The
Bell P-39 Airacobra
was one of the principal American
fighter
aircraft in service at the start of World
War II. Although its mid-engine placement was
innovative, the P-39 design was handicapped by the lack of an
efficient
turbo-supercharger, limiting
it to low-altitude work. The P-39 was used with great success by
the
Soviet Air Force, who scored
the highest number of individual kills attributed to any U.S.
fighter type. Other important users were the Free French and
co-belligerent Italian air forces. Together with the derivative
P-63 Kingcobra, these aircraft would
be the most successful mass-produced, fixed-wing aircraft
manufactured by Bell.
Design and development
In February 1937, Lieutenant
Benjamin
S. Kelsey, Project Officer
for Fighters at the
United
States Army Air Corps (USAAC), issued a specification for a new
fighter via
Circular Proposal X-609. It was a
request for a single-engine high-altitude
interceptor aircraft having "the
tactical mission of interception and attack of hostile aircraft at
high altitude". Specifications called for at least 1,000 lb of
heavy armament including a cannon, a liquid-cooled Allison engine
with a
General Electric turbo-supercharger,
tricycle landing gear, a level
airspeed of at least 360
mph
(580 km/h) at
altitude, and a climb to
20,000 ft (6,100 m) within 6 minutes;
Lockheed P-38 Lightning. Retrieved: 21
January 2007. the toughest set of specifications USAAC had
presented to that date. Although Bell's limited fighter design work
had previously resulted in the unusual
Bell YFM-1 Airacuda, the
Model
12 proposal adopted an equally original configuration with
an
Allison V-12 engine mounted in the
middle of the
fuselage, just behind the
cockpit, and a propeller driven by a shaft passing beneath the
pilot's feet under the cockpit floor.
The main purpose of this configuration was to free up space for the
heavy main armament, a 37 mm (1.46 in)
Oldsmobile T9 cannon firing through the center of the
propeller hub for optimum accuracy and stability when firing. In
fact, the entire design was made to accommodate this gun in the
aircraft. This happened because H.M. Poyer, designer for project
leader Robert Woods, was impressed by the power of this weapon and
he pressed for its incorporation though the original concept had
been a 20–25 mm (.79–98 in) cannon mounted in a
conventional manner in the nose. This was unusual, because fighters
had previously been designed around an engine, not a weapon system.
Although devastating when it worked, the T9 had very limited
ammunition, a low rate of fire, and was prone to jamming.
A secondary benefit of the mid-engine arrangement was to create a
smooth and streamlined nose profile. Entry to the cockpit was
through side doors (mounted on both sides of the cockpit) rather
than a sliding canopy. Its unusual engine location and the long
driveshaft caused some pilot concern at first, but experience
showed this was no more of a hazard in a crash landing than with an
engine located forward of the cockpit. There were no problems with
propshaft failure.
As originally designed, the XP-39 had a turbocharger with a scoop
on the left side of the fuselage; both were deleted for
production.Fitzsimons 1978, p. 50. The production P-39 retained a
single-stage, single-speed supercharger with a critical altitude
(above which performance declined) of about 12,000 ft
(3,658 m).
The XP-39
made her maiden flight on 6 April 1938 at Wright
Field
, Ohio
, achieving
390 mph (630 km/h) at 20,000 ft (6,100 m),
reaching this altitude in only five minutes. The Army
ordered twelve YP-39s (with only a single-stage, single-speed
supercharger) for service evaluation and one YP-39A. After these
trials were complete, which resulted in detail changes including
deletion of the external radiator, and on advice from
NACA, the
prototype was modified as the
XP-39B; after
demonstrating a performance improvement, the 13 YP-39s were
completed to this standard, adding two .30 in (7.62 mm)
machine guns to the two existing .50 in (12.7 mm) guns.
Lacking armor or self-sealing fuel tanks, the prototype was
(900 kg) lighter than the production fighters.
After completing service trials, and originally designated
P-45, a first order for 80 aircraft was placed 10
August 1939; the designation would revert before deliveries
began.
Technical details
The P-39 was an all-metal, low-wing, single-engine fighter, with a
tricycle undercarriage and an
Allison
V-1710 liquid-cooled Vee-12 engine mounted in the central
fuselage, directly behind the cockpit.
The Airacobra was one of the first production fighters to be
conceived as a "weapons system"; in this case the aircraft (known
originally as the Bell Model 4) was designed around the
37mm T9 cannon. This weapon, which was designed in
1934 by the American Armament Corporation, a division of
Oldsmobile, fired a 1.3 lb (610 g)
projectile capable of piercing .8 in (2 cm) of armor at
500 yd (450 m) with
armor
piercing rounds. The 200 lb, 90 inch long weapon had
to be rigidly mounted and fire parallel to and close to the
centerline of the new fighter; however, it would be impossible to
mount the weapon in the fuselage, firing through the propeller
shaft as could be done with smaller 20mm cannon. Weight, balance
and visibility problems meant that the cockpit could not be placed
farther back in the fuselage, behind the engine and cannon. The
solution adopted was to mount the cannon in the forward fuselage
and the engine in the center fuselage, directly behind the pilot's
seat. The tractor propeller was driven via a 10 foot long drive
shaft which was made in two sections, incorporating a self-aligning
bearing to accommodate fuselage deflection during violent
maneuvers. This shaft ran through a tunnel in the cockpit floor and
was connected to a gearbox in the nose of the fuselage which, in
turn, drove the three or (later) four bladed propeller via a short
central shaft. The gearbox was provided with its own lubrication
system, separate from the engine; in later versions of the
Airacobra the gearbox was provided with some armor protection. The
glycol cooled radiator was fitted in
the wing center-section, immediately beneath the engine; this was
flanked on either side by a single drum shaped oil cooler. Air for
the radiator and oil coolers was drawn in through intakes formed in
both wing-root leading edges and was directed via four ducts to the
radiator faces. The air was then exhausted through three
controllable hinged flaps near the trailing edge of the center
section. Air for the
carburettor was
drawn in via a raised oval intake immediately aft of the rear
canopy.
