and Tony LeVier in remarkable flight demonstrations, performing such stunts as slow rolls at treetop level with one prop feathered to dispel the myth that the P-38 was unmanageable.[149][150]

Surviving aircraft edit

Of the ten thousand aircraft built, there are 26 survivors of which ten are airworthy.

Noted P-38 pilots edit

Richard Bong and Thomas McGuire edit

 
Major Richard Bong in his P-38

The American ace of aces and his closest competitor both flew Lightnings and tallied 40 and 38 victories, respectively.[151] Majors Richard I. "Dick" Bong and Thomas B. "Tommy" McGuire of the USAAF competed for the top position. Both men were awarded the Medal of Honor.

McGuire was killed in air combat in January 1945 over the Philippines, after accumulating 38 confirmed kills, making him the second-ranking American ace. Bong was rotated back to the United States as America's ace of aces, after making 40 kills, becoming a test pilot. He was killed on 6 August 1945, the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Japan, when his Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star jet fighter flamed out on take-off.

 
(L–R) Thomas B. McGuire and Charles Lindbergh discussing a mission on Biak Island in July 1944

Charles Lindbergh edit

Charles Lindbergh became famous for his transatlantic solo flight before the war. By WWII he was a civilian working for Vought in the South Pacific area. He received preferential treatment as if a visiting colonel. In Hollandia, Lindbergh attached himself to the 475th Fighter Group which was flying P-38s. Although new to the aircraft, Lindbergh was instrumental in extending the range of the P-38 through improved throttle settings, or engine-leaning techniques, notably by reducing engine speed to 1,600 rpm, setting the carburetors for auto-lean and flying at 185 mph (298 km/h) indicated airspeed, which reduced fuel consumption to 70 gal/h, about 2.6 mpg. This combination of settings had been considered dangerous as it was believed this would upset the fuel mixture, causing an explosion.[152]

While with the 475th, he took part in a number of combat missions. On 28 July 1944, Lindbergh shot down a Mitsubishi Ki-51 "Sonia" flown by the veteran commander of the 73rd Independent Flying Chutai of the Imperial Japanese Army Captain Saburo Shimada. In an extended, twisting dogfight in which many of the participants ran out of ammunition, Shimada turned his aircraft directly toward Lindbergh, who was just approaching the combat area. Lindbergh fired in a defensive reaction brought on by Shimada's apparent head-on ramming attack. Hit by cannon and machine-gun fire, the "Sonia's" propeller visibly slowed, but Shimada held his course. Lindbergh pulled up at the last moment to avoid collision as the damaged "Sonia" went into a steep dive, hit the ocean, and sank. The unofficial kill was not entered in the 475th's war record. On 12 August 1944, Lindbergh left Hollandia to return to the United States.[153]

Charles MacDonald edit

The third-ranking American ace of the Pacific theater, Charles H. MacDonald, flew a Lightning against the Japanese and scored 27 kills[151] in his aircraft, the Putt Putt Maru.

Martin James Monti edit

Martin James Monti was an American pilot who defected to the Axis powers in a stolen F-5E Lightning, which was handed over to the Luftwaffe Zirkus Rosarius for testing afterward.

Robin Olds edit

Robin Olds was the last P-38 ace in the 8th Air Force and the last in the ETO. Flying a P-38J, he downed five German fighters on two separate missions over France and Germany. He subsequently transitioned to P-51s and scored seven more kills. After World War II, he flew F-4 Phantom IIs in Vietnam, ending his career as brigadier general with 16 kills.

John H. Ross edit

Ross is a decorated World War II pilot who flew 96 missions for the U.S. Army Air Forces under the U.S. 8th Air Force's 7th Reconnaissance Group in the 22nd Reconnaissance Squadron. Ross flew the Lockheed P-38 Lightning as a photo-reconnaissance pilot out of RAF Mount Farm in England during the war. He received 11 medals and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross twice for missions that were integral to Allied victory at the Battle of the Bulge.

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry edit

 
The left main landing gear of Saint-Exupéry's F-5B Lightning, recovered in 2003 from the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Marseille, France

At midday on 31 July 1944, noted aviation pioneer and writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (Night Flight, Wind, Sand and Stars and The Little Prince) vanished in his P-38 of the French Armée de l'Air's Groupe de Chasse II/33, after departing Borgo-Porreta, Corsica. His health, both physically and mentally, had been deteriorating. Saint-Exupéry was said to be intermittently subject to depression and talk had arisen of taking him off flying status.[154][155][Note 4] He was on a flight over the Mediterranean, from Corsica to mainland France, in an unarmed F-5B photo-reconnaissance variant of the P-38J,[Note 5] described as being a "war-weary, nonairworthy craft".[156]

In 2000, a French scuba diver found the partial remnants of a Lightning spread over several thousand square meters of the Mediterranean seabed off the coast of Marseille. In April 2004, the recovered component serial numbers were confirmed as being from Saint-Exupéry's F-5B Lightning. Only a small amount of the aircraft's wreckage was recovered.[157] In June 2004, the recovered parts and fragments were given to the Air and Space Museum of France in Le Bourget, Paris, where Saint-Exupéry's life is commemorated in a special exhibit.[158]

In 1981 and also in 2008, two Luftwaffe fighter pilots, respectively Robert Heichele and Horst Rippert, separately claimed to have shot down Saint-Exupéry's P-38.[159][160][161] Both claims were unverifiable and possibly self-promotional, as neither of their units' combat records of action from that period made any note of such a shoot-down.[162][163]

Specifications (P-38L) edit

 
A three-view drawing of a P-38 Lightning
 
Lockheed P-38L Lightning at the National Museum of the United States Air Force, marked as a P-38J of the 55th Fighter Squadron, based in England[164]
 
M2 machine gun armament in the nose of the P-38
 
A P-38 with a 1,000 lb (454 kg) bomb and a drop tank

Data from Lockheed P-38H/J/L Pilot's Flight Operating Instructions,[165] P-38H/J/L Pilot's Flight Operating Instructions[166]

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[167]
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 23016; tip: NACA 4412[168]
  • Empty weight: 12,800 lb (5,806 kg) [167]
  • Gross weight: 17,500 lb (7,938 kg) [167]
  • 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)[169]
  • 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) [167]
  • Power/mass: 0.16 hp/lb (0.26 kW/kg)
  • Drag area: 8.78 sq ft (0.82 m2)[167]
  • Zero-lift drag coefficient: 0.0268[167]

Armament

  • Guns:
  • 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

Popular culture edit

 
1950 Studebaker Champion

Harley Earl arranged for several of his designers to view a YP-38 prototype shortly before World War II, and its design directly inspired the tail fins of the 1948–1949 Cadillac.[170]

The P-38 was also the inspiration for Raymond Loewy and his design team at Studebaker for the 1950 and 1951 model-year Studebakers.[171]

The whine of the speeder bike engines in Return of the Jedi was partly achieved by recording the engine noise of a P-38, combined with that of a North American P-51 Mustang.[172]

The popular eight-bit video game "1942" puts the player in command of a P-38 flying over the Pacific, fighting against Japanese Zeros and the Nakajima G10N bomber. The game was made by Japanese company Capcom, intended for Western markets, and finishes with the player raiding Tokyo.

Notable appearances in media edit

Documentaries edit

  • Sheet Metal Repairs to the P-38 Lightning (1945, b & w, 19:00). This educational production and training film from Lockheed shows standard aviation tooling and methods that are still used today for aluminum aircraft repair. Film by TM Technologies.
  • Yamamoto shot down! (1944, B&W, 4:00) The P-38 Squadron that shot down Admiral Yamamoto in a long distance interception in the Pacific, is depicted. The film includes purported P-38 gun camera footage of the Admiral's Betty bomber going down in flames.
  • Dick Bong: Pacific Ace (1944, B&W, 4:00) This short documentary film pays tribute to Richard "Dick" Bong, the top American ace who flew P-38s in World War II.
  • Angel in Overalls (1945, B&W, 15:00) This film was developed to show U.S. Lockheed P-38 production-line workers in a wide variety of roles.[173]

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Notes edit

  1. ^ The 1939 edition of the German Aviation Manual already contained a detailed drawing and a close-up photograph of this prototype along with detailed information on the engines, and indicated that its maximum speed was supposed to be 640–680 km/h (400–420 mph). Dimensions, equipment, and weaponry were indicated as unknown.[35]
  2. ^ Turbosuperchargers were not secret nor restricted by the United States government. Related designs were known from French and Swiss firms. France and the UK did not want turbosuperchargers; they had never employed them and they knew the American ones were in short supply and did not want delivery delayed[57]
  3. ^ Some of the fastest postwar racing P-38s were virtually identical in layout to the P-322-II.
  4. ^ Saint-Exupéry suffered recurring pain and immobility from previous injuries due to his numerous aircraft crashes, to the extent that he could not dress himself in his own flight suit. After his death, vague suggestions were made that his disappearance was the result of suicide rather than an aircraft failure or combat loss.[citation needed]
  5. ^ He was flying a P-38-F-5B-1-LO, 42-68223, c/n 2734.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Master Sgt. John DeShetler (20 November 2006), 'Lightning' strikes 1st Pursuit Group, United States Air Force
  2. ^ . aeroflight.co.uk. Retrieved: 10 October 2010.
  3. ^ a b c Donald 1997, p. 581.
  4. ^ Johnsen 2003, p. 75, chptr. 4 "Its ability to carry two 150-gallon or 300-gallon drop made it a natural for long range escort duties...".
  5. ^ . National Museum of the United States Air Force. Retrieved 21 January 2007.
  6. ^ The P-38: When Lightning Strikes, Lockheed Martin
  7. ^ Levine 1992, p. 18.
  8. ^ Stanaway 1998, p. [page needed].
  9. ^ USAAF 1 1945, p. 7, "Two turbo-superchargers give the Allison engines sea level horsepower at extremely high altitudes.".
  10. ^ Blake 2020, Chptr. 8, p. 300, "…the P-38 was a very quiet plane, because its exhaust exited through the turbosuperchargers on top of the plane…".
  11. ^ Gunston 1980, p. 133.
  12. ^ Bodie 2001, p. xvi.
  13. ^ Bodie 2001, pp. 16–17.
  14. ^ Bodie 2001, p. 14.
  15. ^ Hanson, Dave. "Lockheed P-38 Lightning." Dave's Warbirds. Retrieved: 21 January 2007.
  16. ^ a b Bodie 2001, p. 19.
  17. ^ a b c Bodie 2001, p. 51.
  18. ^ a b Current Biography Yearbook. H. W. Wilson Co. 1969. p. 199. At that time, Lockheed did not as yet have a formal engineering building, and so Johnson and his staff improvised a development plant using unoccupied corners in hangars and an old distillery. The results of this 'skunk works' approach was the legendary P-38 Lightning.
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  172. ^ "Sound Design of Star Wars." filmsound.org, 3 January 2012. Quote: "The sound of a Speeder Bike was achieved by mixing together the recorded sounds of a P-51 Mustang airplane, a P-38 Lockheed Interceptor, and then recording them."
  173. ^ "Stock Footage: WWII Pacific Theater: Angel In Overalls - The P-38 Lightning; Broadcast Quality Video Footage, WWII Fighter P-38 Lightning Video Clips And Archive Films". www.buyoutfootage.com. Retrieved 16 August 2022.

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External links edit

  • The short film P-38: Flight Characteristics is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
  • a 1943 Flight article
  • "Jap-hunting without a Gun!" a 1943 Lockheed advertisement in Flight
  • "Lockheed Lightning (P-38/J)"[permanent dead link] a 1944 Flight article
  • "Lockheed Lightning (P-38L-5-LO)"[permanent dead link] Cutaway view
  • [1] P-38 Association and Museum

