Air Combat Maneuvering at those altitudes in non turbocharged fighters has gotta be more of a slow motion waltz than a dogfight.I haven't come across a report of anything higher than 30,000feet and it's noticeable how fast combat descended when battle commenced.
One day we took the Navy Flying Club's Cessna Acrobat and the T-34 up to do some altitude work. We stopped at 10,000 ft and did some gentle acrobatics, some formation work, and a half-hearted "dogfight". Then we huffed and puffed our way up to 12,000 and tried again. This time it was a joke. The planes (especially the Cessna) had so little reserve performance they couldn't do much manevering without drifting down in altitude. Anything more than a 30 degree bank would set the stall horn to blaring, and to keep it out of buffet, you had to lower the nose and give away some altitude.(remember, this was South Florida in late summer, OAT on the ground was 93 F, and we were burning 100LL in engines designed for 80 octane).
After the horror show at 12,000 we decided to try for 14, but at 13.3, full throttle, stall horn blaring, the 150 couldn't be coaxed any higher, despite having burned off over half its fuel. In fact I got a little clumsy on the controls and it fell off into a spin which I recovered from none too smoothly, causing a secondary stall and another spin, this time the other way.
At that point it penetrated my thick oxygen deprived skull that the thin air wasn't helping any, so I held full pro-spin controls, gyrated down to 9500 and made a proper recovery. My first experience with a protracted spin, and was impressed with how tight that little plane wound up over time and how long it took to recover when the time came. Out over the water, and with your instruments in full rebellion, it's kind of hard to keep track of how many turns you've made, but I'm sure the recovery took at least 2 - 3 turns, not the instantaneous recovery I was used to. The G meter showed 4.4, though I don't remember pulling that hard.
I'm guessing the behaviour of a Spit or a 109 attempting combat in the low 30s would be pretty similar.
Cheers,
Wes
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