The fuselage structure was unusual and innovative, being based on a
strong central keel which incorporated the armament, cockpit and
engine. Two strong fuselage beams to port and starboard formed the
basis of the structure. These angled upwards fore and aft to create
mounting points for the T9 cannon and propeller reduction gearbox
and for the engine and accessories respectively. A strong arched
bulkhead provided the main structural point to which the main spar
of the wing was attached. This arch incorporated a fireproof panel
and an armor plate separating the engine from the cockpit. It also
incorporated a turnover pylon and a pane of bullet-resistant glass
behind the pilot's head. The arch also formed the basis of the
cockpit housing; the pilot's seat was attached to the forward face
as was the cockpit floor. Forward of the cockpit the fuselage nose
was formed from large removable covers. A long nosewheel well was
incorporated in the lower nose section. The engine and accessories
were attached to the rear of the arch and the main structural
beams; these too were covered using large removable panels. A
conventional semi-monocoque rear fuselage was attached aft of the
main structure.
Because the pilot was riding above the extension shaft he was
placed higher in the fuselage than most contemporary fighters,
which, in turn, allowed Bell to use a raised cockpit enclosure,
giving the pilot a good field of view. Access to the cockpit was
via sideways opening "car doors", one on either side. Both had
wind-down windows; because only the right hand door had a handle
both inside and outside this was used as the normal means of
access. The left hand door could only be opened from the outside
and was only for emergency use, although both doors could be
jettisoned. In operational service, however the cockpit was
difficult to escape from in an emergency because the roof was
fixed.
The complete armament fit consisted of the T9 with a pair of
Browning M2 .50 in (12.7 mm)
machineguns mounted in the nose. This
would change to two .50 in (12.7 mm) and two .30 in
(7.62 mm) guns in the XP-39B (P-39C, Model 13, the first 20
delivered) and two 0.50 in/12.7 mm and four
0.30 in/7.62 mm (all four in the wings) in the P-39D
(Model 15), which also introduced self-sealing tanks and shackles
(and piping) for a 500 lb (227 kg) bomb or drop
tank.
Because of the unconventional layout, there was no space in the
fuselage to place a fuel tank. Although drop tanks were implemented
to extend its range, the standard fuel load was carried in the
wings, with the result that the P-39 was limited to short range
tactical strikes.
In September 1940, Britain ordered 386 P-39Ds (Model 14), with a
20 mm (.79 in)
Hispano-Suiza HS.404 and six
.303 in (7.7 mm), instead of a 37 mm
(1.46 in) cannon and six 0.30 in (7.62 in) guns. The
RAF eventually ordered a total of 675 P-39s. However, after the
first Airacobras arrived at
601
Squadron RAF in September 1941,
they were promptly recognized as having an inadequate rate of climb
and performance at altitude for Western European conditions. Only
80 were adopted, all of them with 601 Squadron. Britain transferred
about 200 P-39s to the Soviet Union.
Another
200 examples intended for the RAF were taken up by the USAAF after the attack on Pearl
Harbor
as the P-400, and were sent to the
Fifth Air Force in Australia, for
service in the South West Pacific
Theatre.
A heavy structure, and around 265 lb (120 kg) of armor
were characteristic of this aircraft as well. The production P-39's
heavier weight combined with the Allison engine having only a
single-stage, single-speed supercharger, limited the high-altitude
capabilities of the fighter. The P-39's altitude performance was
markedly inferior to the contemporary European fighters and, as a
result, the first USAAF fighter units in the
European Theater were equipped with the
Spitfire V. However, the
P-39D's roll rate was 75°/s at – better than the A6M2, F4F, F6F, or
P-38 up to . (see NACA chart).
Above the supercharger's critical altitude of about 12,000 ft
(3,658 m), an early P-39's performance dropped off rapidly.
This limited its usefulness in traditional fighter missions in
Europe as well as in the Pacific, where it was not uncommon for
Japanese bombers to attack at altitudes above the P-39's
operational ceiling (which in the tropical hot air inevitably was
lower than in moderate climates). However the late production N and
Q models making up 75% of all Aircobras could maintain a top speed
of approximately 375 mph (604 km/h) up to 20,000 ft
(6,100 m).
The weight distribution of the P-39 was supposedly the reason for
its tendency to enter a dangerous
flat
spin, a characteristic Soviet test pilots were able to
demonstrate to the skeptical manufacturer who had been unable to
reproduce the effect. After extensive tests, it was determined the
spin could only be induced if the aircraft was improperly loaded,
with no ammunition in the front compartment. The flight manual
specifically noted a need to ballast the front ammunition
compartment with the appropriate weight of shell casings to achieve
a reasonable center of gravity. High speed controls were light,
consequently, high speed turns and pull-outs were possible.
However, the P-39 had to be held in a dive since it tended to level
out, reminiscent of the Spitfire. Recommended dive speed limit
(
Vne) was for the P-39.
The rear-mounted engine made the aircraft ideal for ground attack
since fire would be coming from the front-bottom quarter and was
less likely to hit the engine and its cooling systems. However, the
arrangement proved to be very vulnerable to attacks from above and
behind and nearly any hit on the fuselage from an attacking enemy
fighter was virtually guaranteed to disable the cooling system and
lead to the prompt demise of the engine and thus the airplane.
Coupled with lack of high-altitude performance, the Airacobra was
extremely vulnerable to any enemy fighter with decent high altitude
performance.
By the
time of the Pearl
Harbor
attack, nearly 600 had been built.
When P-39 production ended in August 1944, Bell had built 9,558
Airacobras, of which 4,773 (mostly -39N and -39Q) were sent to the
Soviet Union through the
Lend-Lease
program. There were numerous minor variations in engine,
propeller, and armament, but no major structural changes in
production types, excepting a few two-seat TP-39F and RP-39Q
trainers. In addition, seven went to the
U.S. Navy as
radio-controlled
drone.
Trials of a
laminar flow wing (in the
XP-39E) and
Continental
IV-1430 engine (the P-76) were unsuccessful. The mid-engine,
gun-through-hub concept was developed further in the Bell
P-63 Kingcobra.
