OldSkeptic
Senior Airman
- 509
- May 17, 2010
Greg agree totally.
I just take the case of Supermarine (and for others reading this this is not a 'Spit vs 109' rant' and what was better), this is evolutionary production engineering stuff. And the endless fixes and changes they made throughout the Spit's life. And North American and the Mustang .. and the Mosquito .. and the 190 ... like all the 'greats'.
Feedback from operations, work out a fix and then include it into the next production batch sort of stuff. It doesn't have to be perfect, just good enough and better than what went before.
Again, my great admiration of Kurt Tank and his team (in my opinion Germany's Mitchell, not just a great engineer in himself, as he was, but a great leader of a technical team). You contrast the 190 development vs the 109 and you see good teamwork, where R&D worked closely with requirements and production. Continually improving the plane and producing much needed variants as needed, without the chaos and 'perfectionism' that crippled so much of Germany's efforts (in all areas not just planes). Sadly, again let down by the German engine manufacturers far too often.
The UK and the US has a lot to thank Rolls Royce for, for never deviating from, despite much political pressure at times, from the 'main game'. Plus without RR creating and pushing it the Merlin Mustang would never have happened (the US was not interested, the British Air Ministry was against it ... and Portal was very against it).
Hives, that very great man. a very 'unsung' hero and the architect of why RR was the antithesis of (say) Daimler Benz. As he would say, in his own inimitable way, "a good engine NOW is worth far more than a 200% better engines THEN'.
So even if Willy had been interested (which he wasn't in the least) in future 109 development he would still have been up against DB and the like (oh the games they played, DB promising the earth about the 603 as a political play to do down Jumo, got a whole factory allocated .. then did nothing, in their minds they had won by crippling the opposition ...hmm sounds familiar as Mark Twain said "history rhymes").
I just take the case of Supermarine (and for others reading this this is not a 'Spit vs 109' rant' and what was better), this is evolutionary production engineering stuff. And the endless fixes and changes they made throughout the Spit's life. And North American and the Mustang .. and the Mosquito .. and the 190 ... like all the 'greats'.
Feedback from operations, work out a fix and then include it into the next production batch sort of stuff. It doesn't have to be perfect, just good enough and better than what went before.
Again, my great admiration of Kurt Tank and his team (in my opinion Germany's Mitchell, not just a great engineer in himself, as he was, but a great leader of a technical team). You contrast the 190 development vs the 109 and you see good teamwork, where R&D worked closely with requirements and production. Continually improving the plane and producing much needed variants as needed, without the chaos and 'perfectionism' that crippled so much of Germany's efforts (in all areas not just planes). Sadly, again let down by the German engine manufacturers far too often.
The UK and the US has a lot to thank Rolls Royce for, for never deviating from, despite much political pressure at times, from the 'main game'. Plus without RR creating and pushing it the Merlin Mustang would never have happened (the US was not interested, the British Air Ministry was against it ... and Portal was very against it).
Hives, that very great man. a very 'unsung' hero and the architect of why RR was the antithesis of (say) Daimler Benz. As he would say, in his own inimitable way, "a good engine NOW is worth far more than a 200% better engines THEN'.
So even if Willy had been interested (which he wasn't in the least) in future 109 development he would still have been up against DB and the like (oh the games they played, DB promising the earth about the 603 as a political play to do down Jumo, got a whole factory allocated .. then did nothing, in their minds they had won by crippling the opposition ...hmm sounds familiar as Mark Twain said "history rhymes").