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If the Lancaster was 'tossed' onto its back by a shell, it could have provided just the momentum the pilot needed to keep going through the roll until he was right-way up again. I can't see a bombed-up Lancaster pulling off a roll in the normal aerobatic manner.
I'm not disagreeing with youAn all up weight Lanc no but a Lanc after dumping its load and beimg light on fuel why not
I agree that the Lanc or 17 are not aerobatic birds , but I've read of one pilot flying the maritime version in the RCAF that used to roll it occasionally just to keep the crew awakeI'm not disagreeing with you
but in the case of this particular Lancaster, it was loaded up; it might be convenient to think that the exploding shell gave it the push-start into the manoeuvre that it needed but I can't think of anything else that might have gotten it through to the other side of the roll.
The question of 'why not' is largely irrelevant, it was done by Alex Henshaw but even with the feat confirmed we might be missing a big point here - what use was it to a 4-engined heavy? Physics tells me that a fully aerobatic Lancaster or B-17 is not going to shake a Fw190 off its tail.
Hope this doesn't sound too far fetched – well it probably does – but I'll run it past you anyway: My intention is to have the Lancaster dive for cover into a storm cloud (to hide) followed by the FW-190. The Lanc. immediately climbs to loop back up and over the chasing fighter, getting behind it so that when they eventually appear out of cloud cover the nose turret will shoot down the FW-190 now ahead of them. To compensate for the speed differential between the two aircraft – the fighter getting too far ahead – my reasoning is the fighter would throttle back to avoid colliding with the bomber (apparently, ahead of him). Also of course he mustn't deviate from the bearing he entered the cloud at.
May sound ridiculous to you guys who know a lot more about these things than I do, but bear in mind, that since your average film-goer won't possess anything like your knowledge, they will more than likely accept what they see. Also, it is precisely, because the pilot is an arrogant S.O.B., risk-taker, that rather than escape by using the cloud cover he wants to down the enemy fighter. Too incredible... I'm hoping not.
As an acceptable alternative, it may be to have the Lanc. simply bank in the tightest possible curving turn to enable it to get behind the fighter. Not sure what you call this manoeuvre.
.His favourite tactic was to drop everything from gear to flaps cut power and hope the guy overshot
Heh. Welcome to the club! Walk away from the guy who says he knows everything. He's an idiot.At the moment I'm just trying to familiarise myself with flight dynamics – control surfaces and such. Conversing with people like you, it strikes me how deeply ignorant I am even about the basics. Meanwhile, a friend of mine was (hopefully, still is) going out with an RAF pilot who flies Hercules into Kandahar so I'm going to run some ideas past him if I can.