A naval version with tail-dragger landing gear, the
XFL-1 Airabonita, was ordered as a competitor
to the
F4U Corsair and
XF5F Skyrocket. It first flew 13 May 1940,
but after a troublesome and protracted development and testing
period, it was rejected.
Operational history
The Airacobra saw combat throughout the world, particularly in the
Southwest Pacific, Mediterranean and Russian theaters. Because its
engine was not equipped with a supercharger, the P-39 performed
best below altitude. It often was used at lower altitudes for such
missions as ground strafing. Russian pilots appreciated the
cannon-armed P-39 primarily for its air-to-air attack
capability.
United Kingdom

P-39Q-1BE
42-19447
Saga Boy II
Lt.
Chickering, CO 357th Fighter Group, July 1943.
In 1940, the
British
Direct Purchase Commission in the US was looking for combat
aircraft; they ordered 675 of the export version Bell Model 14 as
the "
Caribou" on the strength of the company's
representations on 13 April 1940. The performance of the Bell P-39
prototype and 13 test aircraft which were able to achieve a speed
of at altitude was due to the installation of turbo-
supercharging. The British armament was
0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns in the fuselage, and four
0.30 in (7.62 mm) machine guns in the wings, the
37 mm gun was replaced by a 20 mm (.79 in)
Hispano-Suiza.
The British export models were renamed "
Airacobra"
in 1941. A further 150 were specified for delivery under
Lend-lease in 1941 but these were not supplied.
The
Royal Air Force (RAF) took
delivery in mid 1941 and found that actual performance of the
non-turbo-supercharged production aircraft differed markedly from
what they were expecting. In some areas, the Airacobra was inferior
to existing aircraft such as the
Hawker
Hurricane and
Supermarine
Spitfire and its performance at altitude suffered drastically.
On the other hand it was considered effective for low level fighter
and ground attack work. Problems with gun and exhaust flash
suppression and compass were fixable.
No. 601 Squadron RAF was the only British
unit to use the Airacobra operationally, receiving their first two
examples on 6 August 1941. On 9 October, four Airacobras attacked
enemy barges near Dunkirk, in the type's only operational action
with the RAF. The squadron continued to train with the Airacobra
during the winter, but a combination of poor serviceability and
deep distrust of this unfamiliar fighter resulted in the RAF
rejecting the type after one combat mission. In March 1942, the
unit re-equipped with Spitfires.
The Airacobras already in the UK, along with the remainder of the
first batch being built in the US, were sent to the Soviet Air
force, the sole exception being
AH574, which
was passed to the
Royal Navy and used for
experimental work, including the first carrier landing by a
tricycle undercarriage aircraft on , until it was scrapped on the
recommendation of a visiting
Bell test pilot in March 1946.
U.S.

Bell P-39 Airacobra firing all weapons
at night.
The United States requisitioned 200 of the next part of the order
as the P-400. The P-400 designation came from advertised top speed
of .
After
Pearl
Harbor
, the P-400 was deployed to training units, but some
saw combat in the Southwest Pacific including with the Cactus Air Force in the Battle of
Guadalcanal
. Though outclassed by Japanese fighter planes,
it performed well in strafing and bombing runs, often proving
deadly in ground attacks on Japanese forces trying to retake
Henderson
Field
. Guns salvaged from P-39s were sometimes
fitted to Navy PT boats to increase firepower.
From
September to November 1942 pilots of the 57th Fighter Squadron flew
P-39s and P-38s from an airfield built on land bulldozed into
Kuluk Bay on the barren island of Adak in Alaska's Aleutian Islands
. They attacked the Japanese forces which had
invaded Attu and Kiska islands in the Aleutians in June 1942. The
number one foe that claimed the most lives, however, was not the
Japanese but the weather. The low clouds, heavy mist and fog,
driving rain, snow and high winds made flying dangerous and lives
miserable. The 57th remained in Alaska until November 1942 and then
returned to the United States.
In North Africa, the
Tuskegee Airmen
were assigned P-39s in February 1944.
They successfully
transitioned and carried out their duties including supporting
Operation Shingle over Anzio
as well as
missions over the Gulf of
Naples
in the Airacobra but achieved few aerial
victories. By June they had transitioned to
P-47 Thunderbolts and then
P-51 Mustangs in July 1944.
While only one U.S. pilot, Lt. Bill Fiedler, became an ace in a
P-39, many U.S. aces scored one or two of their victories in the
aircraft.
USSR

P-39Q-15BE
44-2664
Aviation Museum of Central Finland
The most successful use of the P-39 was in the hands of the Soviet
Air Force (VVS). The tactical environment of the
Eastern Front did not demand
the extreme high-altitude operations that the RAF and
USAAF employed with their big
bombers. The low-speed, low-altitude turning nature of most air
combat on the Russian Front suited the P-39's strengths: sturdy
construction, reliable radio gear, and adequate firepower.
It was common for the Soviet pilots to remove the wing guns and
rely only on the cannon and nose machine guns as armament; a
modification that improved roll rate by reducing
rotational momentum. The Soviets used
the Airacobra primarily for air-to-air combat against a variety of
German aircraft, including
Messerschmitt Bf 109s,
Focke-Wulf Fw 190s,
Junkers Ju 87s, and
Ju 88.
The second-highest scoring Allied ace,
Aleksandr Pokryshkin, flew
the P-39 from late 1942 until the end of the war (though rumours
exist that he changed in late 1944 to a
P-63 Kingcobra); his unofficial score in the
Airacobra stands at nearly 60
Luftwaffe aircraft. His
wingman,
Grigori
Rechkalov, scored 57 victories with the P-39. This is the
highest score ever gained by any pilot with any U.S.-made aircraft.
The usual nickname for the well-loved Airacobra in the VVS was
Kobrushka, "little cobra", or
Kobrastochka—a
portmanteau of Kobra and Lastochka
(swallow), "dear little cobra".