lockheed, lightning, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, american, single, seat, twin, piston, engined, fighter, aircraft, that, used, during, world, developed, united, states, army, corps, usaac, lockheed, corporation, incorporated, distinctive, twi. P 38 redirects here For other uses see P 38 disambiguation 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 USAAC 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 4 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 5 Used in the aerial reconnaissance role the P 38 accounted for 90 percent of American aerial film captured over Europe 6 Although it was not designated a heavy fighter or a bomber destroyer by the USAAC the P 38 filled those roles and more unlike German heavy fighters crewed by two or three airmen the P 38 with its lone pilot was nimble enough to compete with single engine fighters 7 P 38 LightningA P 38 Lightning warbird over Chino Airport in 2009Role Fighter Fighter bomber Aerial reconnaissanceNational origin United StatesManufacturer Lockheed CorporationFirst flight 27 January 1939Introduction July 1941 1 Retired 1949 United States Air Force 1965 Honduran Air Force 2 Primary users United States Army Air ForcesFree French Air ForceProduced 1941 45Number built 10 037 3 Developed into Lockheed XP 49 Lockheed XP 58The P 38 was used most successfully in the Pacific and the China Burma India Theaters 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 8 Unusual for an early war fighter design both engines were supplemented by turbosuperchargers making it one of the earliest Allied fighters capable of performing well at high altitudes 9 The turbosuperchargers also muffled the exhaust making the P 38 s operation relatively quiet 10 The Lightning was extremely forgiving in flight and could be mishandled in many ways but the initial 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 11 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 12 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 XP 38 and YP 38 prototypes 1 2 High speed compressibility problems 1 3 Range extension 2 Operational history 2 1 Entry to the war 2 2 European theater 2 2 1 North Africa and Italy 2 2 2 Western Europe 2 3 Pacific theater 2 3 1 Killing of Admiral Yamamoto 2 4 Service record 2 5 Postwar operations 3 Production 3 1 P 38D and P 38Es 3 2 P 38Fs and P 38Gs 3 3 P 38J P 38L 3 4 Pathfinders night fighter and other variants 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Noted P 38s 6 1 Yippee 7 Surviving aircraft 8 Noted P 38 pilots 8 1 Richard Bong and Thomas McGuire 8 2 Charles Lindbergh 8 3 Charles MacDonald 8 4 Martin James Monti 8 5 Robin Olds 8 6 John H Ross 8 7 Antoine de Saint Exupery 9 Specifications P 38L 10 Popular culture 11 Notable appearances in media 11 1 Documentaries 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 External linksDesign and development editThe 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 13 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 14 Kelsey and Saville aimed to get a more capable fighter better at dog fighting and at high altitude combat Specifications called for a maximum airspeed of at least 360 mph 580 km h at altitude and a climb to 20 000 ft 6 100 m within six minutes 15 the toughest set of specifications USAAC had ever presented The unbuilt Vultee XP1015 design was offered to fill this requirement but was not advanced enough to merit further investigation A similar proposal for a single engined fighter was issued at the same time Circular Proposal X 609 in response to which the Bell P 39 Airacobra was designed 16 Both proposals required liquid cooled Allison V 1710 engines with turbosuperchargers and gave extra points for tricycle landing gear nbsp Preliminary Lockheed twin engine P 38 fighter concepts nbsp P 38 armament concentrated in the nose of the aircraftLockheed formed a secretive engineering team to implement the project apart from the main factory this approach later became known as Skunk Works 17 18 The Lockheed design team under the direction of Hall Hibbard and Clarence Kelly Johnson considered a range of twin engined configurations including both engines in a central fuselage with push pull propellers 19 The eventual configuration was rare in terms of contemporary production fighter aircraft design with the Dutch Fokker G I heavy fighter and the later Northrop P 61 Black Widow night fighter and Swedish SAAB 21 having a similar planform The Lockheed team chose twin booms to accommodate the tail assembly engines and turbosuperchargers with a central nacelle for the pilot and armament The XP 38 gondola mockup was designed to mount two 50 caliber 12 7 mm M2 Browning machine guns with 200 rounds per gun rpg two 30 caliber 7 62 mm Brownings with 500 rpg and a United States Army Ordnance Department prototype T1 23 mm 90 in autocannon with a rotary magazine as a substitute for the nonexistent 25 mm Hotchkiss aircraft autocannon specified by Kelsey and Saville 16 In the prototype YP 38s an Army Ordnance Department T9 37 mm 1 46 in autocannon later designated as the M4 in production with 15 rounds replaced the 23 mm T1 20 21 The 15 rounds were in three five round clips an unsatisfactory arrangement according to Kelsey and the T9 M4 did not perform reliably in flight Further armament experiments from March to June 1941 resulted in the P 38E combat configuration of four M2 Browning machine guns and one Hispano 20 mm 79 in autocannon with 150 rounds 22 Clustering all the armament in the nose was unusual in U S aircraft which typically used wing mounted guns with trajectories set up to crisscross at one or more points in a convergence zone The P 38 cannon used heavier 20 mm rounds creating a different trajectory so it was inclined upward slightly more than the four machine guns such that the trajectories of the cannon rounds and 50 caliber bullets came together between 350 and 400 yards 23 Nose mounted guns did not suffer as much from having their useful ranges limited by pattern convergence meaning that good pilots could shoot much farther A Lightning could reliably hit targets at any range up to 1 000 yd 910 m whereas the wing guns of other fighters were optimized for a specific range 24 The rate of fire was about 650 rounds per minute for the 20 110 mm cannon round 130 gram shell at a muzzle velocity of about 2 850 ft s 870 m s and for the 50 caliber machine guns 43 gram rounds about 850 rpm at 2 900 ft s 880 m s velocity Combined rate of fire was over 4 000 rpm with roughly every sixth projectile a 20 mm shell 25 The duration of sustained firing for the 20 mm cannon was about 14 seconds while the 50 caliber machine guns worked for 35 seconds if each magazine were fully loaded with 500 rounds or for 21 seconds if 300 rounds were loaded to save weight for long distance flying The Lockheed design incorporated tricycle undercarriage and a bubble canopy and featured two 1 000 hp 750 kW turbosupercharged 12 cylinder Allison V 1710 engines fitted with counter rotating propellers to eliminate the effect of engine torque with the turbochargers positioned behind the engines the exhaust side of the units exposed along the dorsal surfaces of the booms 26 Counter rotation was achieved by the use of handed engines the crankshafts of the engines turned in opposite directions a relatively easy task for the V 1710 modular design aircraft powerplant 27 The P 38 was the first American fighter to make extensive use of stainless steel and smooth flush riveted butt jointed aluminum skin panels 28 page needed It was also the first military airplane to fly faster than 400 mph 640 km h in level flight 29 30 XP 38 and YP 38 prototypes edit Lockheed won the competition on 23 June 1937 with its Model 22 and was contracted to build a prototype XP 38 31 for US 163 000 though Lockheed s own costs on the prototype would add up to US 761 000 32 Construction began in July 1938 in an old bourbon distillery purchased by Lockheed to house expanding operations This secure and remote site was later identified by Johnson as the first of five Lockheed Skunk Works locations 17 18 33 The XP 38 first flew on 27 January 1939 at the hands of Ben Kelsey 34 Note 1 nbsp One of 13 YP 38s constructedKelsey then proposed a speed dash to Wright Field on 11 February 1939 to relocate the aircraft for further testing General Henry Hap Arnold commander of the USAAC approved of the record attempt and recommended a cross country flight to New York The flight set a speed record by flying from California to New York in seven hours and two minutes not counting two refueling stops 26 Kelsey flew conservatively for most of the way working the engines gently even throttling back during descent to remove the associated speed advantage Bundled up against the cold Arnold congratulated Kelsey at Wright Field during his final refueling stop and said don t spare the horses on the next leg 36 After climbing out of Wright Field and reaching altitude Kelsey pushed the XP 38 to 420 miles per hour 680 km h 37 Nearing his destination Kelsey was ordered by Mitchel Field tower Hempstead New York into a slow landing pattern behind other aircraft Carburetor icing caused it to be brought down short of the Mitchel runway and it was wrecked However on the basis of the record flight the Air Corps ordered 13 YP 38s on 27 April 1939 for US 134 284 2 31 million in 2023 each 3 38 The Y in YP was the USAAC s designation for service test i e small numbers of early production aircraft while the X in XP was for experimental Lockheed s chief test pilot Tony LeVier angrily characterized the accident as an unnecessary publicity stunt 39 but according to Kelsey the loss of the prototype rather than hampering the program sped the process by cutting short the initial test series The success of the aircraft design contributed to Kelsey s promotion to captain in May 1939 17 nbsp Mechanized P 38 assembly lines in Burbank California 40 Manufacture of YP 38s fell behind schedule at least partly because of changes to meet the need for mass production making them substantially different in construction from the prototype Another factor was the sudden required expansion of Lockheed s facility in Burbank taking it from a specialized civilian firm dealing with small orders to a large government defense contractor making Venturas Harpoons Lodestars and Hudsons and designing the Constellation for TWA The first YP 38 was not completed until September 1940 with its maiden flight on 17 September 41 The 13th and final YP 38 was delivered to the USAAC in June 1941 12 aircraft were retained for flight testing and one for destructive stress testing The YPs were substantially redesigned and differed greatly in detail from the hand built XP 38 They were lighter and included changes in engine fit The propeller rotation was reversed with the blades spinning outward away from the cockpit at the top of their arc rather than inward as before This improved the aircraft s stability as a gunnery platform 42 High speed compressibility problems edit nbsp The P 38 was flown with a yoke rather than the more usual stick Test flights revealed problems initially believed to be tail flutter During high speed flight approaching Mach 0 68 especially during dives the aircraft s tail would begin to shake violently and the nose would tuck under see Mach tuck steepening the dive Once caught in this dive the fighter would enter a high speed compressibility stall and the controls would lock up leaving the pilot no option but to bail out if possible or remain with the aircraft until it got down to denser air where he might have a chance to pull out During a test flight in May 1941 USAAC Major Signa Gilkey managed to stay with a YP 38 in a compressibility lockup riding it out until he recovered gradually using elevator trim 26 Lockheed engineers were very concerned by this limitation but first had to concentrate on filling the current order of aircraft In late June 1941 the Army Air Corps was renamed the U S Army Air Forces USAAF and 65 Lightnings were finished for the service by September 1941 with more on the way for the USAAF the Royal Air Force RAF and the Free French Air Force operating from England By November 1941 many of the initial assembly line challenges had been met which freed up time for the engineering team to tackle the problem of frozen controls in a dive Lockheed had a few ideas for tests that would help them find an answer The first solution tried was the fitting of spring loaded servo tabs on the elevator trailing edge designed to aid the pilot when control yoke forces rose over 30 pounds force 130 N as would be expected in a high speed dive At that point the tabs would begin to multiply the effort of the pilot s actions Expert test pilot Ralph Virden was given a specific high altitude test sequence to follow and was told to restrict his speed and fast maneuvering in denser air at low altitudes since the new mechanism could exert tremendous leverage under those conditions A note was taped to the instrument panel of the test craft underscoring this instruction On 4 November 1941 Virden climbed into YP 38 1 and completed the test sequence successfully but 15 minutes later was seen in a steep dive followed by a high G pullout The tail unit of the aircraft failed at about 3 500 ft 1 000 m during the high speed dive recovery Virden was killed in the subsequent crash The Lockheed design office was justifiably upset but their design engineers could only conclude that servo tabs were not the solution for loss of control in a dive Lockheed still had to find the problem the Army Air Forces personnel were sure it was flutter and ordered Lockheed to look more closely at the tail In 1941 flutter was a familiar engineering problem related to a too flexible tail but the P 38 s empennage was completely skinned in aluminum rather than fabric and was quite rigid At no time did the P 38 suffer from true flutter 43 To prove a point one elevator and its vertical stabilizers were skinned with metal 63 thicker than standard but the increase in rigidity made no difference in vibration Army Lieutenant Colonel Kenneth B Wolfe head of Army Production Engineering asked Lockheed to try external mass balances above and below the elevator although the P 38 already had large mass balances elegantly placed within each vertical stabilizer Various configurations of external mass balances were equipped and dangerously steep test flights were flown to document their performance Explaining to Wolfe in Report No 2414 Kelly Johnson wrote the violence of the vibration was unchanged and the diving tendency was naturally the same for all conditions The external mass balances did not help at all Nonetheless at Wolfe s insistence the additional external balances were a feature of every P 38 built from then on 44 nbsp The P 38 pilot training manual compressibility chart shows speed limit vs altitude Johnson said in his autobiography 45 that he pleaded with National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics to do model tests in its wind tunnel They already had experience of models thrashing around violently at speeds approaching those requested and did not want to risk damaging their tunnel Gen Arnold head of Army Air Forces ordered them to run the tests which were done up to Mach 0 74 46 The P 38 s dive problem was revealed to be the center of pressure moving back toward the tail when in high speed airflow The solution was to change the geometry of the wing s lower surface when diving to keep lift within bounds of the top of the wing In February 1943 quick acting dive flaps were tried and proven by Lockheed test pilots The dive flaps were installed outboard of the engine nacelles and in action they extended downward 35 in 1 5 seconds The flaps did not act as a speed brake they affected the pressure distribution in a way that retained the wing s lift 47 Late in 1943 a few hundred