Where does he say that Marshall ??
In his description of the combat. You can find the quote here:
Focke-Wulf Ta 152 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Where does he say that Marshall ??
Soren, if he was gaining "meter by meter" in the turn,
one of three things is clear (we can rule out that Reschke was goofing off and smoking a cig).
1.) he was a better pilot flying an equivalent a/c in that manuever, or
2.) he was flying against a good pilot, with a slightly better better a/c than the Tempest
3.) he was a better pilot, flying an equivalent machine and able to gain a slight edge in the Ta 152.
Which is it?
Prove it?
Back to your 'tutorial' on manuever Performance?
Not by a long shot. The much longer wings of the Ta-152 makes it a completely different in a pilot's eyes. Note that even the Dora was mistaken as a another type a/c than the Fw190 when first seen by Allied pilots.
In his description of the combat. You can find the quote here:
Focke-Wulf Ta 152 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
If in doubt ask Erich, cause he isn't. And it has already been confirmed various times before.
I have HUGE respect for Erich's research. But ask Erich if he IS sure based on german records?
Or are you trying to say that Reschke is a liar Bill ???
QUOTE]
Nah, But as Erich and I BOTH noted about Willi's claims of Mustangs destroyed on the Nov 26, 1944 mission discussions on JG301's Black Day around Misburg, he (Willi) greatly overstated the Mustang losses.. so, why do we know for sure that he was 'dead on here?
A. I defy you to explain why a Ta 152 is immediately discernable from a 190D in a side elevation 90 degree deflection shot at the profile plus or minus 30 degrees? You would not see a 'distinction in wing span' at 100 to 200 yards. NFW
B. I would draw to your attention pilots mistaking Me 110's from 210's and 210's from 410's from Ju 88's, and 190D's from 109s, as well as 51Bs from 109s and P-47s from 190s'. It happened all the time. So many pilot's had 'eyes' that weren't as discerning as you believe?
You mean in Wikipedia's discription! Exactly why you should take what you read on there with a grain of salt.
You've got what he really said from his own book.
I do but I was wondering why there are two different versions of Reschke's description of the combat?
Nah, But as Erich and I BOTH noted about Willi's claims of Mustangs destroyed on the Nov 26, 1944 mission discussions on JG301's Black Day around Misburg, he (Willi) greatly overstated the Mustang losses.. so, why do we know for sure that he was 'dead on here?
Wrong Soren. (I just had to say that since it's been said to me after nearly every post I've made on this or similar subjects!)
It's completely easy to mistake a Ta152 for a FW190D, particularly if you have never seen a Ta152, which probably no allied pilots ever had, not sure if the allies even knew they existed! Newbs looking at photographs can't tell any of the 190s apart, let alone a guy in a fighter doing 350mph spotting a plane on the deck below him.
One account has Reshke stating that Sattler was hit, one account says he crashed for no apparent reason. (the two downed planes were 500m apart btw) One account says he saw strikes, one account does not. The fact that he makes particular mention in the one account that they could see shell holes in the downed aircraft is of interest. (kinda reminds me of the Red Baron shootdown) The conflicting stories definately bring into question the reliability of the account. In a court of law, a lawyer would have a field day with it.
Believe which ever one you want, but since we do know that a Tempest from the same squadron, in the same area, at the exact same time, shot down a plane that he says was an FW190, it ain't hard to figure out what really happened. It's not like there were droves of FWs flying all over the place. 442 Squadron RCAF for example flew ops for the entire month of April and saw enemy fighters exactly one time.
AFAIC, score one Tempest for Reshke, one Ta152 for Shaw.
Where did he say meter by meter ??? That's something Marshall claimed he said, but he didn't, you have it in black and white Bill.
What he said was: "I was continually closing on the Tempest"
I'm Ok with Your description although I admit to looking at Wiki also. Still it begs the question?
Well let us see Bill, did you forget this part: "I was continually closing on the Tempest, but for not one second did I feel that my aircraft was reaching its performance limit"
Or later this:
"Throughout the entire combat, the Ta 152 did not reach the peak of its performance even once, responding to every move of the control stick, even just above the ground"
Also do I need to remind yo that the Ta-152H turned allot better than the Fw-190 A-8 in all tests (Read Wilde Sau Dietmar Hermanns book on the Ta152), and that a heavy Jabo turned just as well as the Tempest in British trials ???
We both know the 190D and A had a bit of a problem with the High G turn
I would expect THAT wing to be a better manuever wing than the 190A and D because it had better W/L but I don't know about any possible elastic deformation issues with the long slender wing.
I also noticed a great deal of silence on your part when I gently reminded you to use Thrust - not Hp
Errr, and exactly what does that have to do with the a/c he HIMSELF shot down ??
It's no wonder if he possibly got the number of Mustang losses wrong sa he looked through his squadrons claims. But that's entirely different from fabricating stuff Bill, which you seem to think he does, which is bloody disrespectful IMO! Why the heck would he lie ???!
Sorry Soren, but it is you who is completely wrong. (hey I could get used to saying that! )
What problems Bill ? Enlighten me!
Fw-190 vets certainly describe no problems in high G turns, noting that the a/c "kurved" (turned) very well. And the 190 also gave plenty of warning of the stall if the ailerons were properly adjusted, which a number of captured examples weren't. Difference is the Germans knew how to properly adjust them, the Allies didn't.
Warning of an approaching stall in the 190 was characterized as slight buffeting and notching of the stick, which most pilots easily noticed.
So I trust the Rechlin trials which were conducted with highly experienced test pilots.
No issues according to anyone who flew it.
Why do you find it necessary to lie Bill ??
I addressed that issue, even offering the thrust figures for the entire Fw-190 Ta-152 family.
Easy. The Ta-152 is longer, both the front and rear fuselage is longer. The tail fin is a different design and larger. Wings are MUCH longer. Sorry but there's no way you'd see this and call it a FW-190:
LoL and ofcourse all of these fighter looked relatively alike from afar, with similar AR wings. Now of you could find examples of someone mistaking a Spitfire with a P-51 or something like that then we could talk.