The United States did not supply the M80 armor-piercing round for
the
autocannons of Soviet P-39s—instead,
approximately 1,200,000
M54
high-explosive rounds were supplied, which the Soviets used for
air-to-air combat and against soft ground targets. The VVS did not
use the P-39 for tank-busting duties.
A total of 4,719 P-39s were sent to the Soviet Union, accounting
for more than one-third of all U.S. and UK-supplied fighter
aircraft in the VVS, and nearly half of all P-39 production.
Australia
In early 1942, the
Royal
Australian Air Force (RAAF), experiencing
Japanese air raids
on towns in northern Australia, found itself unable to obtain
British-designed
interceptor or
sufficient numbers of
P-40s. US
Fifth Air Force squadrons in Australia were
already receiving the brand new P-39D-1. Consequently, in July
1942, older USAAF P-39s, which had been repaired at Australian
workshops, were adopted by the RAAF as a stop-gap
interceptor.
Seven P-39Ds were sent to
No.
23 Squadron RAAF at Lowood,
Queensland
. Later, seven P-39Fs were operated by
No. 24 Squadron RAAF at Townsville
. In the absence of adequate supplies of
P-39s, both squadrons also operated
Wirraway armed
trainers. However, neither squadron
received a full complement of Airacobras, or saw combat with them.
The home air defence role was filled first by P-40s, followed by
Spitfires. Plans to equip two more squadrons with P-39s were also
abandoned. 23 and 24 Squadrons converted to the
Vultee Vengeance in 1943.
France
In 1940, France ordered numerous P-39s to Bell, but because of the
armistice
with Germany they were not delivered.
However, after
Operation
Torch
, French forces in North Africa sided with the
Allies, and were re-equipped with Allied equipment including
P-39Ns. From mid-1943 on, three fighter squadrons, the
GC 3/6 Roussillon,
GC 1/4 Navarre and
GC 1/5 Champagne, flew
these P-39s in combat over the Mediterranean, Italy and Southern
France. A batch of P-39Qs was delivered later, but Airacobras,
which were never popular with French pilots, had been replaced by
P-47 Thunderbolts in front line
units by late 1944.
Italy
In June 1944, the
Italian Co-Belligerent Air
Force (ICAF) received 170 P-39s, most of them -Qs, and a few
-Ns (15th USAAF surplus aircraft stored in Napoli-Capodichino
airfield) and also at least one -L and five -Ms. The P-39 N
(without the the underwing fairing for 12.7 machine guns) had
engines with about 200 hours; a little newer than the P-39Q engines
with 30–150 hours. A total of 149 P-39s would be used: the P-39N
for training, while more modern Qs were used in the front line.In
June–July 1944,
Gruppi 12°, 9° and 10° of 4°
Stormo, moved to Campo Vesuvio airstrip to re-equip with
the P-39s. The site was not suitable and, in three months of
training, 11 accidents occurred, due to engine failures and poor
maintenance of the base. Three pilots died and two were seriously
injured. One of the victims, on 25 August 1944, was the "ace of
aces",
Sergente Maggiore Teresio Martinoli.
The three groups of 4°
Stormo were first sent to Leverano
(Lecce) airstrip, then in mid-October, to Galatina airfield. At the
end of the training, eight more accidents occurred. Almost 70
aircraft were operational, and on 18 September 1944, 12° Group's
P-39s flew their first mission over Albania. Concentrating on
ground attack, the Italian P-39s proved to be suitable in this
role, losing 10 aircraft to German flak in over 3,000 hours of
combat.
By 8 May 1945, at the end of the war, 89 P-39s were still at the
Canne airport and 13 at the
Scuola Addestramento Bombardamento
e Caccia (Training School for Bombers and Fighters), on
Frosinone airfield. In 10 months of operational service, the 4°
Stormo had been awarded with three
Medaglia d'Oro al
Valore Militare "alla memoria".
Portugal
Between
December 1942 and February 1943, the Aeronáutica Militar
(Army Military Aviation) obtained aircraft operated by the 81st and
the 350th Fighter Groups originally dispatched to North Africa as
part of Operation
Torch
. Due to several problems en route, some of
the aircraft were forced to land in Portugal and Spain. Of the 19
fighter aircraft that landed in Portugal, all were interned and
entered service that year with the
Portuguese Army Military Aviation.
Though unnecessary, the Portuguese Government paid the United
States US$20,000 for each of these interned aircraft as well as for
one interned
P-38 Lightning. The US
accepted the payment, and gave as a gift four additional crates of
aircraft, two of which were not badly damaged, without supplying
spares, flight manuals or service manuals. Lacking proper training,
incorporation of the aircraft into service was plagued with
problems, and the last six Portuguese Airacobras that remained in
1950 were sold for scrap.
Poland
The Polish Air Force received two P-39s from the USSR in 1947 for
possible use with the re-established AF. It was decided to re-equip
with Yak-9s instead.
Postwar
In 1945, Italy purchased the 46 surviving P-39s at 1% of their cost
but in summer 1946 many accidents occurred, including fatal ones.
By 1947, 4 Stormo re-equipped with P-38s, with P-39s sent to
training units until the type's retirement in 1951. Only a T9
cannon survives today at Vigna di Valle Museum.
Racing Airacobras
The Airacobra was raced at the
National Air Races in the United States
after World War II. Famous versions used for racing included the
twin aircraft known as "Cobra I" and "Cobra II," owned jointly
between three Bell Aircraft test pilots,
Chalmers "Slick" Goodlin,
Alvin M. "Tex" Johnston, and
Jack Woolams. These craft were extensively
modified to use the more powerful P-63 Kingcobra engine and had
prototype propeller blades from the Bell factory. "Cobra I" with
its pilot, Jack Woolams, was lost in 1946, over the Great Lakes
while he was flying from the National Air Races in Cleveland, Ohio
back to the factory to get a fresh engine.