dive flap field modification kits were assembled to give North African European and Pacific P 38s a chance to withstand compressibility and expand their combat tactics The kits did not always reach their destination In March 1944 200 dive flap kits intended for the European Theater of Operations ETO P 38Js were destroyed in a mistaken identification incident in which an RAF fighter shot down the Douglas C 54 Skymaster mistaken for a German Focke Wulf Fw 200 taking the shipment to England Back in Burbank P 38Js coming off the assembly line in spring 1944 were towed out to the ramp and modified in the open air The flaps were finally incorporated into the production line in June 1944 on the last 210 P 38Js Despite testing having proved the dive flaps effective in improving tactical maneuvers a 14 month delay in production limited their implementation with only the final half of all Lightnings built having the dive flaps installed as an assembly line sequence 48 Johnson later recalled I broke an ulcer over compressibility on the P 38 because we flew into a speed range where no one had ever been before and we had difficulty convincing people that it wasn t the funny looking airplane itself but a fundamental physical problem We found out what happened when the Lightning shed its tail and we worked during the whole war to get 15 more kn 28 km h of speed out of the P 38 We saw compressibility as a brick wall for a long time Then we learned how to get through it 49 Buffeting was another early aerodynamic problem Distinguishing it from compressibility was difficult as both were reported by test pilots as tail shake Buffeting came about from airflow disturbances ahead of the tail the airplane would shake at high speed Leading edge wing slots were tried as were combinations of filleting between the wing cockpit and engine nacelles Air tunnel test number 15 solved the buffeting completely and its fillet solution was fitted to every subsequent P 38 airframe Fillet kits were sent out to every squadron flying Lightnings The problem was traced to a 40 increase in air speed at the wing fuselage junction where the thickness chord ratio was highest An airspeed of 500 mph 800 km h at 25 000 ft 7 600 m could push airflow at the wing fuselage junction close to the speed of sound Filleting solved the buffeting problem for the P 38E and later models 43 nbsp Airfield crew working on Lockheed P 38 fighter plane engines c 1944Another issue with the P 38 arose from its unique design feature of outwardly rotating at the tops of the propeller arcs counter rotating propellers Losing one of two engines in any twin engined non centerline thrust aircraft on takeoff creates sudden drag yawing the nose toward the dead engine and rolling the wingtip down on the side of the dead engine Normal training in flying twin engined aircraft when losing an engine on takeoff is to push the remaining engine to full throttle to maintain airspeed if a pilot did that in the P 38 regardless of which engine had failed the resulting engine torque and p factor force produced a sudden uncontrollable yawing roll and the aircraft would flip over and hit the ground Eventually procedures were taught to allow a pilot to deal with the situation by reducing power on the running engine feathering the prop on the failed engine and then increasing power gradually until the aircraft was in stable flight Single engined takeoffs were possible though not with a full fuel and ammunition load 50 The engines were unusually quiet because the exhausts were muffled by the General Electric turbosuperchargers on the twin Allison V12s 51 Early problems with cockpit temperature regulation occurred pilots were often too hot in the tropical sun as the canopy could not be fully opened without severe buffeting and were often too cold in Northern Europe and at high altitude as the distance of the engines from the cockpit prevented easy heat transfer Later variants received modifications such as electrically heated flight suits to solve these problems citation needed On 20 September 1939 before the YP 38s had been built and flight tested the USAAC ordered 66 initial production P 38 Lightnings 30 of which were delivered to the renamed USAAF in mid 1941 but not all these aircraft were armed The unarmed aircraft were subsequently fitted with four 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns instead of the two 50 in 12 7 mm and two 30 in 7 62 mm of their predecessors and a 37 mm 1 46 in cannon They also had armored glass cockpit armor and fluorescent instrument lighting 52 One was completed with a pressurized cabin on an experimental basis and designated XP 38A 53 Due to reports the USAAF was receiving from Europe the remaining 36 in the batch were upgraded with small improvements such as self sealing fuel tanks and enhanced armor protection to make them combat capable The USAAF specified that these 36 aircraft were to be designated P 38D As a result no P 38Bs or P 38Cs were designated The P 38D s main role was to work out bugs and give the USAAF experience with handling the type 54 nbsp P 38 rear viewIn March 1940 the French and British through the Anglo French Purchasing Committee ordered 667 P 38s for US 100M 55 designated Model 322F for the French and Model 322B for the British The aircraft was a variant of the P 38E The overseas Allies wished for complete commonality of Allison engines with the large numbers of Curtiss P 40 Tomahawks both nations had on order so they ordered the aircraft fitted with two right handed engines not counter rotating without turbosuperchargers 56 Note 2 Performance was supposed to be 400 mph 640 km h at 16 900 ft 5 200 m 57 After the fall of France in June 1940 the British took over the entire order and gave the aircraft the service name Lightning By June 1941 the War Ministry had cause to reconsider their earlier aircraft specifications based on experience gathered in the Battle of Britain and The Blitz 58 British displeasure with the Lockheed order came to the fore in July and on 5 August 1941 they modified the contract such that 143 aircraft would be delivered as previously ordered to be known as Lightning Mark I and 524 would be upgraded to US standard P 38E specifications with a top speed of 415 mph 668 km h at 20 000 ft 6 100 m guaranteed to be called Lightning II for British service 58 Later that summer an RAF test pilot reported back from Burbank with a poor assessment of the tail flutter situation and the British cancelled all but three of the 143 Lightning Is 58 As a loss around US 15M was involved Lockheed reviewed their contracts and decided to hold the British to the original order Negotiations grew bitter and stalled 58 Everything changed after Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 after which the United States government seized some 40 of the Model 322s for West Coast defense 59 subsequently all British Lightnings were delivered to the USAAF starting in January 1942 The USAAF lent the RAF three of the aircraft which were delivered by sea in March 1942 60 and were test flown no earlier than May 61 at Cunliffe Owen Aircraft Swaythling the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment A amp AEE and the Royal Aircraft Establishment 58 The A amp AEE example was unarmed lacked turbochargers and restricted to 300 mph 480 km h though the undercarriage was praised and flight on one engine described as comfortable 62 These three were subsequently returned to the USAAF one in December 1942 and the others in July 1943 60 Of the remaining 140 Lightning Is 19 were not modified and were designated by the USAAF as RP 322 I R for Restricted because noncounter rotating propellers were considered more dangerous on takeoff while 121 were converted to counter rotating V 1710F 2 engines without turbosuperchargers and designated P 322 II All 121 were used as advanced trainers a few were still serving that role in 1945 61 A few RP 322s were later used as test modification platforms such as for smoke laying canisters The RP 322 was a fairly fast aircraft below 16 000 ft 4 900 m and well behaved as a trainer 61 Note 3 Many of the British order of 524 Lightning IIs were fitted with stronger F 10 Allison engines as they became available and all were given wing pylons for fuel tanks or bombs The upgraded aircraft were deployed to the Pacific as USAAC F 5A reconnaissance or P 38G fighter models the latter used with great effect in the operation that shot down Admiral Yamamoto in April 1943 Robert Petit s G model named Miss Virginia was on that mission borrowed by Rex Barber who was later credited with the kill Petit had already used Miss Virginia to defeat two Nakajima A6M2 N Rufe floatplanes in February and to heavily damage a Japanese submarine chaser in March which he mistakenly claimed as a destroyer sunk Murray Jim Shubin used a less powerful F model he named Oriole to down five confirmed and possibly six Zeros over Guadalcanal in June 1943 to become ace in a day 63 The British name was retained over Lockheed s original name Atalanta the swift running Greek goddess following the company tradition of using mythological and celestial figures 64 Range extension edit The strategic bombing proponents within the USAAF nicknamed the Bomber Mafia by their ideological opponents had established in the early 1930s a policy against research to create long range fighters which they thought would not be practical this kind of research was not to compete for bomber resources Aircraft manufacturers understood that they would not be rewarded if they installed subsystems on their fighters to enable them to carry drop tanks to provide more fuel for extended range Lieutenant Kelsey acting against this policy risked his career in late 1941 when he convinced Lockheed to incorporate such subsystems in the P 38E model without putting his request in writing It is possible that Kelsey was responding to Colonel George William Goddard s observation that the US sorely needed a high speed long range photo reconnaissance plane Along with a change order specifying some P 38Es be produced with guns replaced by photoreconnaissance cameras to be designated the F 4 1 LO Lockheed began working out the problems of drop tank design and incorporation After the attack on Pearl Harbor eventually about 100 P 38Es were sent to a modification center near Dallas Texas or to the new Lockheed assembly plant B 6 today the Burbank Airport to be fitted with four K 17 aerial photography cameras All of these aircraft were also modified to be able to carry drop tanks P 38Fs were modified as well Every Lightning from the P 38G onward was capable of being fitted with drop tanks straight off the assembly line 65 In March 1942 General Arnold made an off hand comment that the US could avoid the German U boat menace by flying fighters to the UK rather than packing them onto ships President Roosevelt pressed the point emphasizing his interest in the solution Arnold was likely aware of the flying radius extension work being done on the P 38 which by this time had seen success with small drop tanks in the range of 150 to 165 US gal 570 to 620 L the difference in capacity being the result of subcontractor production variation Arnold ordered further tests with larger drop tanks in the range of 300 to 310 US gal 1 100 to 1 200 L the results were reported by Kelsey as providing the P 38 with a 2 500 mile 4 000 km ferrying range 65 Because of available supply the smaller drop tanks were used to fly Lightnings to the UK the plan called Operation Bolero Led by two Boeing B 17 Flying Fortresses the first seven P 38s each carrying two small drop tanks left Presque Isle Army Air Field in Maine on 23 June 1942 for RAF Heathfield in Scotland Their first refueling stop was made in far northeast Canada at Goose Bay The second stop was a rough airstrip in Greenland called Bluie West One and the third refueling stop was in Iceland at Keflavik Other P 38s followed this route with some lost in mishaps usually due to poor weather low visibility radio difficulties and navigational errors Nearly 200 of the P 38Fs and a few modified Es were successfully flown across the Atlantic in July August 1942 making the P 38 the first USAAF fighter to reach Britain and the first fighter ever to be delivered across the Atlantic under its own power 66 Kelsey himself piloted one of the Lightnings landing in Scotland on 25 July 67 Operational history edit nbsp Cocooned Lockheed P 38 Lightnings and North American Aviation P 51 Mustangs line the decks of a U S Navy Escort Jeep Carrier CVE ready for shipment to Europe from New York The first unit to receive P 38s was the 1st Fighter Group After the attack on Pearl Harbor the unit joined the 14th Pursuit Group in San Diego to provide West Coast defense 68 Entry to the war edit The first Lightning to see active service was the F 4 version a P 38E in which the guns were replaced by four K17 cameras 69 They joined the 8th Photographic Squadron in Australia on 4 April 1942 42 Three F 4s were operated by the Royal Australian Air Force in this theater for a short period beginning in September 1942 On 29 May 1942 25 P 38s began operating in the Aleutian Islands in Alaska The fighter s long range made it well suited to the campaign over the almost 1 200 mile 1 900 km long island chain and it was flown there for the rest of the war The Aleutians were some of the most rugged environments available for testing the new aircraft under combat conditions More Lightnings were lost due to severe weather and other conditions than enemy action cases occurred where Lightning pilots mesmerized by flying for hours over gray seas under gray skies simply flew into the water On 9 August 1942 two P 38Es of the 343rd Fighter Group 11th Air Force at the end of a 1 000 mile 1 600 km long range patrol happened upon a pair of Japanese Kawanishi H6K Mavis flying boats and destroyed them 42 making them the first Japanese aircraft to be shot down by Lightnings European theater edit North Africa and Italy edit nbsp Reconnaissance P 38 with bold black and white invasion stripes participating in the Normandy CampaignAfter the Battle of Midway the USAAF began redeploying fighter groups to Britain as part of Operation Bolero and Lightnings of the 1st Fighter Group were flown across the Atlantic via Iceland On 14 August 1942 Second Lieutenant Elza Shahan of the 27th Fighter Squadron and Second Lieutenant Joseph Shaffer of the 33rd Squadron operating out of Iceland shot down a Focke Wulf Fw 200 Condor over the Atlantic Shaffer flying either a P 40C or a P 39 scored the first hit causing a fire on the Condor Shahan in his P 38F finished it off with a high speed gunnery pass 70 This was the first Luftwaffe aircraft destroyed by the USAAF 71 After 347 sorties with no enemy contact the 1st and 14th Fighter Groups transferred from the UK to the 12th Air Force in North Africa as part of the force being built up for Operation Torch The Lightning s long range allowed the pilots to fly their fighters over the Bay of Biscay skirting neutral Spain and Portugal to refuel in Morocco The P 38s were initially based at Tafaroui Airfield in Algeria alongside P 40 Warhawks and the rest of the 12th Air Force P 38s were first involved in North African combat operations on 11 November 1942 The first North African P 38 kill was on 22 November when Lieutenant Mark Shipman of the 14th downed an Italian airplane with twin engines Shipman later made two more kills a Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter and a very large Me 323 Gigant transport 72 Early results in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations were mixed Some P 38 pilots scored multiple kills to become aces while many others were shot down due to inexperience or tactical strictures Overall the P 38 suffered its highest losses in the Mediterranean Theater The primary function of the P 38 in North Africa was to escort bombers 