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Because at that given RPM you are not going to build up speed to exceed Vne or Vmax.
I've been flying for 20 years and am also a flight instructor. I've been working in the aviation business for 35 years. I think I know a little something about this stuff!I don't think that's how it works, but my knowledge of engines and propellers isn't the greatest so I'll leave it to the more knowledgeable folks.
And boost and RPM are used in conjunction with each other when flying a high performance aircraft with a constant speed propeller.Interestingly, with regards to the pilot's notes, the Barracuda I, II (Merlin 30 32) are as you describe, but the Barracuda II III (Merlin 32) notes give no mention of RPM, but say the dive should be entered with not less than +6lb./sq.in. boost to avoid gaining excess speed.
No it indicates that you are not going to over speed the engine or over boost it. You are also keeping the propeller at a pitch that will limit efficiency, slowing the aircraft down and preventing you from reaching Vne at a given dive altitude.This indicates to me that the reason for the 2,000 rpm is due to a propeller damage/overspeeding issue: the smaller pitch range on the 3-bladed prop compared to the 4-bladed, 32 degree prop.
No, but this is the technique developed to dive the aircraft at speeds that won't wreck the engine or airframe when diving from 5000'.All this aside - in reading A&AEE dive bombing tests with the Barracuda II (merlin 32) the aircraft could be dived to 300 IAS with brakes deployed, 2000 rpm and 0lb boost.
A telling bit in the 'conclusions' of the report:
The limiting diving speed was reached in a near-vertical dive (entry being effected by a firm push force on the control column) after diving through 4000-5000 feet, and hence, if a steep diving technique is to be employed operationally, the height at which the dive is entered must not be more than 5000 feet approximately above the required pull-out height. This may limit the operational role of the aircraft.
This doesn't seem like an aircraft that can set a certain RPM and stop accelerating straight down.
I still have issues with some of what you're saying - but overall it doesn't matter as it appears I was misreading you.
I thought you were saying that setting an aircraft's prop speed to 'X' would stop it from accelerating past a certain speed in a vertical dive.
I don't think that's how it works, but my knowledge of engines and propellers isn't the greatest so I'll leave it to the more knowledgeable folks.
Interestingly, with regards to the pilot's notes, the Barracuda I, II (Merlin 30 32) are as you describe, but the Barracuda II III (Merlin 32) notes give no mention of RPM, but say the dive should be entered with not less than +6lb./sq.in. boost to avoid gaining excess speed.
This indicates to me that the reason for the 2,000 rpm is due to a propeller damage/overspeeding issue: the smaller pitch range on the 3-bladed prop compared to the 4-bladed, 32 degree prop.
All this aside - in reading A&AEE dive bombing tests with the Barracuda II (merlin 32) the aircraft could be dived to 300 IAS with brakes deployed, 2000 rpm and 0lb boost.
A telling bit in the 'conclusions' of the report:
The limiting diving speed was reached in a near-vertical dive (entry being effected by a firm push force on the control column) after diving through 4000-5000 feet, and hence, if a steep diving technique is to be employed operationally, the height at which the dive is entered must not be more than 5000 feet approximately above the required pull-out height. This may limit the operational role of the aircraft.
This doesn't seem like an aircraft that can set a certain RPM and stop accelerating straight down.
49. Diving
(i) The dive should be entered smoothly at not less than +6 Lb./sq.in. boost. This will avoid any tendency for the carburettor to cut momentarily due to the effect of negative g. The throttle lever may be retracted during the dive to avoid gaining excessive speed.
The MXY7 may have had a high speed in it's final dive, but even then, it had terrible accuracy.I believe the ultimate dive bomber, the Japanese Ohka, had a maximum dive speed of around 650 mph.
Do you know the aircraft weight and bomb load for that test?
Here's the exact wording of the paragraph from the Feb 1945 Pilot's Notes:
It would to a point at a certain altitude because the propeller is not operating at it max efficiency. 5000' is mentioned in this discussion. I think it's obvious if you dive a barracuda from 30,000' and keep the prop in low pitch, it's lack of efficiency will be overcome by mother gravity.
That I'm prepared to believe. It was the image of a Barracuda diving straight down--not accelerating--at 260 IAS that had my eyebrow raised.
Exactly but it's also mentioned in the pilot's notes for the same reason, remember you're looking at "a picture." The numbers paint something a bit different.No, the 5000 foot figure is mentioned (in the A&AEE conclusions) because beyond that, the Barracuda will exceed the limiting dive speed, not stop accelerating and coast down at 260 IAS.
Can you name any dive bomber attack on a carrier that was stopped by AA? NO WW2 AA system had the capability to defeat a determined DB attack, even with considerably larger numbers of defending ships than were present when Illustrious was attacked.
RN carriers survived air attacks in the Mediterranean. It really depends how you qualify 'determined'.
In operations off Crete the light cruiser HMS Fiji survived thirteen hours of more or less continuous air attack before finally sustaining two hits which proved fatal. This may have been due to the fact that she had run out of ammunition and was reduced to firing practice (solid) shot at the incoming aircraft before ceasing fire altogether. Ordinary Seaman Leonard Michaels, a survivor, said with typical understatement that his 'emboldened the attacking aircraft.'
HMS Kipling was attacked 83 times in roughly five hours but survived. HMS Kandahar survived 22 attacks in four hours and forty five minutes but survived. Not carriers and obviously smaller and harder to hit, but they survived what I would call determined attack.
Cheers
Steve