The "Cobra II" (Race #84) flown by famed test pilot "Tex" Johnston,
beat out
P-51 Mustangs and other P-39
racers, which were the favorites, to win the 1946
Thompson Trophy race. Cobra II raced again
in the 1947 Thompson Trophy race, finishing 3rd. It raced yet again
in the 1948 Thompson trophy race, but was unable to finish due to
engine difficulties. Cobra II did not race again and was destroyed
on 10 August 1968 during a test flight prior to a run on the world
piston-engine speed record, when owner-pilot Mike Carroll lost
control and crashed. Carroll perished and the highly-modified P-39
was destroyed.
Mira Slovak's "Mr. Mennen" (Race #21) P-39Q Airacobra was a very
fast unlimited racer; a late arrival in 1972 kept this little racer
out of the Reno races, and it was never entered again. Its color
scheme was all white with "Mennen" green and bronze trim.
It is now
owned and displayed by the Kalamazoo Air Zoo
. The P-39Q (former USAAC serial no.
44-3908/NX40A), is painted as a P-400, "Whistlin' Britches."
Variants
XP-39
- :Bell Model 12
- XP-39-BE (1 completed). Prototype. Powered by
an Allison V-1710-17 (E2) engine (1,150 hp/858 kW) fitted
with a B-5 two-stage turbosupercharger. Provision was made for two
.50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns in the forward fuselage and
one 25 mm (.98 in) cannon but aircraft remained
unarmed.
- :s/n: 38-326
- :First flight: 6 April 1939
YP-39
- : Bell Model 12
- : 13 Produced
- YP-39-BE (12 completed): Service test version,
V-1710-37 (E5) engine (1,090 hp/813 kW). First two
aircraft delivered with armament, the remained with a M4 37 mm
(1.46 in) autocannon with 15 rounds, 2 × .50 in
(12.7 mm) machine guns with 200 rpg, and 2 × .30 in
(7.62 in) machine guns with 500 rpg in the nose. wider
vertical tail than XP-39B.
- :s/n: 40-027 – 40-038
- :First flight: 13 September 1940
- YP-39A-BE (1 completed). Intended to have a
high-altitude V-1710-31 engine (1,150 hp/858 kW), but
delivered as a regular YP-39.
- :s/n: 40-039
XP-39B
- XP-39B-BE (1 conversion). Streamlined XP-39
based on NACA wind
tunnel testing resulting in revised canopy and wheel door
shape, oil and radiator intakes moved from right fuselage to wing
roots, fuselage increased length (by 1 ft 1 in, to
29 ft 9 in) and decreased wingspan (by 1 ft
10 in, to 34 ft). Turbosupercharger replaced with
single-stage geared supercharger,
Allison V-1710-37 (E5) engine (1,090 hp/813 kW),
carburetor air intake moved to fuselage behind canopy.
- :s/n: 38-326
- :First Flight: 25 November 1939.
P-39C

P-39C-BE assigned to the 40th PS /
31st PG at Selfridge Field
- :Bell Model 13
- :80 ordered, 20 produced, remainder redesignated P-39D
- P-39C-BE (20 Produced). First production
version, identical to YP-39 except for V-1710-35 engine
(1,150 hp/858 kW). Armed with 1 × 37 mm
(1.46 in) cannon, 2 × .50 in (12.7 mm) & 2 ×
.30 in (7.62 mm) machine guns in the nose. Aircraft
lacked armor and self-sealing fuel tanks.
- :s/n: 40-2971 – 40-2990
- :First Flight: January 1941.
Airacobra I
- :Bell Model 13 (P-39C/Airacobra I) – Model 14 (Airacobra
Ia)
- :675 ordered (excluding ex-P-39Cs)
- Airacobra I (3 delivered). Three P-39Cs sent
to England for testing.
- :s/n: 40-2981 (DS173) – 40-2983 (DS174)
- :s/n: 40-2984 (DS175)
- Airacobra Ia. P-400 designation indicates
British Contract. Briefly named Caribou. V-1710-E4
(1,150 hp/858 kW) engine, 1 × 20 mm (.79 in)
cannon with 60 rounds & 2 × 0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine
guns were mounted nose and four 0.303 in (7.7 mm) machine
guns were mounted in the wings. IFF set removed from behind pilot.
note: the designation Ia indicates direct purchase aircraft.
- :s/n: AH570/AH739 (170 aircraft)
- :s/n: AP264/AP384 (121 aircraft)
- :s/n: BW100/BW183 (84 aircraft)
- :s/n: BX135/BX434 (300 aircraft)
P-39D
- :Bell Model 13 (P-39D) – Model 14A (D-1) – Model 14A-1
(D-2)
- :454 ordered
- P-39D-BE (60 Produced). P-39C reordered with
245 lb (111 kg) of additional armor, self-sealing fuel
tanks. Armament increased to 1 × 37 mm/1.46 mm cannon (30
rounds), 2 × .50 in/12.7 mm (200 rpg) and 4 × wing
mounted .30 in/7.62 mm (1,000 rpg) machine guns.
- :s/n: 40-2991 – 40-3050
- P-39D-1BE (336 produced). M1 20 mm
(.79 in) M1 cannon. Specifically ordered for delivery under
Lend-Lease.
- :s/n: 41-28257 – 41-28406
- :s/n: 41-38220 – 41-38404
- :s/n: 41-38563
- P-39D-2BE (158 produced). V-1710-63 (E6)
engine (1,325 hp/988 kW) restored the 37 mm
(1.46 in) cannon, provisions for a single 145 gal
(549 l) drop tank or maximum 500 lb (227 kg) bomb
under the fuselage.
- : s/n: 41-38405 – 41-38562
- P-39D-3BE (26 conversions). P-39D-1s converted
to Photo Reconnaissance Configuration; K-24 and K-25 camera in rear
fuselage, extra armor for oil coolers
- P-39D-4BE (11 conversions). P-39D-2 converted
to Photo Reconnaissance Configuration. Same mods as D-3
aircraft.