73 but the fighters also targeted transport aircraft and later in the campaign they were sometimes tasked with ground attack missions When tied to bomber escort duties the P 38 squadrons were vulnerable to attack from above by German fighters who selected the most advantageous position and timing The initial tactical doctrine of the American units was for the P 38s to fly near the bombers at all times rather than to defend aggressively or to fly ahead and clear the airspace for the bombers and many American pilots were downed because of this limitation Losses mounted and all available P 38s in the UK were flown over to North Africa to restore squadron strength 72 After this painful experience the American leadership changed tactics and in February 1943 the P 38s were given free rein in their battles 74 The first German success against the P 38 was on 28 November 1942 when Bf 109 pilots of Jagdgeschwader 53 claimed seven Lightnings for no loss of their own 74 Further one sided German victories were noted on several occasions through January 1943 75 The first P 38 pilots to achieve ace status were Virgil Smith of the 14th FG and Jack Illfrey of the 1st FG both credited with five wins by 26 December Smith got a sixth enemy aircraft on 28 December but was killed two days later in a crash landing likely after taking fire from Oberfeldwebel Herbert Rollwage of JG 53 who survived the war with at least 71 kills This was Rollwage s first victory over a P 38 and his 35th claim at the time 76 The two squadrons of the 14th Fighter Group were reduced so badly in December 1942 that the 82nd FG was flown from the UK to North Africa to cover the shortage The first kill by the 82nd was during a bomber escort mission on 7 January 1943 when William J Dixie Sloan broke formation and turned toward six attacking Bf 109s to shoot one of them down Known for his maverick style Sloan racked up 12 victories by July 1943 76 After another heavy toll in January 1943 14th FG had to be withdrawn from the front to reorganize with surviving pilots sent home and the few remaining Lightnings transferred to the 82nd 73 The 14th was out of action for three months returning in May 77 On 5 April 1943 26 P 38Fs of the 82nd claimed 31 enemy aircraft destroyed helping to establish air superiority in the area and allegedly earning it the German nickname der Gabelschwanz Teufel the Fork tailed Devil coming from a recently downed German aviator as described by Life magazine in August 1943 However the reliability of this attribution is doubtful as the clear intent of the article was to rehabilitate the P 38 s reputation in the minds of the American public No earlier independent or German attestation exists for this claim 78 The P 38s remained active in the Mediterranean for the rest of the war continuing to deliver and receive damage in combat On 30 August 1943 13 P 38s were shot down by German and Italian fighters while escorting B 26 and B 17 bombers on raids against targets in Italy 79 80 On 2 September 10 P 38s were shot down in combat with Bf 109s of JG 53 with four Bf 109s including that of 67 victory ace Franz Schiess who had been the leading Lightning killer in the Luftwaffe with 17 destroyed 80 81 The Mediterranean Theater had the first aerial combat between German fighters and P 38s German fighter pilot appraisal of the P 38 was mixed Some observers dismissed the P 38 as an easy kill while others gave it high praise a deadly enemy worthy of respect Johannes Steinhoff commander of JG 77 in North Africa said that the unit s old Bf 109s were perhaps a little faster than the P 38 but a dogfight with the twin engined fighter was daunting because its turning radius was much smaller and it could quickly get on the tail of the Bf 109 Franz Stigler an ace with 28 kills flew Bf 109s against the P 38 in North Africa Stigler said the Lightning could turn inside us with ease and they could go from level flight to climb almost instantaneously We lost quite a few pilots who tried to make an attack and then pull up One cardinal rule we never forgot was to avoid fighting the P 38 head on That was suicide Stigler said the best defense was to flick roll the Bf 109 and dive as the Lightning was slow in the first 10 of roll and it was not as fast in a dive 82 Herbert Kaiser eventually a 68 kill ace shot down his first P 38 in January 1943 Kaiser said that the P 38 should be respected as a formidable opponent that it was faster and more maneuverable than the Bf 109G 6 model he flew especially since the G 6 was slowed by underwing cannon pods Johann Pichler another high scoring ace said that the P 38 in 1943 was much faster in a climb than the Bf 109 77 Kurt Buhligen third highest scoring German pilot on the Western front with 112 victories recalled The P 38 fighter and the B 24 were easy to burn Once in Africa we were six and met eight P 38s and shot down seven One sees a great distance in Africa and our observers and flak people called in sightings and we could get altitude first and they were low and slow 83 General der Jagdflieger Adolf Galland was unimpressed with the P 38 declaring it had similar shortcomings in combat to our Bf 110 our fighters were clearly superior to it 84 Heinz Baer said that P 38s were not difficult at all They were easy to outmaneuver and were generally a sure kill 85 On 12 June 1943 a P 38G while flying a special mission between Gibraltar and Malta or perhaps just after strafing the radar station of Capo Pula landed on the airfield of Capoterra Cagliari in Sardinia from navigation error due to a compass failure Regia Aeronautica chief test pilot Colonnello Lieutenant Colonel Angelo Tondi flew the captured aircraft to Guidonia airfield where the P 38G was evaluated On 11 August 1943 Tondi took off to intercept a formation of about 50 bombers returning from the bombing of Terni Umbria Tondi attacked B 17G Bonny Sue 42 30307 that fell off the shore of Torvaianica near Rome while six airmen parachuted out According to US sources he also damaged three more bombers on that occasion On 4 September the 301st BG reported the loss of B 17 The Lady Evelyn 42 30344 downed by an enemy P 38 86 War missions for that plane were limited as the Italian petrol was too corrosive for the Lockheed s tanks 87 Other Lightnings were eventually acquired by Italy for postwar service nbsp Herbert Hatch pointing to the five victory marks on his P 38In a particular case when faced by more agile fighters at low altitudes in a constricted valley Lightnings suffered heavy losses On the morning of 10 June 1944 96 P 38Js of the 1st and 82nd Fighter Groups took off from Italy for Ploiești the third most heavily defended target in Europe after Berlin and Vienna 88 Instead of bombing from high altitude as had been tried by the Fifteenth Air Force USAAF planning had determined that a dive bombing surprise attack beginning at about 7 000 feet 2 100 m with bomb release at or below 3 000 feet 900 m 88 performed by 46 82nd Fighter Group P 38s each carrying one 1 000 pound 500 kg bomb would yield more accurate results 89 All of 1st Fighter Group and a few aircraft in 82nd Fighter Group were to fly cover and all fighters were to strafe targets of opportunity on the return trip a distance of some 1 255 miles 2 020 km including a circuitous outward route made in an attempt to achieve surprise 88 Some 85 or 86 fighters arrived in Romania to find enemy airfields alerted with a wide assortment of aircraft scrambling for safety P 38s shot down several including heavy fighters transports and observation aircraft At Ploiești defense forces were fully alert the target was concealed by smoke screen and antiaircraft fire was very heavy seven Lightnings were lost to antiaircraft fire at the target and two more during strafing attacks on the return flight German Bf 109 fighters from I JG 53 and 2 JG 77 fought the Americans Sixteen P 38s called Indieni cu două pene Indians with two feathers by the Romanians of the 71st Fighter Squadron were challenged by a large formation of Romanian IAR 81C fighters of the 6th Fighter Group The fight took place below 300 feet 100 m in a narrow valley and lasted 12 minutes 90 91 Herbert Hatch saw two IAR 81Cs that he misidentified as Focke Wulf Fw 190s hit the ground after taking fire from his guns and his fellow pilots confirmed three more of his kills Three of his victories were confirmed by gun camera However the outnumbered 71st Fighter Squadron took more damage than it dished out losing nine aircraft In all the USAAF lost 22 aircraft on the mission The Americans claimed 23 aerial victories The Romanians and Germans lost five Bf 110s four Ju 52s and one Savoia Marchetti SM 79 on the ground as well as three Focke Wulf Fw 58 three IAR 38 and three IAR 81C in the air 92 93 Eleven enemy locomotives were strafed and left burning and flak emplacements were destroyed along with fuel trucks and other targets Results of the bombing were not observed by the USAAF pilots because of the smoke The dive bombing mission profile was not repeated though the 82nd Fighter Group was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for its part 94 Western Europe edit Experiences over Germany had shown a need for long range escort fighters to protect the Eighth Air Force s heavy bomber operations The P 38Hs of the 55th Fighter Group were transferred to the Eighth in England in September 1943 and were joined by the 20th Fighter Group 364th Fighter Group and 479th Fighter Group soon after P 38s and Spitfires escorted Flying Fortress raids over Europe 95 Because its distinctive shape was less prone to cases of mistaken identity and friendly fire 96 Lieutenant General Jimmy Doolittle commander of the 8th Air Force chose to pilot a P 38 during the invasion of Normandy so he could watch the progress of the air offensive over France 97 At one point in the mission Doolittle flick rolled through a hole in the cloud cover but his wingman then Major General Earle E Partridge was looking elsewhere and failed to notice Doolittle s quick maneuver leaving Doolittle to continue on alone on his survey of the crucial battle Of the P 38 Doolittle said that it was the sweetest flying plane in the sky 98 nbsp P 38s of the 370th Fighter Group at RAF Andover in southern EnglandA little known role of the P 38 in the European theater was that of fighter bomber during the invasion of Normandy and the Allied advance across France into Germany Assigned to the IX Tactical Air Command the 370th Fighter Group and 474th Fighter Group and their P 38s initially flew missions from England dive bombing radar installations enemy armor troop concentrations and flak towers and providing air cover 99 The 370th s group commander Howard F Nichols and a squadron of his P 38 Lightnings attacked Field Marshal Gunther von Kluge s headquarters in July 1944 Nichols himself skipped a 500 lb 230 kg bomb through the front door 100 The 370th later operated from Cardonville France and the 474th from various bases in France flying ground attack missions against gun emplacements troops supply dumps and tanks near Saint Lo in July and in the Falaise Argentan area in August 1944 99 The 370th participated in ground attack missions across Europe until February 1945 when the unit changed over to the P 51 Mustang The 474th operated out of bases in France Belgium and Germany in primarily the ground attack missions until November December 1945 101 After some disastrous raids in 1944 with B 17s escorted by P 38s and Republic P 47 Thunderbolts Doolittle then head of the U S Eighth Air Force went to the Royal Aircraft Establishment Farnborough asking for an evaluation of the various American fighters Test pilot Captain Eric Brown Fleet Air Arm recalled We had found out that the Bf 109 and the FW 190 could fight up to a Mach of 0 75 three quarters the speed of sound We checked the Lightning and it couldn t fly in combat faster than 0 68 So it was useless We told Doolittle that all it was good for was photoreconnaissance and had to be withdrawn from escort duties And the funny thing is that the Americans had great difficulty understanding this because the Lightning had the two top aces in the Far East 102 After evaluation tests at Farnborough the P 38 was kept in fighting service in Europe for a while longer Although many failings were remedied with the introduction of the P 38J by September 1944 all but one of the Lightning groups in the Eighth Air Force had converted to the P 51 Mustang The Eighth Air Force continued to conduct reconnaissance missions using the F 5 variant 68 Pacific theater edit nbsp Wartime poster encouraging greater production of P 38sThe P 38 was used most extensively and successfully in the Pacific Theater where it proved more suited combining exceptional range with the reliability of two engines for long missions over water The P 38 was used in a variety of roles especially escorting bombers at altitudes of 18 000 25 000 ft 5 500 7 600 m The P 38 was credited with destroying more Japanese aircraft than any other USAAF fighter 3 Freezing cockpit temperatures were not a problem at low altitude in the tropics In fact the cockpit was often too hot since opening a window while in flight caused buffeting by setting up turbulence through the tailplane Pilots taking low altitude assignments often flew stripped down to shorts tennis shoes and parachute While the P 38 could not out turn the A6M Zero and most other Japanese fighters when flying below 200 mph 320 km h its superior speed coupled with a good rate of climb meant that it could use energy tactics making multiple high speed passes at its target In addition its tightly grouped guns were even more deadly to lightly armored Japanese warplanes than to German aircraft The concentrated parallel stream of bullets allowed aerial victory at much longer distances than fighters carrying wing guns Dick Bong the United States highest scoring World War II air ace 40 victories in P 38s flew directly at his targets to ensure he hit them in some cases flying through the debris of his target and on one occasion colliding with an enemy aircraft which was claimed as a probable victory The twin Allison engines performed admirably in the Pacific nbsp Col MacDonald and Al Nelson in the Pacific with MacDonald s P 38JGeneral George C Kenney commander of the USAAF 5th Air Force operating in New Guinea could not get enough P 38s they had become his favorite fighter in November 1942 when one squadron the 39th Fighter Squadron of the 35th Fighter Group joined his assorted P 39s and P 40s The Lightnings established local air superiority with their first combat action on 27 December 1942 103 104 105 106 107 Kenney sent repeated requests to Arnold for more P 38s and was rewarded with occasional shipments but Europe was a higher priority in Washington 108 Despite their small force Lightning pilots began to compete in racking up scores against Japanese aircraft On 2 4 March 1943 P 38s flew top cover for 5th Air Force and Australian bombers and attack aircraft during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea in which eight Japanese troop transports and four escorting destroyers were sunk Two P 38 aces from the 39th Fighter Squadron were killed on the second day of the battle Bob Faurot and Hoyt Curley Eason a veteran with five victories who had trained hundreds of pilots including Dick Bong In one notable engagement on 3 March 1943 P 38s escorted 13 B 17s part of an attack including B 25 Mitchells and Beaufighters as they bombed the Japanese convoy from a medium altitude of 7 000 ft 2 100 m which dispersed the convoy formation and reduced their concentrated antiaircraft firepower A B 17 was shot down and when Japanese Zero fighters machine gunned some of the B 17 crew members who bailed out in parachutes three P 38s promptly dived into action claiming five Zeros 109 110 111 112 Killing of Admiral Yamamoto edit Main article Operation Vengeance Because