billswagger
Airman 1st Class
- 256
- Mar 12, 2009
No, I am thinking that in a defensive role you'd want the roll to be as fast as possible, remembering the pilot has to end the roll in the attitude he (mostly male pilots in the war) wishes to turn in. Then, in a coordinated effort, apply elevator to change direction. So, that, I believe, would be a snap roll.
How quickly the result of those two actions in combination move your aircraft out of the aggressor's windscreen, I'm suggesting, should determine the effectiveness of the planes abilities, not just roll alone.
True.
the roll is used with a turn, however, a sharper turning plane that can't roll as fast as a slower turning plane will not be able to follow it through a roll maneuver. (manuever to include a turn even if its not the sharpest)
You have a spitfire that follows a P-47 into a dive. The P-47 banks and turns to the right, while the spitfire follows, and then the P-47 suddenly rolls the opposite way 180 degrees and turns. Rolling alone does nothing more than bank the plane, The plane is going to turn where ever the elevators pitch it towards. If the P-47 rolls 180 degrees where the spitfire has only rolled 100 degrees it won't be able to pitch its nose in the proper direction to follow.
I think the P-47, in contrast, was able to dive and make relatively quicker corrections in its path to the target because of its better high speed roll rate. In pursuit of a 109 that not only dove but banked and turned was probably easy pickins for a fast moving P-47.
There is a lot to be said about high speed and rate of roll considering that turn rate is limited by pilot threshold. It was quickly recognized in that higher rate of roll at high speeds was an imparitive characteristic of a jet fighter.