XP-39E
- :Bell Model: 23
- :3 Ordered
- XP-39E-BE (three ordered): P-39Ds modified for
ground and flight testing. Intended for Continental I-1430-1 engine with
(2,100 hp/1,566 kW) actually flown with Allison V-1710-47
(1,325 hp/988 kW) engine. Airframes were used to test
various wing and different vertical tail surfaces. Fuselage was
lengthened by 1 ft 9 in (53 cm). Used in the
development of the P-63. The production variants, with the
Continental engines were to be redesignated as P-76; there was no
Bell XP-76 as such.
- :s/n: 41-19501 – 41-19502 plus an unnumbered airframe
for static testing.
- :s/n 41-19501 replaced by 42-71464 after
crash on 26 March 1942.
- :s/n: 41-71464
- :First Flight 41-19501: 21 February 1942.
P-39F
- :Bell Model 15B
- :254 Ordered, 25 redesignated P-39J
- :s/n: 41-7116 – 41-7344
- TP-39F-1BE (1 conversion). Two-seat training
version with additional cockpit added in nose—no armament.
- P-39F-2BE (27 conversions). P-39F-1 with
additional belly armor and cameras in rear fuselage.
P-39G
- : Bell Model 26
- :1800 ordered—redesignated P-39K, L, M and N
- P-39G-BE. Intended to be a P-39D-2 with an
Aeroproducts propeller. Due to modifications during production no
P-39G were actually delivered. Instead, these aircraft were
designated P-39K, L, M and N.
- :s/n: 42-4244 – 42-5043
- :s/n: 42-8727 – 42-9726
P-39H
- :Not assigned
P-39J
- :Bell Model 15B
- :25 Ordered
- P-39J-BE (25 produced). P-39F with V-1710-59
(1,100 hp/820 kW) engine with automatic boost
control.
- :s/n: 41-7053 – 41-7056
- :s/n: 42-7059 – 42-7079
P-39K
- :Bell Model 26A
- :210 Ordered
- P-39K-1 (210 produced). P-39D-2BE with
Aeroproducts propeller and V-1710-63 (E6)
(1,325 hp/988 kW) engine. Vents added to nose
- :s/n: 42-4244 – 42-4453
- P-39K-2BE (6 conversions). P-39K-1 with
additional belly armor and cameras in rear fuselage.
- P-39K-5BE (1 conversion). V-1710-85 (E19)
engine to serve as a P-39N prototype
P-39L

P-39L-1BE 44-4673
Lend-Lease to USSR
- :Bell Model 26C
- :250 Ordered
- P-39L-1BE (250 Produced). P-39K with Curtiss
Electric propeller, revised nose gear for reduced drag, provision
for underwing rockets.
- :s/n: 42-4454 – 42-4703
- P-39L-2BE (11 conversions). P-39L-1 with
additional belly armor and cameras in rear fuselage.
P-39M
- :Bell Model 26D
- :240 Ordered
- P-39M-1BE (240 Produced). 11 ft 1 in
Aeroproducts propeller, V-1710-67 (E8) (1,200 hp/895 kW)
engine with improved high-altitude performance at the expense of
low-altitude performance, 10 mph (16 km/h) faster than
P-39L at . Note: some P-39M-1BE were delivered with the V-1710-83
(E18) engine.
- :s/n: 42-4704 – 42-4943
P-39N
- :Bell Model 26N
- :2,095 Produced
- P-39N-BE (500 produced). Originally part of
the P-39G order. V-1710-85 (E19) (1,200 hp/895 kW)
engine. Aeroproducts propeller (10 ft 4 in diameter)
& different propeller reduction gear ratio. Starting with the
167th aircraft, propellor increased to 11 ft 7 in &
internal fuel reduced from 120 gal (454 l) to 87 gal
(329 l).
- :s/n: 42-4944 – 42-5043
- :s/n: 42-8727 – 42-9126
- P-39N-1BE (900 produced). Internal changes to
adjust center of gravity when nose guns were fired.
- :s/n: 42-9127 – 42-9726
- :s/n: 42-18246 – 42-18545
- P-39N-2BE (128 conversions). P-39N-1 with
additional belly armor and cameras in rear fuselage.
- P-39N-3BE (35 conversions). P-39N with
additional belly armor and cameras in rear fuselage.
- P-39N-5BE (695 produced). Armor reduced from
231 lb (105 kg) to 193 lb (88 kg), Armor plate
replaced the bulletproof glass behind the pilot, SCR-695 radio was
fitted, and a new oxygen system was installed.
- :s/n: 42-18546 – 42-19240
- P-39N-6BE (84 conversions). P-39N-5 with
additional belly armor and cameras in rear fuselage.
P-39O
- :Not used
P-39P
- :Not used
P-39Q
- :Bell Model 26Q
- :4,905 Ordered
- :Final production: August 1944
- P-39Q-1BE (150 produced). Wing-mounted
0.30 in (7.62 mm) machine guns replaced with a single
0.50 in (12.7 mm) with 300 rounds of ammunition in a pod
under each wing. Armor increased to the original 231 lb
(105 kg) of armor of the P-39N-1BE.
- :s/n: 42-19446 – 42-19595
- P-39Q-2BE (5 conversions). P-39Q-1s modified
to carry cameras for photographic reconnaissance by adding K-24 and
K-25 cameras in the aft fuselage.

P-39Q-6BE
42-19993
Brooklyn Bum
8th FG, 36th FS
The Fighter Collection
- P-39Q-5BE (950 produced). Reduced armor
(193 lb/88 kg), fuel capacity increased (110 gal/l).
Type A-1 bombsight adapters added.
- :s/n: 42-19596 – 42-20545
- TP-39Q-5BE (1 conversions). Two-seat training
version with additional cockpit added in nose - no armament.
Enlarged tail fillet and a shallow ventral fin added.
- :s/n: 42-20024
- P-39Q-6BE (148 conversions). P-39Q-5s modified
to carry cameras for photographic reconnaissance by adding K-24 and
K-25 cameras in the aft fuselage.
- P-39Q-10BE (705 produced). Increased armor
(228 lb/103 kg), fuel capacity increased
(120 gal/454 l). Automatic Boost controls added and
Throttle & RPM controls were coordinated. Winterization of oil
systems and rubber mounts added to the engines.