of its ability to fly long distances the Lightning figured in one of the most significant operations in the Pacific Theater the interception on 18 April 1943 of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto the architect of Japan s naval strategy in the Pacific including the attack on Pearl Harbor When American codebreakers found out that he was flying to Bougainville Island to conduct a front line inspection 16 P 38G Lightnings were sent on a long range fighter intercept mission flying 435 miles 700 km from Guadalcanal at heights of 10 to 50 ft 3 to 20 m above the ocean to avoid detection The Lightnings met Yamamoto s two Mitsubishi G4M Betty fast bomber transports and six escorting Zeros just as they arrived at the island The first Betty crashed in the jungle and the second ditched near the coast The Americans lost one P 38 Japanese search parties found Yamamoto s body at the jungle crash site the next day 113 Service record edit nbsp Pilot and aircraft armorer inspect ammunition for the central 20 mm cannonThe P 38 s service record shows mixed results which may reflect more on its employment than on flaws with the aircraft The P 38 s engine troubles at high altitudes only occurred with the Eighth Air Force One reason for this was the inadequate cooling systems of the G and H models the improved P 38 J and L had tremendous success flying out of Italy into Germany at all altitudes 68 Until the J 25 variant P 38s were easily avoided by German fighters because of the lack of dive flaps to counter compressibility in dives German fighter pilots not wishing to fight would perform the first half of a Split S and continue into steep dives because they knew the Lightnings would be reluctant to follow On the positive side having two engines was a built in insurance policy Many pilots arrived safely back to base after having an engine failure en route or in combat On 3 March 1944 the first Allied fighters reached Berlin on a frustrated escort mission Lieutenant Colonel Jack Jenkins of 55th Fighter Group led the group of P 38H pilots arriving with only half his force after flak damage and engine trouble took their toll On the way into Berlin Jenkins reported one rough running engine causing him to wonder if he would ever make it back The B 17s he was supposed to escort never showed up having turned back at Hamburg Jenkins and his wingman were able to drop tanks and outrun enemy fighters to return home with three good engines between them 114 nbsp P 38J 42 68008 flying over Southern CaliforniaIn the European Theater P 38s made 130 000 sorties with a loss of 1 3 overall comparing favorably with P 51s which posted a 1 1 loss considering that the P 38s were vastly outnumbered and suffered from poorly thought out tactics Most of the P 38 sorties were made in the period prior to Allied air superiority in Europe when pilots fought against a very determined and skilled enemy 115 Lieutenant Colonel Mark Hubbard a vocal critic of the aircraft rated it the third best Allied fighter in Europe 116 The Lightning s greatest virtues were long range heavy payload high speed fast climb and concentrated firepower The P 38 was a formidable fighter interceptor and attack aircraft In the Pacific Theater the P 38 downed over 1 800 Japanese aircraft with more than 100 pilots becoming aces by downing five or more enemy aircraft 113 American fuel supplies contributed to a better engine performance and maintenance record and range was increased with leaner mixtures In the second half of 1944 the P 38L pilots out of Dutch New Guinea were flying 950 mi 1 530 km fighting for 15 minutes and returning to base 117 Such long legs were invaluable until the P 47N and P 51D entered service Postwar operations edit The end of the war left the USAAF with thousands of P 38s rendered obsolete by the jet age Orders for 1 887 more were cancelled 118 The last P 38s in service with the United States Air Force were retired in 1949 119 One hundred late model P 38L and F 5 Lightnings were acquired by Italy through an agreement dated April 1946 Delivered after refurbishing at the rate of one per month they finally were all sent to the Aeronautica Militare by 1952 The Lightnings served in the 4 Stormo and other units including 3 Stormo flying reconnaissance over the Balkans ground attack naval cooperation and air superiority missions Due to old engines pilot errors and lack of experience in operations large numbers of P 38s were lost in at least 30 accidents many of them fatal Despite this many Italian pilots liked the P 38 because of its excellent visibility on the ground and stability on takeoff The Italian P 38s were phased out in 1956 none survived the scrapyard 120 Surplus P 38s were also used by other foreign air forces with 12 sold to Honduras and 15 retained by China Six F 5s and two unarmed black two seater P 38s were operated by the Dominican Air Force based in San Isidro Airbase Dominican Republic in 1947 Most of the wartime Lightnings present in the continental U S at the end of the war were put up for sale for US 1 200 apiece the rest were scrapped P 38s in distant theaters of war were bulldozed into piles and abandoned or scrapped very few avoided that fate The CIA Liberation Air Force flew one P 38M to support the 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat On 27 June 1954 this aircraft dropped napalm bombs that destroyed the British cargo ship SS Springfjord which was loading Guatemalan cotton 121 and coffee 122 for Grace Line 123 failed verification in Puerto San Jose 124 In 1957 five Honduran P 38s bombed and strafed a village occupied by Nicaraguan forces during a border dispute between these two countries concerning part of Gracias a Dios Department 125 P 38s were popular contenders in the air races from 1946 through 1949 with brightly colored Lightnings making screaming turns around the pylons at Reno and Cleveland Lockheed test pilot Tony LeVier was among those who bought a Lightning choosing a P 38J model and painting it red to make it stand out as an air racer and stunt flyer Lefty Gardner former B 24 and B 17 pilot and associate of the Confederate Air Force bought a mid 1944 P 38L 1 LO that had been modified into an F 5G Gardner painted it white with red and blue trim and named it White Lightnin he reworked its turbo systems and intercoolers for optimum low altitude performance and gave it P 38F style air intakes for better streamlining White Lightnin was severely damaged in a crash landing following an engine fire on a transit flight and was bought and restored with a brilliant polished aluminum finish by the company that owns Red Bull The aircraft is now located in Austria F 5s were bought by aerial survey companies and employed for mapping From the 1950s on the use of the Lightning steadily declined and only a few more than two dozen still exist with few still flying One example is a P 38L owned by the Lone Star Flight Museum in Galveston Texas painted in the colors of Charles H MacDonald s Putt Putt Maru Two other examples are F 5Gs which were owned and operated by Kargl Aerial Surveys in 1946 and are now located in Chino California at Yanks Air Museum and in McMinnville Oregon at Evergreen Aviation Museum The earliest built surviving P 38 Glacier Girl was recovered from the Greenland ice cap in 1992 50 years after she crashed there on a ferry flight to the UK and after a complete restoration flew once again 10 years after her recovery Production editVersion and total manufactured or converted 126 Variant Built or converted CommentXP 38 1 PrototypeYP 38 13 Evaluation aircraftP 38 30 Initial production aircraftXP 38A 1 Pressurized cockpitP 38D 36 Fitted with self sealing fuel tanks armored windshieldP 38E 210 First combat ready variant revised armamentF 4 100 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P 38EModel 322 3 RAF order twin right hand props and no turboRP 322 147 USAAF trainersP 38F 527 First fully citation needed combat capable P 38 fighterF 4A 20 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P 38FP 38G 1 082 Improved P 38F fighterF 5A 180 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P 38GXF 5D 1 A one off converted F 5AP 38H 601 Automatic cooling system improved P 38G fighterP 38J 2 970 New cooling and electrical systemsF 5B 200 Reconnaissance aircraft based on P 38JF 5C 123 Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P 38JF 5E 705 Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P 38J LP 38K 2 Paddle blade props up rated engines with a different propeller reduction ratioP 38L LO 3 810 Improved P 38J new engines new rocket pylonsP 38L VN 113 P 38L built by VulteeF 5F Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P 38LP 38M 75 Night fighter converted from P 38LF 5G Reconnaissance aircraft converted from P 38LOver 10 000 Lightnings were manufactured becoming the only U S combat aircraft that remained in continuous production throughout the duration of American participation in World War II The Lightning had a major effect on other aircraft its wing in a scaled up form was used on the Lockheed Constellation 127 P 38D and P 38Es edit Delivered and accepted Lightning production variants began with the P 38D model The few hand made YP 38s initially contracted were used as trainers and test aircraft No Bs or Cs were delivered to the government as the USAAF allocated the D suffix to all aircraft with self sealing fuel tanks and armor 39 Many secondary but still initial teething tests were conducted using the earliest D variants 39 The first combat capable Lightning was the P 38E and its photo recon variant the F 4 which featured improved instruments electrical and hydraulic systems Part way through production the older Hamilton Standard Hydromatic hollow steel propellers were replaced by new Curtiss Electric duraluminum propellers The definitive and now famous armament configuration was settled upon featuring four 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns with 500 rpg and a 20 mm 79 in Hispano autocannon with 150 rounds 128 While the machine guns had been arranged symmetrically in the nose on the P 38D they were staggered in the P 38E and later versions with the muzzles protruding from the nose in the relative lengths of roughly 1 4 6 2 This was done to ensure a straight ammunition belt feed into the weapons as the earlier arrangement led to jamming The first P 38E rolled out of the factory in October 1941 as the Battle of Moscow filled the news wires of the world Because of the versatility redundant engines and especially high speed and high altitude characteristics of the aircraft as with later variants over a hundred P 38Es were completed in the factory or converted in the field to a photoreconnaissance variant the F 4 in which the guns were replaced by four cameras Most of these early reconnaissance Lightnings were retained stateside for training but the F 4 was the first Lightning to be used in action in April 1942 citation needed P 38Fs and P 38Gs edit After 210 P 38Es were built they were followed starting in February 1942 by the P 38F which incorporated racks inboard of the engines for fuel tanks or a total of 2 000 lb 910 kg of bombs Early variants did not enjoy a high reputation for maneuverability though they could be agile at low altitudes if flown by a capable pilot using the P 38 s forgiving stall characteristics to their best advantage From the P 38F 15 model onwards a combat maneuver setting was added to the P 38 s Fowler flaps When deployed at the 8 maneuver setting the flaps allowed the P 38 to out turn many contemporary single engined fighters at the cost of some added drag However early variants were hampered by high aileron control forces and a low initial rate of roll 129 and all such features required a pilot to gain experience with the aircraft 39 which in part was an additional reason Lockheed sent its representative to England and later to the Pacific Theater The aircraft was still experiencing extensive teething troubles as well as being victimized by urban legends mostly involving inapplicable twin engined factors which had been designed out of the aircraft by Lockheed 39 In addition to these the early versions had a reputation as a widow maker as it could enter an unrecoverable dive due to a sonic surface effect at high subsonic speeds The 527 P 38Fs were heavier with more powerful engines that used more fuel and were unpopular in the air war in Northern Europe 39 Since the heavier engines were having reliability problems and with them without external fuel tanks the range of the P 38F was reduced and since drop tanks themselves were in short supply as the fortunes in the Battle of the Atlantic had not yet swung the Allies way the aircraft became relatively unpopular in minds of the bomber command planning staffs despite being the longest ranged fighter first available to the 8th Air Force in sufficient numbers for long range escort duties 39 Nonetheless General Spaatz then commander of the 8th Air Force in the UK said of the P 38F I d rather have an airplane that goes like hell and has a few things wrong with it than one that won t go like hell and has a few things wrong with it 98 nbsp Lockheed P 38G 1 LO Lightning serial 42 12723The P 38F was followed in June 1942 by the P 38G using more powerful Allisons of 1 400 hp 1 000 kW each and equipped with a better radio A dozen of the planned P 38G production were set aside to serve as prototypes for what became the P 38J with further uprated Allison V 1710F 17 engines 1 425 hp 1 063 kW each in redesigned booms which featured chin mounted intercoolers in place of the original system in the leading edge of the wings and more efficient radiators Lockheed subcontractors however were initially unable to supply both of Burbank s twin production lines with a sufficient quantity of new core intercoolers and radiators War Production Board planners were unwilling to sacrifice production and one of the two remaining prototypes received the new engines but retained the old leading edge intercoolers and radiators nbsp A P 38HAs the P 38H 600 of these stop gap Lightnings with an improved 20 mm cannon and a bomb capacity of 3 200 lb 1 500 kg were produced on one line beginning in May 1943 while the near definitive P 38J began production on the second line in August 1943 The Eighth Air Force was experiencing high altitude and cold weather issues which while not unique to the aircraft were perhaps more severe as the turbosuperchargers upgrading the Allisons were having their own reliability issues making the aircraft more unpopular with senior officers out of the line 39 This was a situation unduplicated on all other fronts where the commands were clamoring for as many P 38s as they could get 39 Both the P 38G and P 38H models performances were restricted by an intercooler system integral to the wing s leading edge which had been designed for the YP 38 s less powerful engines At the higher boost levels the new engine s charge air temperature would increase above the limits recommended by Allison and would be subject to detonation if operated at high power for extended periods of time Reliability was not the only issue either For example the reduced power settings required by the P 38H did not allow the maneuvering flap to be used to good advantage at high altitude 130 All these problems really came to a head in the unplanned P 38H and sped the Lightning s eventual replacement in the 8th Air Force fortunately the 15th Air Force was glad to get them Some P 38G production was diverted on the assembly line to F 5A reconnaissance aircraft An F 5A was modified to an experimental two seat reconnaissance configuration as the XF 5D with a Plexiglas nose two machine guns and additional cameras in the tail booms P 38J P 38L edit nbsp Four P 38Hs flying in formationThe P 38J was introduced in August 1943 The turbosupercharger intercooler system on previous variants had been