One more bit of info from R-2800 Pratt & Whitney's Dependable Masterpiece by Graham White, pages 471-473 regarding the engines in the first P-61s:
"Inter-service rivalry and different philosophies meant that the Navy procured and developed their own engines and the Army Air Forces did likewise. Contributing to this state of affairs was the fact that the Navy did not have high hopes for turbosupercharging whereas the Air Force did. Consequently, the Air Force paid for the development of the General Electric Type B and Type C turbosuperchargers. The Navy, on the other hand, paid for the development of gear driven, two-stage, supercharging. Therefore it was somewhat surprising to see the YP-61 and P-61A powered by a Navy engine, the "B" series R-2800-10 normally seen powering the F6F Hellcat. The -10 was soon replaced by the very similar -65W. The primary difference was the -65 used G.E. ignition and water injection. With the introduction of the P-61C a very different engine was used: the -73/-77s that were "C" series, single-stage, single-speed engines. Additional boost was provided by a G.E. CH-5 turbosupercharger."
Typically, engine dash numbers that are even are Navy engines and odd are Army, for those that may not know that. Again, I hope all this helps with the original question.
Randy
P.S. Stephan - just saw your reply. I'm not well read on the P-61 but it does seem odd that when the change was made from the -10 Navy engine to the -65 Army one, that a turbo-supercharged engine wasn't considered. Of course there was a very high demand for them in the heavy bombers, which may have had some effect. All the best.
Last edited by Randy Wilson on Mon Sep 08, 2014 4:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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