- :s/n: 42-20546 – 42-21250
- P-39Q-11BE (8 conversions). P-39Q-10s modified
to carry cameras for photographic reconnaissance by adding K-24 and
K-25 cameras in the aft fuselage.
- P-39Q-15BE (1,000 produced). Reinforced
inclined deck to prevent .50 in (12.7 mm) machine gun
tripod mounting cracking, bulkhead reinforcements to prevent rudder
pedal wall cracking, a reinforced reduction gearbox bulkhead to
prevent cowling former cracking, and repositioning of the battery
solenoid. Oxygen system reduced from four bottle to only two.
- :s/n: 44-2001 – 44-3000
- P-39Q-20BE (1,000 produced). Minor equipment
changes. The underwing 0.50 in (12.7 mm) machine gun pods
were sometimes omitted in this version.
- :s/n: 44-3001 – 44-4000
- P-39Q-21BE (109 converted). P-39Q-20 fitted
with a four-bladed Aeroproducts propeller.
- RP-39Q-22BE (12 conversions). Two seat trainer
conversions of the P-39Q-20.
- P-39Q-25BE (700 produced). Similar to the Q-21
but with a reinforced aft-fuselage and horizontal stabilizer
structure.
- :s/n: 44-32167 – 44-32666
- :s/n: 44-70905 – 44-71104
- P-39Q-30BE (400 produced). Reverted back to
the three-bladed propellor
- :s/n: 44-71105 – 44-71504
- XTDL-1 (two acquired). P-39Qs used by the US
Navy for use as target drones. Assigned to NAS Cape May for test
work. Later redesignated F2L-1K.
- :s/n: P-39Q-10BE 42-20807 Bu 91102
- :s/n: P-39Q-5BE 42-19976 Bu 91103
Other
- P-45: The P-45 was the initial designation of
the P-39C or Model 13.
- XFL-1 Airabonita: One prototype
for the U.S. Navy.
Operators
- Esquadrilha Airacobra (Airacobra Squadron), later
renamed Esquadrilha 4 (Squadron No. 4) — Aeronáutica
Militar (Army Military Aviation)
Survivors
A number of P-39s are still in existence of which three are still
flying. The
Commemorative Air
Force flies a Bell P-39 Airacobra painted in the markings and
colors of the 350th Fighter Group, which consisted of the 345th,
346th and 347th Fighter Squadrons operating P-39s in North Africa
and Italy. At one time, the Airacobra was painted in Russian colors
and markings.
Keski-Suomen
Ilmailumuseo
at Tikkakoski
, Finland
, has one restored P-39Q Airacobra, "White 26", on
static display, restored in original wartime camouflage and
markings. The P-39 is originally a Soviet lend-lease
aircraft captured by Finnish troops in World War II that landed in
Finnish held territory after its pilot became lost and was forced
to land because he was running out of fuel.
On 22 April 1942, P-39F
41-7104 assigned to the 13th AF /
347th FG / 70th FS (Pilot: 1st Lt James W. Blose) crashed in Fiji,
but was not found until a local pig farmer discovered the wreck in
2004. The pilot's body was also found and sent to Hawaii for
identification. Personal items were recovered at the site.
Other Airacobras on display include:
- P-39Q-6BE 42-19993, "Brooklyn Bum– 2nd" is now at the
Fighter Collection in Duxford, UK.
- The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum has P-39Q-15BE
44-2433 on display.
Specifications (P-39Q)
Popular culture
- The P-39 Airacobra is featured in the Russian movie Peregon (2006) dealing with Lend
Lease aircraft in transit to Russia.
- The P-39 is also featured in numerous shots in the wartime
American movie "Air Force" (124 Min.), an Oscar-winning,
propaganda-oriented movie directed by Howard Hawks, released by
Warner Brothers in 1943.
See also
References
- Notes
- Gunston 1980, p. 22.
- Bishop, Chris. The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War
II. New York: Orbis Publishing Ltd., 1998. ISBN
0-7607-1022-8.
- Bodie 1991, p. 19.
- Bodie 1991, pp. 16–17.
- Bodie 1991, p. 14. Brigadier General Benjamin S.
Kelsey recalled in 1977 that he and Lieutenant Gordon P. Saville
(later General) drew up the specification in 1937 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
(227 kg) of armament including ammunition. Kelsey was looking
for a minimum of 1,000 lb (454 kg) of armament.
- Donald 1997, p. 106.
- Somewhat similar to the Republic A-10 Thunderbolt.
- McDowell 1980, p. 10.
- Johnsen 1998, p. 8.
- Dean 1997, p. 191.
- Donald 1997
- Johnsen 1998, p. 7.
- Fitzsimons 1978
- Kinzey 1999, pp. 9, 13.
- Bowers 1978, p.24.
- Green and Swanborough 1977, pp.8–9.
- P-39 cooling system(PDF File) Retrieved: 12 May
2009.
- Image of P-39 structureRetrieved: 12 May
2009.
- P-39 recovered fuselage structure (Note: This lacks
the cockpit arch)Retrieved: 12 May 2009.
- P-39 Cockpit and rear archRetrieved: 12 May
2009.
- Johnson and Heffernan 1982, p.90.
- Dean 1997, pp. 191–192.
- Dean 1997, p. 194.
- Dean 1997, pp. 192, 602.
- Dean 1997, p. 200.
- Dean 1997, pp. 206–207.
- Donald 1997, p.107. Trainers were a rarity for fighter types
outside the Soviet Union in the 1940s.
- Mason 1969, pp. 5–6.
- Brown 2006, p. 93.
- Brown 2006, p. 145.
- Baugher, Joe. "Airacobra I for RAF, P-400." Bell P-39
Airacobra, 18 September 2006. Retrieved: 16 October 2009.
- A PT boat restored in Portland, Oregon has been fitted with a
replica of such a gun.
- "The combat record of the Tuskegee Airmen speaks
for itself." tuskegeeairmen.org. Retrieved: 16 October
2009.
- Pejčoch 2008, p. 86.
- Gebhardt, Major James F., USAF (Retired) "Some
Additional P-39 History." Hosted by March Field Air Museum.
