don4331
Senior Airman
You seem to be implying that the Peregrines/DH Variable pitch propeller were no where close to 2,000lbs eachTrying to fit over 4000lbs of power plant weight into an 8300lb tare weight airplane (with Peregrines and DH variable pitch propellers) is the trick.
Morgan and Shacklady have the breakdown for the "power plant" in the Spitfire prototype as 2,000lbs with 1,225lb for bare Merlin F - close enough to the 1,230 lbs for Merlin II, RRHT cutaways, that I have been using.
The equivalent numbers for a Peregrine are 1,140lb for bare engine, and just over 1,800lbs for entire power plant. But Whirlwind doesn't use wooden propeller. The DH variable pitch propeller adds about 140lbs making the Whirlwind power plant about 1,940lbs each or about 3,880lbs for the pair.
But in my design. I want variable pitch propellers on the Merlins, so would be looking at adding about 200lbs to the Spitfire power plant weight. So, 2,200lbs total or about 260lbs/side more for the now 8,850lb empty fighter. And we know exactly how a Whirlwind flies with a 250lb bomb on each wind from increased takeoff run to stall speed (both u/c & flaps up and down) to landing speed. And that is close enough to the delta to Merlins for girl I go with. The only thing we don't know is how it functions at higher speed at altitude.
For the Kestrel Whirlwind with 12 gun nose
The 12 gun nose is about 100lbs lighter with 350rpg (which is why the mock up had 500rpg; note: Wiki is wrong for HS.404, 60 round drum weighs 22lbs empty/54lbs loaded. I'll fix it at some point referencing the US TM9-27)
The Kestrel XVIs are 140lbs lighter, the power plant with wooden propeller would be slightly over 500lbs lighter than historic each.
So, as our Kestrel Whirlwind is a 7,000lb empty airplane, changing from Fowler to split flaps will allow take off and landing distances in same general range as historic plane (Fowler flaps being 20% better than split per Theory of wing sections)*
Supermarine was truly fortunate to have the plane that RJ Mitchell designed and Joe Smith developed. But unfortunately, much of the team that was put together for the Spitfire dispersed after his death. Had he lived, I suspect he would have designed successor (like Sydney Camm followed up the Hurricane with Typhoon/Tornado, Tempest, Fury, etc) and Spitfire would only be a small pre/early war footnote.
For Westland, Petter still lives. And he can follow up a successful Kestrel XVI Whirlwind, with a slightly portly Peregrine Whirlwind (think Bf.109F to Me.109K) then design the follow on Merlin power heavy twin (with 25% more wing area and 4 - 20mm/3 - 0.303") using reputation gained from the initial successful plane.
*Yes, you can further improve Fowler flaps but making them multi element, and adding leading edge slat and get some truly impressive CL's but we are building a fighter in mid-30s here.