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Any PR fighter was difficult to intercept Glider. And the Mossie was only a head ache to catch for the German Zerstöreres, the Bf-109 had no problem catching the Mossie.
As a matter of interest what was the cruising speed of the 109K and at what altitude are you talking about?
Just a thought but if the 109K could cruise faster than a Spitfire at max speed then why did they find it so difficult to intercept allied PR planes such as the SPit or the Mossie
Re the Zero I do find that amusing, didn't know they went over 400mph.
It would be a little worrying for the Germans if they didn't have an advantage over a Spit IXIn layman`s terms, they can run circles around the old Spitfire IXs at these speeds and altitudes.
I admit that you have mentioned this before. I know that the He177 was used as a recce on Atlantic missions but not over the UK. Do you have any details as to these missions?For the same reason Spitfires found it hard to intercept PR 109s and He 177s over England. High flying, fast single targets the radar may not pick up in time, are difficult to vector onto and intercept.
In layman`s terms, they can run circles around the old Spitfire IXs at these speeds and altitudes.
QUOTE]
Maybe, if excess thrust was the only factor affecting turn. From everything I have read, anecdotal and official tactical trials, the Mustang could not outturn any Spit at any speed, nor could the 109 or 190A/D for that matter. Dont forget the Mustang weighs about 1000 lbs? more than a Spit IX.
From RAE Tactical Trials
They also note that the elevators are much heavier.Turning Circle
20. The Mustang is always out-turned by the Spitfire IX. Use of flaps on the Mustang does not appear to improve the turning circle. There is adequate warning of the high-speed stall in the form of elevator buffeting, followed by tail buffeting.
Rate of Roll
21. Although the ailerons feel light, the Mustang III cannot roll as quickly as the Spitfire IX at normal speeds. The ailerons stiffen up only slightly at high speeds and the rates of roll become the same at about 400mph.
Yes the Spit IX could only do 408-415 mph level speed at alt, (and that's not at 5 min WEP either). Yet they shot down a lot of 109s and 190's.
Considered by most knowledgeable people to be the best all round fighter of WWII, and considered best by pilots who also flew Hurricanes, Mustangs, P47s, Typhoons, P40's etc. It had an ideal balance of climb, dive, maneuverability, speed and firepower. Other planes might be better at one thing or another, but the Spit IX was darn good at everything.
the Mustang could not outturn any Spit at any speed, nor could the 109 or 190A/D for that matter.
Besides the claim is that For the same reason Spitfires found it hard to intercept PR 109s and He 177s I have not heard of the He177 being used over the UK and believe that the 109 was ineffective.
Maybe, if excess thrust was the only factor affecting turn. From everything I have read, anecdotal and official tactical trials, the Mustang could not outturn any Spit at any speed, nor could the 109 or 190A/D for that matter. Dont forget the Mustang weighs about 1000 lbs? more than a Spit IX.
Yes the Spit IX could only do 408-415 mph level speed at alt, (and that's not at 5 min WEP either).
Yet they shot down a lot of 109s and 190's.
Considered by most knowledgeable people to be the best all round fighter of WWII, and considered best by pilots who also flew Hurricanes, Mustangs, P47s, Typhoons, P40's etc. It had an ideal balance of climb, dive, maneuverability, speed and firepower. Other planes might be better at one thing or another, but the Spit IX was darn good at everything.
In this helpful conclusion, Wachtel was supported by the evidence of photographic reconnaissance, which incidentally revealed one of the biggest surprises of the whole war. It turned out that there seemed to have been no German photographic reconnaissance of London from 10th January 1941 to 10th September 1944. We had expected that the Germans would have flown regular reconnaissances of the whole of southern England, but Fighter Command had been so effective in interception that the Germans had not succeeded in making a reconnaissance of London for 3 years and 9 months, no more than 50 miles inside our own coastline, while our own reconnaissance pilots were often flying over 500 miles of German occupied territory. I knew of no more startling contrast in the entire war, a joint tribute to Fighter Command and our own reconnaissance units.
I had a slight inkling of the situation before we captured Wachtel's map, because I had read a glowing tribute to the new German twin jet fighter, the Me 262, which a secret German report said was so good it had succeeded in photographic reconnaissance of London "hitherto considered impossible".
Throughout the Battle of Normandy Allied army commanders received frequent and comprehensive photographic coverage of the enemy positions in front of them. In stark contrast, German field commanders often received no warning of a build-up of Allied forces until the leading units came within view of their forward positions. During the battle Luftwaffe reconnaissance units endeavoured to fly two types of operation: high-speed low-altitude visual and photographic reconnaissance sorties by day, flown by Messerschmitt 109s of the tactical reconnaissance units; and high-altitude night photographic missions by Me 410s and Ju 188s of strategic reconnaissance units.
The tactics employed by the Bf 109 reconnaissance units were straightforward enough, though often hazardous in view of the magnitude of the opposition. Usually the aircraft operated in pairs, one of each pair conducting the reconnaissance while the other kept watch for enemy fighters. On rare occasions a fighter escort would be provided if a reconnaissance of a particularly heavily defended area were required, but usually the reconnaissance pilots had to penetrate the defences on their own.
