I have to agree that the rotation looks pretty enthusiastic for a loaded P-2. That said, I'm pretty sure that they had a load of water on board. The ground is wet under the airplane in the picture from the post above with the right engine starting and in this picture taken a couple of minutes earlier.


Normally, the pilots are more conservative and try to build up speed prior to doing much climbing in loaded P-2s. Part of the reason is that the jets don't really help much until the airspeed gets to 170 kts. Then again, some pilots want to get a little altitude right off in case something breaks. I'm more in the build up speed first camp, but you can trade airspeed for altitude or vice versa within reason. Tom Hammond must have been in the altitude first group. Here's the take off picture from the earlier post and one from a different take off. Unfortrunately, the second picture was taken with a 110 film camera. A good quality 110 camera, but the negatives are tiny and all of these pictures are scanned from 35 year old prints.


The only other comment on this subject would be that the wind was usually blowing down the runway at Alamogordo at 20 kts or more and this was in May, so the ambient temp wasn't too high. That said, I agree with your observation on the steeper than normal climb angle for a loaded airplane.