Retrieved on October 29, 2009.
- Loza
- Mitchell 1992, p. 34.
- Loza 2009
- Hardesty 1991, p. 253.
- Birkett, Gordon R. "RAAF Bell Airacobras Part 1."
adf-serials.com, 2005. Retrieved: 20 June 2007.
- "Dimensione Cielo aerei Italiani nella Seconda Guerra
Mondiale." Caccia Assalto3. Roma: Edizioni Bizzarri, 1972,
pp. 75–76.
- Gueli 2004
- "Dimensione Cielo aerei Italiani nella Seconda Guerra
Mondiale." Caccia Assalto3. Roma: Edizioni Bizzarri, 1972,
p. 78.
- "The P-400 / P-39L Airacobra." Portuguese
Airacobra service history. Retrieved: 16 October 2009.
- Public Record Office entry of 18 March 1943, quoted by
"Wreckovery" in Aviation News, 10–23 August 1984.
- Bowers 1979, p. 25.
- Bowers 1979, p. 22.
- "P-39F Airacobra Serial Number 41-7104." Pacific
Wrecks, Updated 6 October 2009. Retrieved: 16 October
2009.
- United States Air Force Museum 1975, p. 35.
- IMDb. Peregon (2006)
- Bibliography
- Bodie, Warren. The Lockheed P-38 Lightning. St. Paul,
Minnesota: Widewing Publications, 1991. ISBN 0-9629359-5-6.
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8, No 6, November 1978.
- Bowers, Peter M. "Airborne Cobra Pt. II". Airpower,
Vol.9, No.1, January 1979.
- Brown, Captain Eric. Wings on My Sleeve. London:
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2006. ISBN 0-29784-565-9.
- Byk, Gary. The Modeller's Guide to the Bell P-39 Airacobra
in RAAF Service. Melbourne, Australia: Red Roo Models
Publication, 1997. ISBN 0-646-32869-7.
- Dean, Francis H. America's Hundred Thousand. Atglen,
PA: Schiffer Publishing Ltd, 1997 ISBN 0-76430-072-5.
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Profile no.165. Windsor, Berkshire, UK: Profile Publications.
Ltd., 1966 (reprinted 1971). No ISBN.
- "Dimensione Cielo aerei Italiani nella Seconda Guerra Mondiale.
(in Italian) Caccia Assalto 3. Roma: Edizioni Bizzarri,
1972.
- Donald, David. "Bell P-39 Airacobra." The Encyclopedia of
World Aircraft. Leicester, UK: Blitz Editions, 1997. ISBN
1-85605-375-X.
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Airacobra. Ramsbury, Marlborough, Wiltshire: The Crowood Press
Ltd., 2000. ISBN 1-86126-348-1.
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Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare,
Volume 1. New York: Columbia House, 1967. ISBN
0-83936-175-0.
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4. London: Macdonald & Co., 6th Edition, 1969. ISBN
0-35601-448-7.
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Files: U. S. Army Air Force Fighters, Part
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Militare n.132, Sept. 2004.
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1941–1945. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1991
(first edition 1982). ISBN 0-87474-510-1.
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1-58007-010-8.
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Boscombe Down 1939–45. London: Jane's Publishing Company
Limited, 1982. ISBN 0-7106-0203-0
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Mushroom Model Publications, 2003. ISBN 83-916327-9-2.
- Kinzey, Bert. P-39 Airacobra in Detail, D&S Vol.
63. Carrollton, TX: Squadron/Signal Publications, Inc.,
1999. ISBN 1-88897-416-4.
- Loza, Dmitriy and James F. Gebhardt, editor and translator.
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Air War Against Germany. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of
Kansas, 2002. ISBN 0-7006-1140-1.
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Two, Volume One. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company
Inc., 1971. ISBN 0-85064-012-1.
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Aviolibri Special 7 (Bilingual Italian/English). Roma, Italia:
IBN Editore, 2003. ISBN 88-86815-85-9.
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No.43. Carrollton, TX: Squadron/Signal Publications, Inc.,
1980. ISBN 0-89747-102-4.
- Mellinger, George and John Stanaway. P-39 Airacobra Aces of
World War 2. Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2001. ISBN
1-84176-204-0.
- Mitchell, Rick. Airacobra Advantage: The Flying
Cannon. The Complete Story of Bell Aircraft Corporation's
P-39 Pursuit Fighter Plane. Missoula, Montana: Pictorial
Histories Publishing Co., 1992 (second printing 1995). ISBN
0-929521-62-5.
- Park, Edwards. Nanette, Her Pilot's Love Story.
Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1977. (2nd edition
1989). ISBN 0-87474-737-6.
- Pejčoch, Ivo. Bojové Legendy: P-39 Airacobra (in
Czech). Prague, Czech Republic: Jan Vašut s.r.o., 2008. ISBN
80-7236-573-9.
- Roman, Valerij. Aerokobry vstupayut v boy ('Airacobras
enter combat'), Белл P-400,P-39D-1,P-39D-2("Avia-retro" series
1) (in Ukrainian). Kiev, Ukraine: Aero-Hobby, 1993. ISBN
5-7707-5170-03.
- Roman, Valerij. Aerokobry nad Kuban'yu (Airacobras over
Kuban'), P-39 K, L и M ("Avia-retro" series 2) (in Ukrainian).
Kiev, Ukraine: Aero-Hobby, 2006. ISBN 0-9780696-0-9.
- Tomalik, Jacek. Bell P-39 Airacobra Cz.1, Monografie
Lotnicze 58 (in Polish). Gdańsk, Poland: AJ-Press, 1999. ISBN
83-7237-032-X.
- Tomalik, Jacek. Bell P-63 Kingcobra, XFL-1 Airabonita, P-39
Airacobra Cz.2, Monografie Lotnicze 59 (in Polish). Gdańsk,
Poland: AJ-Press, 2001. ISBN 83-7237-034-6.
- United States Air Force Museum Guidebook.
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio: Air Force Museum Foundation, 1975.
External links