An "overfuelled" Spitfire was hardly combat capable. The PR ID was nicknamed "the flying bowser". It also carried extra oil,something often overlooked when people increase the theoretical endurance of WWII aircraft.
Wing Commander Tuttle.
"You could not fly it straight and level for the first half hour after take-off. Until you had emptied the rear tank,the aircraft hunted all the time. The centre of gravity was so far back you couldn't control it.It was the sort of thing that would never have got in during peace time,but war is another matter."
Cheers
Steve
If instability for the first half an hour to hour of flight is the only draw-back, I'd suspect the RAF would have gladly accepted it. Only two of the PR MK ID/Mk IVs had the rear fuselage tank anyway. The rest were built without the 29 gal rear tank.
Armed, Merlin powered Spitfires proved capable of operating with more than 210 imperial gallons, on combat missions. Drop tanks were a bit of a game changer.
In late-build Mk IXs it was found that when the extra rear fuel tanks (44 gal) were fitted, the aircraft became longitudinally unstable above 145 mph - the Spitfire never having the best longitudinal stability anyway. As speed increased, the aircraft became progressively less stable and required constant 'hands on' flying to remain straight and level.
By the time 1/2 the rear tank had been burned off (22 imp gal - about 70 kg) the Spitfire began to return to normal behaviour. It was recommended that a Spitfire not engage in combat before before the rear fuel tank was emptied though.
The implication for this is that the rear tank must be the first used in the aircraft. With my proposed/theoretical long-range Mk V with the 29 gal rear fuel tank, this is actually solved fairly simply by a little juggling of tanks during flight.
Warm-up, taxi and take off consume around 10 gal. I'd suggest the rear fuselage tank is used for this.
Climb to 20,000 ft would consume another 13-17 gal. I'd actually suggest that the 30/45 gal drop is used for climb.
Then the pilot switches back to the rear fuselage tank to use up the remainder of the fuel in the tank. The remaining 19 gal is enough for about 35 minutes slow cruising (220-225 mph), or for about 15 minutes at fast cruise (315-330 mph). If form up occurs over the Channel, that means the pilot is still only going to be about 100-120 miles into France, at best.
With the rear tanks used for warm up/take-off and the drop tanks used for climb out/form up, the Spitfire still has full front tanks (95 gal) and either 13 gal or 28 gal left in the drop tanks, around 70% of total fuel load left. Even if the pilots are required to 'pickle' their tanks off early, 95 gal is still enough for 15 minutes at fast cruise, five at full combat power and then another 2 and a bit hours at a cruise speed of 220-225 mph (32 gph), or about 1 and a half hours at a slightly more aggressive speed/fuel setting (45 gph and 285-290 mph).
Its still a 4 hour aircraft, not a seven hour aircraft like the later P-51s, but with the rear tank and drop tank its no slouch. In 1942/early 1943, the Spitfires of the RAF were limited to a combat radius of 200-210 miles and usually operated no further than 175 miles. The P-47 had a radius of about 240 miles, but usually operated no further than 210 miles. By mid-1943 the P-47's practical radius is out to 250-275 miles (with 75 gal external tank), and it takes until late in 1943 before its over 350 miles (with 108 gal tank).
Load up the Spitfire with the big forward tanks and the rear fuselage tanks and all of a sudden you've got a bird with a pratcial 275-300 mile combat radius in late 1941/early 1942. That's far enough to maybe support the 8th AF out to the German border, possibly the Rhur, depending on flight profile/route taken.