housed in the leading edges of the wings and had proven vulnerable to combat damage and could burst if the wrong series of controls was mistakenly activated In the P 38J series the streamlined engine nacelles of previous Lightnings were changed to fit the intercooler radiator between the oil coolers forming a chin that visually distinguished the J model from its predecessors While the P 38J used the same V 1710 89 91 engines as the H model the new core type intercooler more efficiently lowered intake manifold temperatures and permitted a substantial increase in rated power The leading edge of the outer wing was fitted with 55 US gal 210 L fuel tanks filling the space formerly occupied by intercooler tunnels but these were omitted on early P 38J blocks due to limited availability 131 The final 210 J models designated P 38J 25 LO alleviated the compressibility problem through the addition of a set of electrically actuated dive recovery flaps just outboard of the engines on the bottom centerline of the wings With these improvements a USAAF pilot reported a dive speed of almost 600 mph 970 km h although the indicated air speed was later corrected for compressibility error and the actual dive speed was lower 132 Lockheed manufactured over 200 retrofit modification kits to be installed on P 38J 10 LO and J 20 LO already in Europe but the USAAF C 54 carrying them was shot down by an RAF pilot who mistook the Douglas transport for a German Focke Wulf Condor 133 Unfortunately the loss of the kits came during Lockheed test pilot Tony LeVier s four month morale boosting tour of P 38 bases Flying a new Lightning named Snafuperman modified to full P 38J 25 LO specifications at Lockheed s modification center near Belfast LeVier captured the pilots full attention by routinely performing maneuvers during March 1944 that common 8th Air Force wisdom held to be suicidal It proved too little too late because the decision had already been made to re equip with Mustangs 50 The P 38J 25 LO production block also introduced hydraulically boosted ailerons one of the first times such a system was fitted to a fighter This significantly improved the Lightning s rate of roll and reduced control forces for the pilot This production block and the following P 38L model are considered the definitive Lightnings and Lockheed ramped up production working with subcontractors across the country to produce hundreds of Lightnings each month Two P 38Ks were developed from 1942 to 1943 one official and one an internal Lockheed experiment The first was actually a battered RP 38E piggyback test mule previously used by Lockheed to test the P 38J chin intercooler installation now fitted with paddle bladed high activity Hamilton Standard Hydromatic propellers similar to those used on the P 47 The new propellers required spinners of greater diameter and the mule s crude hand formed sheet steel cowlings were further stretched to blend the spinners into the nacelles It retained its piggyback configuration that allowed an observer to ride behind the pilot With Lockheed s AAF representative as a passenger and the maneuvering flap deployed to offset Army Hot Day conditions the old K Mule still climbed to 45 000 feet 14 000 m With a fresh coat of paint covering its crude hand formed steel cowlings this RP 38E acts as stand in for the P 38K 1 LO in the model s only picture 134 The 12th G model originally set aside as a P 38J prototype was redesignated P 38K 1 LO and fitted with the aforementioned paddle blade propellers and new Allison V 1710 75 77 F15R L powerplants rated at 1 875 bhp 1 398 kW at War Emergency Power These engines were geared 2 36 to 1 unlike the standard P 38 ratio of 2 to 1 The AAF took delivery in September 1943 at Eglin Field In tests the P 38K 1 achieved 432 mph 695 km h at military power and was predicted to exceed 450 mph 720 km h at War Emergency Power with a similar increase in load and range The initial climb rate was 4 800 ft 1 500 m min and the ceiling was 46 000 ft 14 000 m It reached 20 000 ft 6 100 m in five minutes flat this with a coat of camouflage paint which added weight and drag Although it was judged superior in climb and speed to the latest and best fighters from all AAF manufacturers the War Production Board refused to authorize P 38K production due to the two to three week interruption in production necessary to implement cowling modifications for the revised spinners and higher thrust line 134 Some had also doubted Allison s ability to deliver the F15 engine in quantity 135 As promising as it had looked the P 38K project came to a halt The P 38L was the most numerous variant of the Lightning with 3 923 built 113 by Consolidated Vultee in their Nashville plant It entered service with the USAAF in June 1944 in time to support the Allied invasion of France on D Day Lockheed production of the Lightning was distinguished by a suffix consisting of a production block number followed by LO for example P 38L 1 LO while Consolidated Vultee production was distinguished by a block number followed by VN for example P 38L 5 VN The P 38L was the first Lightning fitted with zero length rocket launchers Seven High Velocity Aircraft Rockets HVARs on pylons were placed beneath each wing and later five rockets were on each wing on Christmas tree launch racks which added 1 365 lb 619 kg to the aircraft 136 The P 38L also had strengthened stores pylons to allow carriage of 2 000 lb 900 kg bombs or 300 US gal 1 100 L drop tanks nbsp F 5A Lightning of the 7th Photo Group 8th Air Force based at Mount Farm The national insignia was bordered in red with overall finish in synthetic haze Lockheed modified 200 P 38J airframes in production to become unarmed F 5B photo reconnaissance aircraft while hundreds of other P 38Js and P 38Ls were modified at Lockheed s Dallas Modification Center to become F 5Cs F 5Es F 5Fs or F 5Gs A few P 38Ls were field modified to become two seat TP 38L familiarization trainers During and after June 1948 the remaining J and L variants were designated ZF 38J and ZF 38L with the ZF designator meaning obsolete fighter replacing the P for Pursuit category Late model Lightnings were delivered unpainted per USAAF policy established in 1944 At first field units tried to paint them since pilots worried about being too visible to the enemy but the reduction in weight and drag turned out to be a minor advantage in combat The P 38L 5 the most common subvariant of the P 38L had a modified cockpit heating system consisting of a plug socket in the cockpit into which the pilot could plug his heat suit wire for improved comfort These Lightnings also received the uprated V 1710 112 113 F30R L engines and this dramatically lowered the number of engine failure problems experienced at high altitude so commonly associated with European operations Pathfinders night fighter and other variants edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Lightning was modified for other roles In addition to the F 4 and F 5 reconnaissance variants a number of P 38Js and P 38Ls were field modified as formation bombing pathfinders or droopsnoots 137 fitted with a Norden bombsight or an H2X radar system Such pathfinders would lead a formation of other P 38s each loaded with two 2 000 lb 907 kg bombs the entire formation releasing their ordnance when the pathfinder did 138 nbsp 44 27234 a former P 38L converted as a P 38M Night LightningA number of Lightnings were modified as night fighters Several field or experimental modifications with different equipment fits finally led to the formal P 38M night fighter or Night Lightning A total of 75 P 38Ls were modified to the Night Lightning configuration painted flat black with conical flash hiders on the guns an AN APS 6 radar pod below the nose and a second cockpit with a raised canopy behind the pilot s canopy for the radar operator The headroom in the rear cockpit was limited requiring radar operators who were preferably short in stature 139 page needed One of the initial production P 38s had its turbosuperchargers removed with a secondary cockpit placed in one of the booms to examine how flight crews would respond to such an asymmetric cockpit layout 136 Cross Roy 1968 Lockheed P 38 Lightning John W Caler Publications ISBN 9780858800038 Retrieved 25 January 2020 Another experiment was the modification of P 38 40 744 for pilot asymmetric flight tests lt ref gt page needed One P 38E was fitted with an extended central nacelle to accommodate a tandem seat cockpit with dual controls and was later fitted with a laminar flow wing nbsp P 38E testbed 41 1986 shown with second version of upswept tail designed to keep tail out of water upon takeoff for a proposed twin float variantVery early in the Pacific War a scheme was proposed to fit Lightnings with floats to allow them to make long range ferry flights The floats would be removed before the aircraft went into combat Concerns arose that saltwater spray would corrode the tailplane so in March 1942 P 38E 41 1986 was modified with a tailplane raised some 16 18 in 41 46 cm booms lengthened by 2 ft and a rearward facing second seat added for an observer to monitor the effectiveness of the new arrangement A second version was crafted on the same airframe with the twin booms given greater sideplane area to augment the vertical rudders This arrangement was removed and a final third version was fabricated that had the booms returned to normal length but the tail raised 33 in 84 cm All three tail modifications were designed by George H Bert Estabrook The final version was used for a quick series of dive tests on 7 December 1942 in which Milo Burcham performed the test maneuvers and Kelly Johnson observed from the rear seat Johnson concluded that the raised floatplane tail gave no advantage in solving the problem of compressibility At no time was this P 38E testbed airframe actually fitted with floats and the idea was quickly abandoned as the U S Navy proved to have enough sealift capacity to keep up with P 38 deliveries to the South Pacific 140 Still another P 38E was used in 1942 to tow a Waco troop glider as a demonstration However there proved to be plenty of other aircraft such as Douglas C 47 Skytrains available to tow gliders and the Lightning was spared this duty Standard Lightnings were used as crew and cargo transports in the South Pacific They were fitted with pods attached to the underwing pylons replacing drop tanks or bombs that could carry a single passenger in a lying down position or cargo This was a very uncomfortable way to fly Some of the pods were not even fitted with a window to let the passenger see out or bring in light Lockheed proposed a carrier based Model 822 version of the Lightning for the United States Navy The Model 822 would have featured folding wings an arresting hook and stronger undercarriage for carrier operations The navy was not interested as they regarded the Lightning as too big for carrier operations and did not like liquid cooled engines anyway and the Model 822 never went beyond the paper stage However the navy did operate four land based F 5Bs in North Africa inherited from the USAAF and redesignated FO 1 A P 38J was used in experiments with an unusual scheme for midair refueling in which the fighter snagged a drop tank trailed on a cable from a bomber The USAAF managed to make this work but decided it was not practical A P 38J was also fitted with experimental retractable snow ski landing gear but this idea never reached operational service either After the war a P 38L was experimentally fitted with armament of three 60 in 15 2 mm machine guns The 60 in 15 2 mm caliber cartridge had been developed early in the war for an infantry anti tank rifle a type of weapon developed by a number of nations in the 1930s when tanks were lighter but by 1942 armor was too tough for this caliber Another P 38L was modified after the war as a super strafer with eight 50 in 12 7 mm machine guns in the nose and a pod under each wing with two 50 in 12 7 mm guns for a total of 12 machine guns Nothing came of this conversion either Variants edit nbsp A 3 view line drawing of a P 38LXP 38 United States Army Air Force designation for one prototype Lockheed Model 22 first flown in 1939 141 YP 38 Redesigned preproduction batch with armament 13 built 141 P 38 First production variant with 0 5 in guns and a 37 mm cannon 30 built 141 142 XP 38A Thirtieth P 38 modified with a pressurized cockpit 141 142 Lightning I Former Armee de l air order for 667 aircraft being reduced to 143 Lighting Is it was taken by the Royal Air Force three delivered to RAF and the remainder of the order was delivered to USAAF It used C series V 1710 33 engines without turbochargers and right hand propeller rotation not counter 143 144 Lightning II The Royal Air Force designation for a cancelled order of 524 aircraft using F series V 1710 engines the only one built was retained by the USAAF for testing the rest of the order was completed as P 38F 13 LO P 38F 15 LO P 38G 13 LO and P 38G 15 LO aircraft 143 144 P 322 I 22 Lightning Is of the 143 built were retained by the USAAF for training and testing Most were unarmed although some retained the Lighting I armament of two 50 cal and two 30 cal guns 141 145 P 322 II 121 Lightning Is were re engined with the V 1710 27 29 and used for training Most were unarmed 141 145 P 38B Proposed variant of the P 38A not built 141 P 38C Proposed variant of the P 38A not built 141 P 38D Production variant with modified tailplane incidence self sealing fuel tanks 36 built 141 P 38E Production variant with revised hydraulic system 20 mm cannon rather than the 37 mm of earlier variants 210 built 141 P 38E Floatplane A proposed floatplane variant of the P 38E with upswept tail booms and fitted with droppable and fuel filled floats one prototype was converted from P 38E 41 1986 with modified tail booms but was not fitted with floats It did not enter production 146 P 38F Production variant with inboard underwing racks for drop tanks or 2000 lb of bombs 527 built 141 P 38G Production variant with modified radio equipment 1082 built 141 P 38H Production variant capable of carrying 3200 lb of underwing bombs improved intercooler design along with automatic oil radiator flaps 601 built 141 P 38J This production variant was built in 1943 with improvements to each batch notably an increase of Hp that came with an improved turbo charger It also included chin radiators flat bullet proof windshields power boosted ailerons and increased fuel capacity 2970 were built Some were modified to pathfinder configuration and to F 5C F 5E and F 5F 141 P 38K With 1425 hp engines larger Hamilton Standard Paddle bladed propellers were added to compensate for increased power one was built a single P 38E was additionally converted to the same propeller as the P 38K 141 P 38L With 1600 hp engines 3923 were built which included 113 built at Vultee later conversions to pathfinders and F 5G were made 141 TP 38L Two P 38Ls were converted as tandem seated operational trainers 141 P 38M Conversion of P 38L as a radar equipped night fighter 141 F 4 Photo reconnaissance variant of the P 38E 99 built 147 F 4A Photo reconnaissance variant of the P 38F 20 built 147 F 5A Reconnaissance variant of the P 38G 181 built 147 F 5B Reconnaissance variant of the P 38J 200 were built and four were later sent to the United States Navy as FO 1s 147 F 5C Reconnaissance variant of the P 38J 123 conversions 147 XF 5D Prone observer variant one conversion from a F 5A 147 F 5E Reconnaissance variant converted from the P 38J and P 38L 705 converted 147 F 5F Reconnaissance variant conversions of the P 38L 147 F 5G As reconnaissance variant conversions of the P 38L they had a different camera configuration from the F 5F 147 XFO 1 United States Navy designation for four F 5Bs operated for evaluation 148 Operators editMain article List of Lockheed P 38 Lightning operators Military