A Critical Analysis of the RAF Air Superiority Campaign in India, Burma and Malaya in 1941-45

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Boost / overboosting is certainly an issue - again something which was frequently employed against Zeros by pilots flying all kinds of Allied fighters.

S
 
I get what your saying, but initial acceleration of Spit V over Zero, according to the test, wasn't enough to keep you from getting shot down before you drew out of range. 'The main escape maneuver they used with almost all allied fighters against KI43 or Zero" I agree 100% but aside from a few Spits in Australia and Hurricanes in Burma most allied fighters were USA and USA fighters with few exceptions, climbed worse but dropped like a rock. P39, P40, P47, P51, Hellcat Corsair were all great divers, P38 dived good against Japanese (not against Germans at high altitude) Also, except for P39 with engine in back, and P51, the other 4 fighters listed were tough and could absorb a few strikes and still get away
 

I suspect they may not have been pushing the Spits to the max, because the Spitfire Mk V has an excellent power to mass ratio of about 0.21* whereas the A6M2 has a ratio of about 0.18. The Spit is also much more streamlined and has shorter wings (i.e. less drag).

Even if you can outdive by a lot though, it won't save you if the other aircraft is right behind you. What might save you is for example nosing over if your opponent has an engine that floods in negative G (I think this was a problem both for the Spit V and the A6M though) or else you have to sideslip / skid, roll and twist etc. either until they overshoot or you can extend. These tactics did seem to work so long as the defending pilot knows he is being attacked and has sufficient E to maneuver.

In the case of a Spitfire vs. an A6M, a Split S followed by a full power, vertical dive downward would mean reaching a speed that the A6M could not safely follow in a matter of just a few seconds... maybe 20 seconds? Still more than long enough to get shot down if you weren't taking measures to avoid being hit (skidding etc.) but not that long.

I remember recently reading (but can't remember where precisely) some US officer noting that A6Ms rarely followed Allied fighters in a steep dive even though they could have up to a point. I'm pretty confident a Spit could do this, the more pertinent question for this thread though would be could a Hurricane do it.

S
 
Below 20,000, well below 15,000, the P40 could reasonably fight with a Zero, but the P40 with any kind of altitude could dive away. The Spit V vs P40E dogfight test showed that the P40E could disengage from the Spit V at will by diving.

Nonsense. No P-40 pilot would have thought that and at low altitude diving away wasn't much of an option. P-40 successes were mainly due to B'nZ tactics but remember the P-40 rarely fought the A6M3.
 

Ok we get that this test convinced those two pilots of that result, and that you are thoroughly convinced by that test. But I'm not so thoroughly swayed.

I do not however think that 290 kts / 333 mph is an accurate top speed for a Spit V at 15,000 feet, according to this is managed 375 at 20,000 feet and this report says 369 at 13,000 feet, 368 at 14,000 feet, and 365 at 16,000 feet. The fastest speed I've seen reported for an A6M2 at any altitude was about 330 mph, usually quite a bit below that. Maybe the lower Spitfire speed in this test was due to the vokes filter or maybe it was just a worn out plane or something else. A given test on a given day can have different results. This test from Feb 1943 noted that the P-40K had better acceleration than the A6M. They even performed a drag race. From the report:

"P-40K-1 vs. Zero. Airplanes were flown side by side at 200 m.p.h. indicated. On signal, both engines were given full throttle and full r.p.m. For seven seconds the two planes accelerated equally, at which time the P-40 began to pull away very rapidly."


I'm pretty sure the Spit V had better acceleration than the P-40K*. More importantly, they both had better acceleration than the A6M going strait down at full power.

S

* also suspect the A6M in that test may not have been operating at full capacity either
 

290 knots not mph
 
Ah, no they don't. That is your opinion - don't confuse it or conflate it with facts.

S

You can calculate the wing loading and power to weight ratios as easily as I can. Combine that with superior roll rates and the F4F-4 is completely outperformed. There's nothing that the F4F-4 can do better than a Hurricane/Spitfire or Sea Hurricane/Seafire with the exception of better cockpit, over the nose, visibility compared to the Spitfire/Seafire but not the Hurricane/Sea Hurricane.

This is from Nimitiz via Lundstrom (Black shoe carrier admiral)

There's no doubt that Wildcat pilots and Nimitz would have jumped at the chance to deploy Sea Hurricanes and/or Seafires if they had been available.
 
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The USN pilots were trained to fly all types pre-war, they were an elite force and the results they got showed it. The Brits, well everyone got called up or volunteered so that they could get to do what they wanted too, and the results showed. The Commonwealth was a volunteers only set up, you can look at the results they got whether in the RAF or their own units, they were always better.
Spitfire (F) Mk.VB W.3322 Report
The Vokes tropical filter reduced the speed of a Spitfire Vb to 354 mph tops with a Merlin 45, the RAAF Spitfire Vc had a Merlin 46 and extra bulges on its wings for an extra two 20 mm cannon, so it would have been slower by about 5 mph, but at a greater height. 333 mph at 15000 ft is probably about right.
 
Also, test was against clip winged A6M-3 not A6M-2

Ok fair enough but the tested speed on the A6M3 doesn't appear to be better. This test showed a max of 310 mph TAS, though better altitude performance than the A6M2.

Hamp Performance Test

This doc says 346 mph at ~22,000 feet but that's still considerably lower than the Spit V at 375 mph TAS at 20,000.

My guess is that they were having trouble with that Spit for one reason or another on that particular day. May also have something to do with why they had so much trouble initially at Darwin.

S
 

No, you hit the nail on the head in previous post, it was a tropical Spitfire, that explains lower performance. But a Spitfire can't operate in primitive conditions without Tropical setup
 

Spitfire Seafire is a very different beast altogether than a Hurricane. Please don't conflate the arguments.

For the record Spitfire or Seafire > Wildcat / Martlet, with the exception of range,. Range of course is important for naval aircraft. But in all other respects the Spitfire is better.

Hurricane, I'm nowhere near convinced.

What is the maximum dive speed of the Hurricane compared to the Wildcat?

S
 
No, you hit the nail on the head in previous post, it was a tropical Spitfire, that explains lower performance. But a Spitfire can't operate in primitive conditions without Tropical setup
They had of course come direct from the UK, which meant the Vokes which also carried extra oil for the engine when carrying a 90 gal ferry tank. In the Med, the Aboukir tropical filter was developed that only caused a 5 mph loss in top speed.
 

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