By the time of the Second World War, a nation could not guarantee its survival without air power.
Bombers pummelled cities, and fighters prowled the skies. A new form of combined arms warfare, with ground and air forces working in rapid coordinated assaults, was seemingly unstoppable. An unprecedented effort was made to create warplanes in large numbers.
Aircraft factories grew in number and size; the rate at which military aircraft were produced during the war is astonishing. In Britain, Canada, Germany, Japan, and the Soviet Union, factories turned out bombers and fighters by the tens of thousands. Here are the ten wartime aircraft types produced in the greatest number:
10: North American P-51 Mustang - 15,586

In 1938, the British knew they needed a great deal more fighter aircraft. To supplement domestically produced aircraft, they looked to the USA; the best US fighter of the time was the Curtiss P-40. They asked the North American Aviation company if it would like to produce P-40s for the RAF.
North American Aviation replied that they could design and build a superior new aircraft in a shorter time than it would take to set up a P-40 production line. This they did, and the result was the superb P-51 Mustang. The P-51 embodied the latest advances in aerodynamics.
10: North American P-51 Mustang

Initially an excellent low-level fighter, the Mustang later became an excellent aircraft at all altitudes. It was very fast, with a very long-range. Importantly it was far easier to manufacture than other aircraft, especially the British Spitfire.
According to the aerospace engineer Joe Wilding, “Is it possible to quantify this design emphasis for production? Comparing aircraft production costs is challenging, especially between different countries. Labor hours per aircraft is more comparable, but the data is mostly anecdotal…most data shows the Mustang as having one of the lowest hours to build, in some cases by as much as half when compared to comparable fighters.”
9: Republic P-47 Thunderbolt - 15,660

The massive and extremely heavy Republic P-47 Thunderbolt was a versatile fighter bomber. The only competition the P-47 has for the title of the best operational United States Army Air Force fighter aircraft of the war is the North American P-51 Mustang.
As Joe Wilding noted, “The top 10 Thunderbolt aces (of all theatres) all survived the war. This statistic is not shared by any other aircraft in World War 2”. That alone should be enough to give it bragging rights as the king, but there are myriad other reasons to love the ‘Jug’.
9: Republic P-47 Thunderbolt

More were built than any other American fighter, and it proved itself repeatedly in every conceivable fighter-bomber role. It was far tougher and longer-ranged than the Spitfire. It had more firepower than the Mustang and carried 65% more ammunition.
Whereas most fighter aircraft wheezed and flailed around at higher altitudes, the P-47 could take on the best the enemy had at 30,000 feet with a decisive advantage. The Jug’s marginal range disadvantage against the famously long-legged Mustang was rectified in the phenomenal P-47N, which was also faster than the P-51D.

















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