nbsp Australia nbsp Republic of China nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Free France nbsp France nbsp Honduras nbsp Kingdom of Italy nbsp Italy nbsp Portugal nbsp United Kingdom nbsp United StatesCivil nbsp ColombiaNoted P 38s edit nbsp P 38J Lightning YIPPEEYippee edit The 5 000th Lightning built a P 38J 20 LO 44 23296 was painted bright vermilion red and had the name YIPPEE painted on the underside of the wings in large white letters as well as the signatures of hundreds of factory workers This and other aircraft were used by a handful of Lockheed test pilots including Milo Burcham Jimmie Mattern and Tony LeVier in remarkable flight demonstrations performing such stunts as slow rolls at treetop level with one prop feathered to dispel the myth that the P 38 was unmanageable 149 150 Surviving aircraft editMain article List of surviving Lockheed P 38 Lightnings Of the ten thousand aircraft built there are 26 survivors of which ten are airworthy Noted P 38 pilots editRichard Bong and Thomas McGuire edit nbsp Major Richard Bong in his P 38The American ace of aces and his closest competitor both flew Lightnings and tallied 40 and 38 victories respectively 151 Majors Richard I Dick Bong and Thomas B Tommy McGuire of the USAAF competed for the top position Both men were awarded the Medal of Honor McGuire was killed in air combat in January 1945 over the Philippines after accumulating 38 confirmed kills making him the second ranking American ace Bong was rotated back to the United States as America s ace of aces after making 40 kills becoming a test pilot He was killed on 6 August 1945 the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Japan when his Lockheed P 80 Shooting Star jet fighter flamed out on take off nbsp L R Thomas B McGuire and Charles Lindbergh discussing a mission on Biak Island in July 1944Charles Lindbergh edit Charles Lindbergh became famous for his transatlantic solo flight before the war By WWII he was a civilian working for Vought in the South Pacific area He received preferential treatment as if a visiting colonel In Hollandia Lindbergh attached himself to the 475th Fighter Group which was flying P 38s Although new to the aircraft Lindbergh was instrumental in extending the range of the P 38 through improved throttle settings or engine leaning techniques notably by reducing engine speed to 1 600 rpm setting the carburetors for auto lean and flying at 185 mph 298 km h indicated airspeed which reduced fuel consumption to 70 gal h about 2 6 mpg This combination of settings had been considered dangerous as it was believed this would upset the fuel mixture causing an explosion 152 While with the 475th he took part in a number of combat missions On 28 July 1944 Lindbergh shot down a Mitsubishi Ki 51 Sonia flown by the veteran commander of the 73rd Independent Flying Chutai of the Imperial Japanese Army Captain Saburo Shimada In an extended twisting dogfight in which many of the participants ran out of ammunition Shimada turned his aircraft directly toward Lindbergh who was just approaching the combat area Lindbergh fired in a defensive reaction brought on by Shimada s apparent head on ramming attack Hit by cannon and machine gun fire the Sonia s propeller visibly slowed but Shimada held his course Lindbergh pulled up at the last moment to avoid collision as the damaged Sonia went into a steep dive hit the ocean and sank The unofficial kill was not entered in the 475th s war record On 12 August 1944 Lindbergh left Hollandia to return to the United States 153 Charles MacDonald edit Main article Charles H MacDonald The third ranking American ace of the Pacific theater Charles H MacDonald flew a Lightning against the Japanese and scored 27 kills 151 in his aircraft the Putt Putt Maru Martin James Monti edit Main article Martin James Monti Martin James Monti was an American pilot who defected to the Axis powers in a stolen F 5E Lightning which was handed over to the Luftwaffe Zirkus Rosarius for testing afterward Robin Olds edit Main article Robin Olds Robin Olds was the last P 38 ace in the 8th Air Force and the last in the ETO Flying a P 38J he downed five German fighters on two separate missions over France and Germany He subsequently transitioned to P 51s and scored seven more kills After World War II he flew F 4 Phantom IIs in Vietnam ending his career as brigadier general with 16 kills John H Ross edit Main article John H Ross Ross is a decorated World War II pilot who flew 96 missions for the U S Army Air Forces under the U S 8th Air Force s 7th Reconnaissance Group in the 22nd Reconnaissance Squadron Ross flew the Lockheed P 38 Lightning as a photo reconnaissance pilot out of RAF Mount Farm in England during the war He received 11 medals and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross twice for missions that were integral to Allied victory at the Battle of the Bulge Antoine de Saint Exupery edit nbsp The left main landing gear of Saint Exupery s F 5B Lightning recovered in 2003 from the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Marseille FranceMain article Antoine de Saint Exupery At midday on 31 July 1944 noted aviation pioneer and writer Antoine de Saint Exupery Night Flight Wind Sand and Stars and The Little Prince vanished in his P 38 of the French Armee de l Air s Groupe de Chasse II 33 after departing Borgo Porreta Corsica His health both physically and mentally had been deteriorating Saint Exupery was said to be intermittently subject to depression and talk had arisen of taking him off flying status 154 155 Note 4 He was on a flight over the Mediterranean from Corsica to mainland France in an unarmed F 5B photo reconnaissance variant of the P 38J Note 5 described as being a war weary nonairworthy craft 156 In 2000 a French scuba diver found the partial remnants of a Lightning spread over several thousand square meters of the Mediterranean seabed off the coast of Marseille In April 2004 the recovered component serial numbers were confirmed as being from Saint Exupery s F 5B Lightning Only a small amount of the aircraft s wreckage was recovered 157 In June 2004 the recovered parts and fragments were given to the Air and Space Museum of France in Le Bourget Paris where Saint Exupery s life is commemorated in a special exhibit 158 In 1981 and also in 2008 two Luftwaffe fighter pilots respectively Robert Heichele and Horst Rippert separately claimed to have shot down Saint Exupery s P 38 159 160 161 Both claims were unverifiable and possibly self promotional as neither of their units combat records of action from that period made any note of such a shoot down 162 163 Specifications P 38L edit nbsp A three view drawing of a P 38 Lightning nbsp Lockheed P 38L Lightning at the National Museum of the United States Air Force marked as a P 38J of the 55th Fighter Squadron based in England 164 nbsp M2 machine gun armament in the nose of the P 38 nbsp A P 38 with a 1 000 lb 454 kg bomb and a drop tankData from Lockheed P 38H J L Pilot s Flight Operating Instructions 165 P 38H J L Pilot s Flight Operating Instructions 166 General characteristicsCrew 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 26 167 Airfoil root NACA 23016 tip NACA 4412 168 Empty weight 12 800 lb 5 806 kg 167 Gross weight 17 500 lb 7 938 kg 167 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 169 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 167 Power mass 0 16 hp lb 0 26 kW kg Drag area 8 78 sq ft 0 82 m2 167 Zero lift drag coefficient 0 0268 167 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 bombsPopular culture edit nbsp 1950 Studebaker ChampionHarley Earl arranged for several of his designers to view a YP 38 prototype shortly before World War II and its design directly inspired the tail fins of the 1948 1949 Cadillac 170 The P 38 was also the inspiration for Raymond Loewy and his design team at Studebaker for the 1950 and 1951 model year Studebakers 171 The whine of the speeder bike engines in Return of the Jedi was partly achieved by recording the engine noise of a P 38 combined with that of a North American P 51 Mustang 172 The popular eight bit video game 1942 puts the player in command of a P 38 flying over the Pacific fighting against Japanese Zeros and the Nakajima G10N bomber The game was made by Japanese company Capcom intended for Western markets and finishes with the player raiding Tokyo Notable appearances in media editMain article Aircraft in fiction P 38 Lightning Documentaries edit Sheet Metal Repairs to the P 38 Lightning 1945 b amp w 19 00 This educational production and training film from Lockheed shows standard aviation tooling and methods that are still used today for aluminum aircraft repair Film by TM Technologies Yamamoto shot down 1944 B amp W 4 00 The P 38 Squadron that shot down Admiral Yamamoto in a long distance interception in the Pacific is depicted The film includes purported P 38 gun camera footage of the Admiral s Betty bomber going down in flames Dick Bong Pacific Ace 1944 B amp W 4 00 This short documentary film pays tribute to Richard Dick Bong the top American ace who flew P 38s in World War II Angel in Overalls 1945 B amp W 15 00 This film was developed to show U S Lockheed P 38 production line workers in a wide variety of roles 173 See also edit nbsp Aviation portalLockheed Martin F 35 Lightning IIRelated development Lockheed XP 49 Lockheed XP 58 Chain LightningAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Bristol Beaufighter de Havilland Mosquito Focke Wulf Fw 187 Fokker G I Hughes XF 11 Kawasaki Ki 96 Messerschmitt Me 210 Mitsubishi Ki 83 Nakajima J5N Northrop P 61 Black Widow Westland WhirlwindRelated lists List of aircraft of World War II List of fighter aircraft List of Lockheed aircraft List of military aircraft of the United StatesNotes edit The 1939 edition of the German Aviation Manualalready contained a detailed drawing and a close up photograph of this prototype along with detailed information on the engines and indicated that its maximum speed was supposed to be 640 680 km h 400 420 mph Dimensions equipment and weaponry were indicated as unknown 35 Turbosuperchargers were not secret nor restricted by the United States government Related designs were known from French and Swiss firms France and the UK did not want turbosuperchargers they had never employed them and they knew the American ones were in short supply and did not want delivery delayed 57 Some of the fastest postwar racing P 38s were virtually identical in layout to the P 322 II Saint Exupery suffered recurring pain and immobility from previous injuries due to his numerous aircraft crashes to the extent that he could not dress himself in his own flight suit After his death vague suggestions were made that his disappearance was the result of suicide rather than an aircraft failure or combat loss citation needed He was flying a P 38 F 5B 1 LO 42 68223 c n 2734 citation needed References edit Master Sgt John DeShetler 20 November 2006 Lightning strikes 1st Pursuit Group United States Air Force Honduran Air Force aeroflight co uk Retrieved 10 October 2010 a b c Donald 1997 p 581 Johnsen 2003 p 75 chptr 4 Its ability to carry two 150 gallon or 300 gallon drop made it a natural for long range escort duties P 38 Lightning National Museum of the United States Air Force Retrieved 21 January 2007 The P 38 When Lightning Strikes Lockheed Martin Levine 1992 p 18 Stanaway 1998 p page needed USAAF 1 1945 p 7 Two turbo superchargers give the Allison engines sea level horsepower at extremely high altitudes Blake 2020 Chptr 8 p 300 the P 38 was a very quiet plane because its exhaust exited through the turbosuperchargers on top of the plane Gunston 1980 p 133 Bodie 2001 p xvi Bodie 2001 pp 16 17 Bodie 2001 p 14 Hanson Dave Lockheed P 38 Lightning Dave s Warbirds Retrieved 21 January 2007 a b Bodie 2001 p 19 a b c Bodie 2001 p 51 a b Current Biography Yearbook H W Wilson Co 1969 p 199 At that time Lockheed did not as yet have a formal engineering building and so Johnson and his staff improvised a development plant using unoccupied corners in hangars and an old distillery The results of this skunk works approach was the legendary P 38 Lightning XP 38 Design Drawings A diagram of the configurations considered for the prototype Archived 18 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine P 38 National Association amp Museum Retrieved 21 January 2007 Bodie 2001 p 44 Chinn George 1951 37 mm Automatic Guns The Machine Gun Vol 3 Washington D C USA United States Government Printing Office p 31 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Gun Automatic 37 mm T9 The T2 gun was modified until eventually a gun designated T9 was ready for test In September 1939 this gun was mounted in P 38 and P 39 fighter planes which was standardized as the M4 Bodie 2001 p 80 AN 01 75 2 P 38 gunsight manual Section IV page 21 Coggins 2000 p 31 Grahame Arthur January 1944 The Facts About Fighter Plane Firepower Popular Science pp 76 83 186 Grahame says the Lightning shoots 168 rounds per second combined cannon and MG the weight of fire being 547 lb minute 9 1 lb second The 20 mm cannon fires at 2850 ft sec muzzle velocity projectile weight 0 29 lb 130 grams at 650 rpm 10 8 rps The 50 caliber machine gun fires at 2900 ft sec weight of projectile 800 grains 51 8 grams at 850 rev min a b c Lockheed P 38 Lightning aviation history com Retrieved 21 January 2007 Handbook of Operation and Maintenance Allison V1710 type engines PDF Allison division General Motors 1943 Loftin L K Jr 1985 Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft NASA SP 468 NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch Washington Retrieved 22 April 2006 Thornborough amp Davis 1988 p 8 Bodie 2001 p 245 O Leary Michael Conquering the Sky Air Classics April 2005 Retrieved 26 January 2007 Bodie 2001 p 32 Kocivar Ben 6 October 1964 Collier Trophy Look Vol 28 no 20 p 36 He calls his development plants skunk works There have been five of them the first an abandoned distillery Bodie 2001 p 33 Schnitzler R G W Feuchter and R Schulz eds Handbuch der Luftfahrt Manual of Aviation in German Munich J F Lehmanns Verlag 1939 pg386 7 Bodie 2001 p 36 Bodie 2001 p 40 Knaack 1988 p 3 a b c d e f g h i Caidin 1983 p page needed Parker 2013 pp 59 75 76 About the P 38 Early Years P 38 National Association amp Museum Retrieved 21 January 2007 a b c Collections Database Lockheed P 38J 10 LO Lightning National Air and Space Museum Retrieved 6 February 2009 a b Bodie 2001 p 58 Bodie 2001 p 57 Johnson amp Smith 1985 p 74 Erikson Albert L Wind Tunnel Investigation of Devices for Improving The Diving Characteristics of Airplanes NACA MR No 3F12 Summary Bodie 2001 pp 174 175 Ethell 1984 p 14 Goebel Greg The Lockheed P 38 Lightning vectorsite net Version 1 3 Retrieved 21 January 2007 a b Bodie 2001 p 210 Kaplan amp Saunders 1991 p 56 Baugher Joe Lockheed P 38 Lightning Archived 26 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Joe Baugher s Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft 13 June 1999 Retrieved 29 January 2007 Baugher Joe Lockheed XP 38A Lightning Joe Baugher s Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft 13 June 1999 Retrieved 29 January 2007 Baugher Joe Lockheed P 38D Lightning Joe Baugher s Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft 13 June 1999 Retrieved 29 January 2007 Bodie 2001 p 46 Bodie 2001 pp 45 47 a b Baugher Joe Lightning I for RAF Joe Baugher s Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft 2 December 2002 Retrieved 29 January 2007 a b c d e Bodie 2001 p 60 Bodie 2001 p 63 a b Bodie 2001 p 61 a b c Bodie 2001 p 64 Mason 2010 pp 204 205 Bodie 2001 pp 111 116 Yenne 1987 p 60 a b Bodie 2001 pp 89 91 McFarland amp Newton 2006 p 103 Bodie 2001 pp 101 102 a b c Baugher Joe P 38 in European Theatre Joe Baugher s Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft 13 June 1999 Retrieved 4 February 2007 Maloney