In the nature of things, photographs taken at night gave considerably less information than those taken by day. However, the all-pervading Allied fighter patrols rendered high-altitude daylight photography too dangerous to be contemplated. During a night mission the aircraft would run through the target area at high speed, at altitudes of around 20,000ft, and release a photo-flash bomb fused to ignite at about 4,000ft above the surface. On ignition the bomb gave a flash of 6,000,000 candlepower lasting for a third of a second, and this automatically closed the shutter of the camera and wound on the film for the next photograph. Then the shutter opened again for the next shot. Usually four or five pictures were taken in this way, at ten-second intervals. By the end of that time the night fighter and gun defences in the area were thoroughly alerted and the German crew had to dive to low altitude and beat a hasty retreat.
As was to be expected, such reconnaissance methods produced only a fragmentary picture of the Allied dispositions. The powerful defences took a mounting toll of both aircraft and crews, and, if they were to survive, the latter had often to break off their missions at the first sign of trouble.
The lack of aerial reconnaissance had serious consequences.
The almost impenetrable fighter screens above England complicated aerial reconnaissance to such a degree that results were obtained only accidentally. Thus, no information could be gathered as to possible secondary landings, for instance in Norway, Denmark or along the German North Sea coast.
The curve of the effectiveness of German aerial reconnaissance matched that of the rise and fall of German arms in general more closely than that of any other form of intelligence. In seeking physical evidence, it depended more upon strength—control of the air—or speed to obtain this evidence than almost all other forms of intelligence. This strength was naturally a function of the overall German strength. For the first half of the war, German air superiority permitted German aerial reconnaissance, and it in turn helped German arms win their victories. But with the German defeats on the ground and in the air, reconnaissance became sparser and less effec
. Toward the end it became almost nonexistent. In December 1944, an air force officer noted that no air reconnaissance of British industry had taken place for three years. German aerial reconnaissance made no great discoveries, as the Allies' did of the V-l sites. It could not get planes over London to correct the fake reports of turned-around agents about the impact points of these flying bombs. It failed to spot the bringing-up of the troops from Siberia that stopped the Germans at Moscow. A mournful comment by the navy on 22 May 1944, while the Germans were trying desperately to discover where the expected invasion of Europe would come, may serve as its epitaph: "Especially on account of the lack of constant comprehensive air reconnaissance, the [enemy's] main transport effort in one sector or another of the Channel coast is not ascertainable"
What you havent heard of and what you wish to believe has rather little substance behind it I am afraid...
Perhaps do some reading first.
Kurfurst's argument appears to be later German fighters like the K4 and Dora outclassed the Spitfire IX. The thing is, in the real world these late war German fighters were too little, too late, and had very little impact.
Let's look at some figures. From the start of August 1944 to the end of the war, the Jagdwaffe claimed 200 Spitfires, 83 Typhoons and Tempests. RAF Tempests alone claimed 203 German fighters (109s, 190s and 262s) in the same period.
Kurfurst likes to claim the RAF had to soldier on with the Spitfire IX, because they were short of more modern types.
As of 26th April, the RAF had on charge the following (figures are UK&Western Europe/Overseas):
Mustang III&IV - 782/224 (Mustang III is P-51B/C, IV is P-51D)
Spitfire XIV - 500/62
Tempest V - 426
Tempest II - 39
I have done, quite a lot over the years and whilst I agree the He177 was used as a naval recce aircraft I have not heard of it being used over the British Isles. I also know that it was used in the little Blitz in the first three months of 1944 and that all the aircraft that took part incurred heavy losses.
I have never heard of any German aircraft (Arado 234 excepted) that could fly over the UK in daylight on Recce missions on anything like the basis of the Allied PR aircraft Mossies, Spits and to a lesser degree Lightnings.
You are the one who says that this happened
and I am willing to agree with you, but only if you can support that statement.
Basically all manouvering is about excess thrust. Sustained turning is all about your excess thrust matching the increased decelerating force from increased drag when you are turning (and flying at a higher AoA than when in level flight, ie. higher induced drag).
So to put it into practical terms, lets see an example.
Plane A can achieve 400 mph with 1500 HP at altitude, and at this point it has 0 excess thrust (since its neither accelerating or decelerating). It can cruise at 330 mph with 1000 HP.
Plane B can achieve 440 mph at altitude with the same 1500 HP, and can achieve 400 mph when cruising using 1000 HP.
So similiarly, Plane B has 0 excess thrust at 440 mph, and has 500 HP excess thrust at 400 mph.
So when Plane A and Plane B will start turning at 400 mph, the drag experienced by both will rapidly increase, because in turn your induced drag will increase rapidly. Overall drag will increase on both aircraft, and now both would need greater thrust to sustain 400 mph in turns. Since Plane A has no more excess thrust at all, it will start to decelerate (quite rapidly) when it commences a turn at 400 mph. Plane B can use its 500 HP-worth of excess thrust to sustain its speed AND turn at the same time.
Weight of course matters, but its not so simple (the 109, for example, is much lighter than the Spit); weight actually effects how high your drag is in turn, which gets us back to excess thrust. The Spitfire has large wings for its size and weight, but at the same time its also a very draggy airframe compared to others, hence why its relatively slow, and outclassed by others at high speed turns, climbs acceleration.
On the other hand, it had some serious defects as well. Lack of speed and range should be mentioned first and foremost, and poor control characteristics. Actually, both of the former vices can be traced back the high drag of the design. I guess the death of the lead engineer was a blow that the design team couldnt recover from.