PW-8 The
Curtiss P-1 Hawk was the first
US Army Air Service aircraft to be assigned the "P" (Pursuit) designation which replaced seven designations for pursuit aircraft, including "PW" (for "Pursuit, Water-cooled engine"). The P-1 was the production version of the Curtiss
XPW-8B, an improved variant of the
PW-8, 25 of which were operational with the Air Service's
17th Pursuit Squadron In September 1923, the Army ordered production of the
PW-8. The PW-8 (Curtiss Model 33) had been developed from the
R-6 racer and was acquired by the Air Service after a competition with the
Boeing Model 15, designated the PW-9, to replace the existing Army fighter, the
Boeing MB-3A. Although the PW-8 was faster than the PW-9 (both having top speeds in excess of 165 mph), it was otherwise outperformed by the Boeing plane, and its surface radiator cooling system, mounted on the upper and lower surfaces of the top wing for streamlining, was more difficult to maintain and vulnerable in combat. However, the Assistant Chief of the Air Service, Brigadier General
Billy Mitchell, agreed to purchase 25 PW-8s in return for assistance by Curtiss in making the
Dawn-to-dusk transcontinental flight across the United States.
P-1 The prototype of the P-1, the
XPW-8B, came about when the Air Service, which had selected the Boeing
PW-9 over the PW-8 as its main production fighter, asked Curtiss to modify the last of its three original
XPW-8 prototypes with wings resembling those of the PW-9. Curtiss designated the modified aircraft its
Model 34A and returned it to the Air Service for evaluation, from which the service ordered it into production as the
P-1. The first production P-1, serial number 25-410, was delivered on August 17, 1925, and was followed in successive years by the
P-1B and
P-1C variants with improved engines. The newest P-1 variants remained in operational service until 1930. The March 7, 1925 order for the P-1 also requested five aircraft with the more powerful 500 hp (373 kW) Curtiss V-1400
engine installed. These were completed in January 1926. The first (SN 25-420) was then modified with a
turbocharger mounted on the right side of the
fuselage nose, and whose turbine was driven by engine exhaust; the craft was designated
XP-2. However, the Curtiss V-1400 engine did not perform up to expectations, with or without the supercharger, and so after a year in service, three of the standard
P-2 Hawks had their engines replaced with the
Curtiss D-12 and were consequently redesignated as P-1s. The fifth machine (25-243) received a Curtiss V-1570 Conqueror engine and became the
XP-6. Two of the XP-3A aircraft were re-engined in 1929 and 1930 with the
Pratt & Whitney R-985-1 Wasp Junior engine. This aircraft was redesignated the
XP-21. Tests were run with this aircraft, but it was never developed into a production aircraft, despite the designation. Five
P-5 Superhawks, similar to the P-1C but with a turbocharged
Curtiss D-12F engine, were delivered in 1928. They had a top speed of 166 mph (267 km/h) at 25,000 ft (7,620 m), considerably higher than the maximum ceiling of the P-1A, but their low-level performance was inferior
AT-4 and AT-5 trainers Two single-seat advanced trainer variants were placed into production, the
AT-4 and
AT-5A, using
Wright-Hisso E /
Wright-Hisso V-720 V-8 engines. The resulting performance degradation from these lower powered engines resulted in them being deemed dangerous to fly, even for experienced pilots. All were re-engined with Curtiss D-12D engines and returned to use as fighters, designated
P-1D and
P-1F respectively. Five AT-4/XAT-5 test variants were re-classified as
P-1E. ==Operational history==