Edward T Lockheed P 38 Lightning Aero Series Vol 19 Fallbrook California Aero Publishers Inc 1968 p 4 Stanaway amp Mellinger 2001 p 43 Stanaway 1998 p page needed a b Stanaway 2014 p 71 a b Blake 2012 p 14 a b Stanaway 2014 p 72 Bergstrom 2019 pp 315 316 a b Stanaway 2014 p 73 a b Stanaway 2014 p 74 Gray William P 16 August 1943 P 38 Lockheed s Twin tailed Fighter Lives Down Its Hoodoo to Sweep Enemy Skies Life p 51 Shores et al 2018 pp 321 323 a b Scutts 1994 p 61 Shores et al 2018 pp 326 329 Laurier 2016 p 54 Sims 1980 pp 134 135 Galland 1954 p page needed Rymaszewski Michael July 1994 Playing Your Aces Computer Gaming World p 102 Garello Giancarlo Prede di guerra Aerei jugoslavi inglesi statunitensi belgi 1940 1943 Torino La Bancarella Aeronautica 2007 p 68 No ISBN in Italian Dimensione cielo Caccia Assalto 3 aerei italiani nella 2a guerra mondiale in Italian Rome Edizioni Bizzarri 1973 No ISBN p 72 a b c Cesarani amp Kavanaugh 2004 pp 234 235 Stanaway 1998 pp 43 46 Hatch 2000 pp 59 67 Dan Vizanti despre IAR 80 și bătălia din 10 iunie 1944 ziare com in Romanian 9 June 2009 Neulen 2005 pp 113 114 IAR 80 contra P 38 10 iunie 1944 rapoarte despre misiune USAAF iar80flyagain org in Romanian 14 July 2022 Mission No 702 10 June 1944 Romana Americana Oil Refinery Ploesti Rumania 82ndfightergroup com Archived from the original on 9 October 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2009 Spick 1983 p 94 Tillman 2004 p 8 Interview with General James H Doolittle Hotlinecy com Retrieved 6 February 2009 a b Of Men and Stars A History of Lockheed Aircraft Corporation 1913 1957 Burbank California Lockheed Aircraft Corporation 1958 p 11 a b Army Air Corps World War II 370th Fighter Group Living History Group Retrieved 14 December 2009 Achtung Jabos The Story of the IX TAC Stars and Stripes Publications Information and Education Division Special and Informational Services ETOUSA 1944 474th Fighter Group WWII World War II Army Air Forces Thompson amp Smith 2008 p 240 Kenney 1987 pp 171 173 Hearn 2008 p 86 Schom 2004 p 310 Stanaway 1997 pp 7 8 McFarland 1997 p 33 Bruning 2003 p 124 Gillison 1962 pp 692 693 Spinetta 2007 p page needed Watson 1950 pp 129 165 Gamble 2010 p 310 a b Stanaway 1997 p 14 Bodie 2001 p 223 Bodie 2001 p 214 Bodie 2001 p 217 Bodie 2001 p 234 Berliner 2011 p 14 P 38 Lightning Bvhcenter org 9 June 2011 Sgarlato Nico I P 38 Italiani in Italian Aerei Nella Storia n 21 December 2000 Memorandum for Chief WH CIA Subject Bombing of British ship SS Springfjord Central Intelligence Agency 1 July 1955 The three page memorandum is stamped CIA Historical Review Program Release as Sanitized 2003 Villagran Kramer 1993 2004 p 151 Lloyd Selwyn 5 July 1954 Aircraft Attacks Parliamentary Debates Hansard vol 529 cc 1769 1772 archived from the original on 25 December 2012 retrieved 16 August 2012 King J C Memorandum for Office of the General Council Subject S S Springfjord Central Intelligence Agency 25 July 1958 The two page memorandum is stamped CIA Historical Review Program Release as Sanitized 2003 Hagedorn Daniel P July November 1986 From Caudillos to COIN Air Enthusiast No 33 pp 55 70 Lockheed P 38L Lightning National Museum of the United States Air Force Retrieved 16 October 2016 Johnson amp Smith 1985 p page needed Spick 2002 p 224 WWII Aircraft Performance P 38F Tactical Trials Final Report on Tactical Suitability of the P 38F Type Airplane 6 March 1943 Retrieved 19 January 2009 Bodie 2001 p 166 Bodie 2001 p 172 Baugher Joe Lockheed P 38J Lightning Joe Baugher s Encyclopedia of American Military Aircraft 5 June 1999 Retrieved 29 January 2007 Bodie 2001 p 208 a b Bodie 2001 pp 169 171 P38K P 38 Lightning online 21 October 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2009 a b Cross 1969 p page needed Donald 2004 p 145 Lightning Modifications amp Derivatives Postwar v2 0 7 1 February 2021 Greg Goebel Jeffrey L Ethell 1983 P 38 Lightning Danvers MA USA Crown ISBN 9780517552476 the 418th 419th and 421st Night Fighter Squadron were given P 38s Bodie 2001 pp 118 121 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Andrade 1979 pp 146 147 a b Kinzey 1998 p 33 a b Andrade 1979 p 245 a b Kinzey 1998 p 27 a b Kinzey 1998 p 28 Davis 1990 p 15 a b c d e f g h i Andrade 1979 pp 99 100 Andrade 1979 p 191 Cefaratt 2002 pp 15 39 141 Frey 2004 p 61 a b Sherman Stephen June 1999 PTO CBI Pilots of WWII Top American aces of the Pacific amp CBI acepilots com retrieved 8 May 2007 Kirkland 2003 pp 29 35 Charles Lindbergh and the 475th Fighter Group Lightning Strikes Retrieved 10 October 2010 Schiff 2006 pp 430 433 Schiff 2006 pp 436 437 Cate 1970 p page needed Cyvoct Brian Riou Island s F 5B Lightning Rhone s delta France Pilot Commander Antoine de Saint Exupery Archived 21 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Aero relic org 2004 Antoine de Saint Exupery aurait ete abattu par un pilote allemand in French Le Monde 15 March 2008 Schiff 2006 pp 438 439 Wartime author mystery solved BBC News 17 March 2008 Tagliabuet John Clues to the Mystery of a Writer Pilot Who Disappeared The New York Times 11 April 2008 Beale Nick Saint Exupery Entre Mythe et Realite in French Aero Journal No 4 2008 pp 78 81 Archive sources for Luftwaffe activity over Southern France on 30 and 31 July 1944 Archived 5 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ghost Bombers Retrieved 30 August 2011 United States Air Force Museum Guidebook 1987 p 54 Lockheed P 38H J L Pilot s Flight Operating Instructions USAAF 1944 ISBN 9781411690134 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Lockheed P 38H J L Pilot s Flight Operating Instructions PDF United States Army Air Force 1944 Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2012 Retrieved 9 January 2020 a b c d e f Appendix A continued Table III Characteristics of Illustrative Aircraft 1939 80 Quest for Performance The Evolution of Modern Aircraft NASA Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Crosby 2003 p 96 Lamm amp Holls 1996 p 110 The P 38 prowls the highway Hemmings Motor News courtesy of Studebaker Retrieved 14 December 2009 Sound Design of Star Wars filmsound org 3 January 2012 Quote The sound of a Speeder Bike was achieved by mixing together the recorded sounds of a P 51 Mustang airplane a P 38 Lockheed Interceptor and then recording them Stock Footage WWII Pacific Theater Angel In Overalls The P 38 Lightning Broadcast Quality Video Footage WWII Fighter P 38 Lightning Video Clips And Archive Films www buyoutfootage com Retrieved 16 August 2022 Bibliography editAndrade John M 1979 U S Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909 Leicester England Midland Counties Publications ISBN 978 0 904597 22 6 Bearman Matt April 2018 Lockheed Consternation Compressibility amp the P 38 Lightning Pt 3 The Aviation Historian 23 18 30 ISSN 2051 1930 Bergstrom Christer in Swedish 2019 Black cross red star air war over the Eastern Front Volume 4 Stalingrad to Kuban 1942 1943 Eskilstuna Vaktel Books ISBN 978 91 88441 21 8 Berliner Don 2011 Surviving fighter aircraft of World War Two a global guide to location and types Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen amp Sword Aviation ISBN 978 1 84884 265 6 Blake Steve 2012 P 38 Lightning Aces of the 82nd Fighter Group Botley Oxford Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 78096 871 1 Blake Steven 4 October 2020 Lightning Strikes The Lockheed P 38 Stroud UK Fonthill Media ISBN 978 1 78155 788 4 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Bodie Warren M 2001 1991 The Lockheed P 38 Lightning The Definitive Story of Lockheed s P 38 Fighter Hayesville North Carolina Widewing Publications ISBN 978 0 9629359 5 4 Bruning John R 2003 Jungle ace Col Gerald R Johnson the USAAF s top fighter leader of the Pacific War 1st The warriors ed Washington D C Brassey s ISBN 978 1 61234 086 9 Caidin Martin 1983 Fork tailed Devil New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 31292 1 Cate Curtis 1970 Antoine de Saint Exupery His Life and Times Saint Laurent Quebec Longmans Canada Limited ISBN 978 1 55778 291 5 Cefaratt Gil 2002 Lockheed the people behind the story Limited ed Paducah Ky Turner Pub pp 15 39 141 ISBN 978 1 56311 847 0 Cesarani David Kavanaugh Sarah 2004 Holocaust critical concepts in historical studies London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 31871 6 Coggins Edward V 2000 Wings That Stay On Turner p 31 ISBN 978 1 56311 568 4 Crosby Francis 2003 A Handbook of Fighter Aircraft Featuring photographs from the Imperial War Museum London Hermes House ISBN 978 0 681 34256 9 Cross Roy 1969 Lockheed P 38 Lightning technical manual Candenong Victoria Australia Kookaburra technical publications John W Caler Publications OCLC 898545364 Davis Larry 1990 P 38 Lightning In Action Squadron Signal Publications ISBN 978 0 89747 255 5 Donald David 1997 The encyclopedia of world aircraft Updated ed Leicester Blitz Editions ISBN 978 1 85605 375 4 Donald David 2004 Warplane Classic Lockheed P 38 Lightning Fork tailed Devil International Air Power Review Vol 14 ISBN 978 1 880588 85 7 ISSN 1473 9917 Ethell Jeffrey 1984 The Great book of World War II airplanes New York Bonanza Books ISBN 978 0 517 45993 5 Frey Royal D 2004 Flying American combat aircraft of WWII 1939 45 1st ed Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3124 9 Galland Adolf 1954 The First and The Last Cutchogue New York Buccaneer Books ISBN 978 0 89966 728 7 Gamble Bruce 2010 Fortress Rabaul the battle for the Southwest Pacific January 1942 April 1943 Minneapolis Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 2350 2 Gillison Douglas 1962 Royal Australian Air Force 1939 1942 Canberra Australian War Memorial pp 692 693 OCLC 2000369 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Gunston Bill 1980 Aircraft of World War 2 New York Crescent Books ISBN 978 0 517 31680 1 Hatch Herbert 2000 An Ace and his Angel Memoirs of a World War II Fighter Pilot Paducah Kentucky Turner Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 56311 574 5 Hearn Chester G 2008 Air Force an illustrated history the U S Air Force from the 1910s to the 21st century Minneapolis Minn Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 3308 2 Johnsen Frederick 2003 Steve Gansen ed Weapons of the Eighth Air Force St Paul MN MBI ISBN 978 0 7603 1340 4 Retrieved 25 January 2020 Johnson Clarence L Smith Maggie 1985 Kelly More Than My Share of it All Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 0 87474 564 1 Kaplan Philip Saunders Andy 1991 Little friends the fighter pilot experience in World War II England 1st ed New York Random House ISBN 978 0 394 58434 8 Kenney George C 1987 General Kenney reports a personal history of the Pacific War Washington D C DIANE ISBN 978 0 912799 44 5 Kinzey Bert 1998 Detail amp Scale Volume 57 P 38 Lighting Part I XP 38 through P 38H Squadron Signal Publications ISBN 978 1 888974 10 2 Kirkland Richard C 2003 War pilot true tales of combat and adventure First ed Novato Calif Presidio ISBN 978 0 345 45812 4 Knaack Marcelle S 1988 Encyclopedia of US Air Force aircraft and missile systems 2 Post World War II bombers 1945 1973 Washington DC Office of Air Force History US Air Force ISBN 978 0 912799 59 9 Lamm Michael Holls Dave 1996 A century of automotive style 100 years of American car design Stockton Calif Lamm Morada Pub Co ISBN 978 0 932128 07 2 Laurier Jim 2016 Fighter Ten Killer Planes of World War II Minneapolis Minnesota Voyageur Press ISBN 978 0 7603 5301 1 Levine Alan J 1992 The Strategic Bombing of Germany 1940 1945 Greenwood ISBN 978 0 275 94319 6 Mason Tim 2010 The secret years flight testing at Boscombe Down 1935 1945 Manchester Crecy ISBN 978 1 902109 14 5 McFarland Stephen Lee 1997 A concise history of the U S Air Force Air Force fiftieth anniversary commemorative ed Washington D C Air Force History and Museums Program United States Air Force ISBN 978 0 16 049208 2 McFarland Stephen Lee Newton Wesley Philips 2006 To command the sky the battle for air superiority over Germany 1942 1944 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press ISBN 978 0 8173 5346 9 Neulen Hans Werner 2005 In the skies of Europe air forces allied to the Luftwaffe 1939 1945 Ramsbury Crowood ISBN 978 1 86126 799 3 Parker Dana T 2013 Building Victory Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II Cypress California ISBN 978 0 9897906 0 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Scutts Jerry 1994 Bf 109 Aces of North Africa and the Mediterranean Aircraft of the Aces Vol 2 London UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 448 0 Schiff Stacy 2006 1994 Saint Exupery A Biography New York Henry Holt ISBN 978 0 679 40310 4 Archived from the original on 13 May 2016 Retrieved 20 September 2023 Schom Alan 2004 The Eagle and the Rising Sun the Japanese American war 1941 1943 Pearl Harbor through Guadalcanal New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 04924 4 Shores Christopher Massimello Giovanni Guest Russell Olynyk Frank Bock Winfried Thomas Andy 2018 A History of the Mediterranean Air War 1940 1945 Volume Four Sicily and Italy to the Fall of Rome 14 May 1943 5 June 1944 London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 911621 10 2 Sims Edward H 1980 Fighter tactics and strategy 1914 1970 2nd ed Fallbrook Calif Aero Pub ISBN 978 0 8168 8795 8 Spick Mike 1983 Fighter pilot tactics the techniques of daylight air combat Cambridge Patrick Stephens ISBN 978 0 85059 617 5 Spick Mike 2002 The Illustrated Directory of Fighters St Paul Minnesota Salamander Books ISBN 978 0 7603 1343 5 Spinetta Lawrence November 2007 Battle of the Bismarck Sea World War II ISSN 0898 4204 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Stanaway John 1997 P 38 Lightning Aces of the Pacific and CBI New York Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 633 0 Stanaway John 1998 P 38 Lightning aces of the ETO MTO London Osprey Aerospace ISBN 978 1 85532 698 9 Stanaway John Mellinger George 2001 P 39 Airacobra aces of World War 2 Oxford Osprey Aviation ISBN 978 1 84176 204 3 Stanaway John 2014 P 38 Lightning Aces 1942 43 Aircraft of the Aces Vol 120 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 78200 334 2 Thompson J Steve Smith Peter C 2008 Air combat manoeuvres the technique and history of air fighting for flight simulation Hersham Classic ISBN 978 1 903223 98 7 Thornborough Anthony M Davis Peter E 1988 Lockheed blackbirds Surrey I Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 1794 8 Tillman Barrett 2004 Brassey s D Day encyclopedia the Normandy invasion A Z 1st ed Washington D C Brassey s ISBN 978 1 57488 760 0 Villagran Kramer Francisco 1993 2004 Biografia politica de Guatemala Guatemala FLACSO Guatemala Costa Rica ISBN 978 99939 72 01 3 Watson Richard L 1950 The Pacific Guadalcanal to Saipan August 1942 to July 1944 IV ed University of Chicago Press OCLC 9990462000 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Yenne Bill 1987 Lockheed Crescent Books ISBN 978 0 517 60471 7 Pilot Training Manual for the P 38 Lightning Winston Salem North Carolina USA Headquarters AAF Office of Flying Safety Safety Education Division 1 August 1945 ISBN 978 0 359 08811 9 Archived from the original on 6 January 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lockheed P 38 Lightning German Pilots Renamed It Gabelschwanz Teufel Fork tailed Devil Popular Science September 1943 The short film P 38 Flight Characteristics is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive The Lockheed Lightning a 1943 Flight article Jap hunting without a Gun a 1943 Lockheed advertisement in Flight Lockheed Lightning P 38 J permanent dead link a 1944 Flight article Lockheed Lightning P 38L 5 LO permanent dead link Cutaway view 1 P 38 Association and Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lockheed P 38 Lightning amp oldid 1217184692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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