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Hehe 127 mph is not the stall speed, the landing speed was lower than that. The stall speed of the P-51D with flaps and gear retracted is 109 mph IIRC, and the FW-190 around 102 - 105 mph under the same conditions.
Bill has stated on several occasions that he and his dad flew in P-51s.(together)Btw, is it me or are you saying you actually fly the P-51 ?? - suspiciously late to come forth with this IMO.
I always enjoyed his books and seeing him on the history channel. I was deeply saddened when he was killed...both Jeff Ethell and I got our pilot's license before we got a driver's license - go figure. And Jeff's dad Irv was a squadron CO when my father was Gp CO of 35th in Japan - we grew up together, starting in Japan in 1948 - and I miss him.
... that`s a faulty conclusion based on insufficent information. We know there was an instruction for the 109F wingtips. Do we know the 109G still had this problem? How we do the Mustang and Spitfire (La7, Yak3, Typhoon etc.) did not have similiar problems? They are less well documented? Of course. The less details we dig up on a plane, the fewer skeletons we find in the cupboard. But that doesn`t effect the actual number of skeletons overall. They are there, even if we don`t know about it.
BTW, ever wondered why the 'pointed', ie. tall vertical stabiliser was introduced to the Spitfire..? Stabiliser fin to the p51d..? Tall tail to the 109?
These aircraft had more in common than not. Designers kept bumping into the same limits, no matter the country. Physics are universal.
He was one hell of a fighter pilot but perhaps an even better instructor. I miss him still and it's been 28 years.
treated wing failure as another type of accident, again something I have never heard of in any US or British record.
Now this is a document issued to units after that have been equipped and trained on the aircraft over and above the normal pilots notes.
why didn't they issue similar reminders for all their 190's, 110's etc?
Another indication that it was more common in German aircraft.
The instruction that I referred to in my previous posting was specifically for the Me109G so yes I do believe that the problem existed in the 109G.Of course any aircraft then or now that exceeds its design limits is in danger of structural failure, that is obvious.
The difference here is that the German authorities had to issue a reminder to all German units that started
Then it lists various items including the item on wing tips. Now this is a document issued to units after that have been equipped and trained on the aircraft over and above the normal pilots notes.
The fact that the authorities had to issue such a reminder implies to me that the problem was greater on the 109 than other aircraft, as I have never heard of such a reminder being issued to other airforces or aircraft. After all, if the problem was the same on all aircraft and the Germans were being more communatitive than other nations, why didn't they issue similar reminders for all their 190's, 110's etc?
You will recall that JG26 in its list of pilots lost to accidents, treated wing failure as another type of accident, again something I have never heard of in any US or British record. Another indication that it was more common in German aircraft.
I would be the first to agree that this isn't definite proof but the circumstancial evidence builds up the more you look into it.
Sorry about your dad Bill.
At 8000-8500 lbs, power on, 80-90 mph sounds about right. You didn't say that before though, so I got confused.
And sorry that I sounded rude before.
Soren - I appreciate the comment. no big deal
Let me make something clear about my 'experience'. I flew a low time, peace time, late model ship in excellent condition. I never (intentionally) over stressed the airframe, did not do any dives exceeding .72 to maybe .74, did not do any 4-5g turns chasing another airplane - and will never represent that I have.
But I do have a good feel for the airplane even though it has been 40+ years since I last solo'd in one.
I had a great instructor who taught me the 'don't do's" early on - and I'm sure was anxious when he 'turned over the keys' for the first solo.
And last, only one of 21 air aces in his group shot down more 109s than he did - Henry Brown... but he definitely respected the airplane
Regards,
Bill
I always enjoyed his books and seeing him on the history channel. I was deeply saddened when he was killed...
You certainly are blessed to have been able to fly one of these great warbirds. Closest I have come to it was a backseat right in a T-6.
Do you have any pics of your dad from the war with his P-51 and some of you when you were flying it? Would be cool to see them.
I am only reporting what it said, which referred to the 109G not F.Then read again and look at the date. It`s been issued after service experience with the 109F, at about the time the units were starting to receive their first 109Gs (which had reinforced wing structure, I might add).
This wasn't fixing a problem, this was reminding people of structural limitations that caused enough accidents that they were treated as ordinary accidents.Such reminders to all units were issued by all airforces in the dozen during the war. It`s the first step in fixing an newly found problem.
Nope, it wasn't, I repeat it was reminding people of structural limitations that caused enough accidents that they were treated as ordinary accidents.Owing to continually recurring accidents caused by wing breakages in Me109 aircraft attention is drawn to the following
And...? It`s a technical addendum, one of the thousends issued during the war from the slightest matters like what grease is to be used in winter till the maintaince of the spark plugs.
I haven't seen any other example and still haven't seen one that covers an entire type of aircraft. However I did say that I was happy to change if I saw an example.And that is the fallacy of your logic. You`ve seen a snipped of a technical instruction about the 109 series. For some odd reason, you assume that no such exist for other aircraft types, as you haven`t seen it.
It doesn`t exist then.
But that`s just an illogical assumption about no such thing being issued in other airforces, or for other types. See below ?
Bill, your statement about the P51 seemingly being easier to fly than a AT6 lends backup to a thread I started a few days ago on the SNJ. Also, your statement about "someone going in every day" says a lot about people who scoff at George Bush's service in the TANG flying F102s. My hat is off to anyone who flew in the military especially in the early jet days.
Seems odd to me that anyone who has been a regular on this forum would not be aware that Bill has actually flown a P51 and that his father was a USAAF pilot in WW2.