Shortround6
Major General
Okay, but how do you explain that late-war the Germans still went with high wing load and their developments and new designs had smaller wings than the rest.
Only the Russian planes featured even smaller wings, but they were also a lot lighter.
Were they?
The smaller wing "trick" was used quite extensively in the the 30s and most of WW II.Smaller wing is one way to cut the drag. Lower the drag = increase the speed.
That design philosophy was also used several times in decades after the ww2.
I am not saying the P-26 was the first but it may have been influential.
149-150 sq ft wing. A very fast plane for 1934-35. It also showed the pitfalls of small wings. An over 80mph landing speed. Which was somewhat solved by fitting flaps part way through the production run and refitting over 100 (?) previously built airplanes. Got the landing speed down to 73mph.
The Supermarine 224 landed at about 60mph and the Air Ministry wanted 50mph. Obviously they relaxed that to even get the Hurricane.
A problem here is trying to assign specific design attributes/characteristics to certain nations. Like having a specific requirement or directive from the the government (customer)
and not having 2-3 companies come up with similar solutions.
Things like (from Wiki)
In early May 1934, despite Germany being under a prohibition from the development of new military aircraft, the Reichsluftfahrtministerium (RLM) issued a request for a new single-seat monoplane fighter under the guise that the proposal was for creating a new 'sports plane'.[2] The Technisches Amt outlined specifications, for the supply of a new fighter aircraft, those submissions for the competition had to meet certain characteristics, including; a) having an all-metal construction, b) having a monoplane configuration, c) having retractable landing gear, d) be capable of achieving a top speed of at least 400 km/h (250 mph) at an altitude of 6,000 m (20,000 ft), e) endure ninety minutes at full throttle at 6,000 m (20,000 ft) f) reach an altitude of 6,000 m (20,000 ft) in seven minutes and have a service ceiling of 10,000 m (33,000 ft) g) be able to be fitted with a Junkers Jumo 210 engine h) be armed with either two 7.92mm fixed machine guns or one 20mm cannon and i) have a wing loading of less than 100 kg/m2. (20.48lb/sq/ft)
The He 112 started with a nearly 250sq ft wing. The 109 was almost 20% high on the desired wing loading. The higher speed of the of the 109 wound up beating the wing loading requirement. The 112 had about 1 meter clipped from the wings but it wasn't enough and the 112B (substernal revisions) would up with a 182sq ft wing.
Both companies had a problem in that they were limited to Jumo 210 engine of approximately 700hp.
The Russians were ham-strung by their engines. They wanted to replace the M-105 engine but the M-106 and M-107 were very late, very troublesome and basically didn't come into service during WW II (4-5 years late). La-5 was not designed to take full advantage of the M-82 engine. It was designed to be quick fix (more power) for an existing/in production airframe.
7000lb aircraft for 1100-1300hp engines are not light weight. Wooden airframes are not light weight for their size. If you are building out of wood (generally) you try to keep the airframe small to keep the weight low. And you limit the amount of fuel AND you limit the weight of guns/ammo. Soviets were never happy with the installed armament of their fighters. They always wanted more but they didn't want to sacrifice the speed/climb/turning that adding more guns would cost. Let's not confuse things by bringing in the Yak-3. a late 1944 fighter.
The engineers of the time had a good idea of what they had to do. Sometimes the customers did not, or they were trying to push things beyond current state of the art. Sometimes they wanted to see what the trade-offs were.
French, Germans, Italians, Soviets all had similar requirements as to range and speed and armament (fighting each other) and would up with similar fighters at the start. France vanished. Italy dropped out 1/2 through and didn't have a high powered engine. German late war stuff was pretty much vaporware (190Ds excepted?)