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No problem, share them with us.No. I had the scans from the original documents: It showed the following:
As you can see, from the original document i gave you the link, the G-2 performed at 20s to the right, 21.5s to the left, without flaps use.Best Bf-109G turn time, to right: G-4: 21 seconds (This G-4 bested all the other Gustavs, including the G-2, by a small margin. 21 seconds was the very best a Gustav ever did in those tests.)
It's not a beliefs problem, only demonstration that we are still waiting for...If you don't want to believe, don't, but that was from an original scan, and it was clear to the right NO Me-109G bested the best the FW-190A-5 did...
Explain what? There is no physical aberration in soviet tests...So you have a significant difference in wingloading that is ignored in real-life, by a lower power-to-weight ratio aircraft, in a way you can't explain...
A genius of aviation matters as you even don't know untill now that all aviation tests are corrected in standart athmosphere conditions?If the Spitfire did 17.5 seconds in these test (which did not occur on the same day, so are worthless for comparisons: They are not comparative data at all),
What do you mean by broad? And why downthrottled?then I would think a downthrottled FW-190A-8 with broad ailerons and broad wood prop can do at least 17.5 seconds to the right...
What Fana number?I do find the methodology of these Russian tests suspicious: 17.5 seconds is better than most Russian types, yet the Russians in combat were never impressed by the Spitfire's maneuverability, and even tried to lighten the weight by removing the outer machine guns... They found the Spitfire unsuccessful in combat in horizontal maneuvers, but superior in vertical maneuvers, and changed their way of flying accordingly (source: Le FANA de L'Aviation)...
Not sure, all soviet fighter pilots found the Bf-109 harder to fight both in verticals and in turning circles.Once again, tests and reality seem irretrievably divorced...
What better turn? Radius or Time of Turn?Many or even most British pilots knew the Hurricane turned much better in sustained turns than the Spitfire... If so, does that mean 16.5 seconds for a Hurricane?
Where is it taken from?The Me-109G had no hope whatsoever in sustained turns against a P-47D, even at 140 MPH,
your math is a tad off. 58.3 lb/ft² wing loading for the P-47D and 40 lb/ft² wing loading for the Bf109G. thats 31% more wing loading for the P-47D. Also, I'd rethink the notion of the Bf109 not being able to turn with the P-47.The Me-109G had no hope whatsoever in sustained turns against a P-47D, even at 140 MPH, yet the wingloading of the P-47D was much higher than the FW-190A!: 50% greater than the Me-109G!
Gaston
I would like to point out, at this juncture, that to those of us who also frequent modelling sites, Gaston/M. Marty/Sherwood is (in)famous for his ability to propound a theory, then throw all sorts of "facts" and figures at it, while producing formulae which can make your head spin, and eyes glaze over.
To (try to) make some sense of this requires that we return to the basics of aircraft dynamics and geometry. First, this talk of raising the "centre of lift" is a total smokescreen, since said centre must coincide with the centre of gravity, or the aircraft will be inherently (and dangerously) unstable. The CoG is the point of the aircraft around which the three main movements (yaw, roll pitch) revolve, which makes it a fulcrum (remember them from school?) This means that it is impossible to raise the centre of lift, so this talk of a shifting 10 tons of weight, at the nose, is a complete nonsense. Operate the elevators, the tail falls (or rises) about the CoG fulcrum, and the nose goes in the opposite direction; note that the hinge point of the elevators is NOT a fulcrum. Spitfires carried lead weights, in the tail (often in the fin) to ensure fore-and-aft balance around the CoG.
A dry Merlin weighs about 1650lbs, so needs 825lbs, at the tail, to shift it, not 10 tons, and the airflow will provide ample force; 1650 x 10feet = 825 x 20 feet (those schooltime levers, again.)
Now, we move on, to the second spurious argument, which is all this talk of turning circles, rate of turn, call it what-you-will. Talk to any wartime pilot (yes, I have,) and he'll tell you that height and speed are far more important; "He who controls the height, controls the fight" was heard over and over again. If turn had been of such paramount importance, production of the Hurricane would not have ceased in the middle of the war, since it could out-turn almost anything. Camm wanted to fit the Griffon into the Hurricane, but was told to forget it, and concentrate on the Typhoon series (less manouevrable, but a heck of a lot faster.)
Mention has been made of the stall, in the Spitfire, with the implication that it was quite violent; again, this is twaddle, since, due to Mitchell's genius in his design of the wing, the root would stall, first, but the ailerons remained fully functional, and, even from the first flights of K5054 (the prototype,) pilots remark on how gentle the stall was, and how easy it was to recover, since it did not spin.
Edgar
I would like to point out, at this juncture, that to those of us who also frequent modelling sites, Gaston/M. Marty/Sherwood is (in)famous for his ability to propound a theory, then throw all sorts of "facts" and figures at it, while producing formulae which can make your head spin, and eyes glaze over.
To (try to) make some sense of this requires that we return to the basics of aircraft dynamics and geometry. First, this talk of raising the "centre of lift" is a total smokescreen, since said centre must coincide with the centre of gravity, or the aircraft will be inherently (and dangerously) unstable. The CoG is the point of the aircraft around which the three main movements (yaw, roll pitch) revolve, which makes it a fulcrum (remember them from school?) This means that it is impossible to raise the centre of lift, so this talk of a shifting 10 tons of weight, at the nose, is a complete nonsense. Operate the elevators, the tail falls (or rises) about the CoG fulcrum, and the nose goes in the opposite direction; note that the hinge point of the elevators is NOT a fulcrum. Spitfires carried lead weights, in the tail (often in the fin) to ensure fore-and-aft balance around the CoG.
A dry Merlin weighs about 1650lbs, so needs 825lbs, at the tail, to shift it, not 10 tons, and the airflow will provide ample force; 1650 x 10feet = 825 x 20 feet (those schooltime levers, again.)
Now, we move on, to the second spurious argument, which is all this talk of turning circles, rate of turn, call it what-you-will. Talk to any wartime pilot (yes, I have,) and he'll tell you that height and speed are far more important; "He who controls the height, controls the fight" was heard over and over again. If turn had been of such paramount importance, production of the Hurricane would not have ceased in the middle of the war, since it could out-turn almost anything. Camm wanted to fit the Griffon into the Hurricane, but was told to forget it, and concentrate on the Typhoon series (less manouevrable, but a heck of a lot faster.)
Mention has been made of the stall, in the Spitfire, with the implication that it was quite violent; again, this is twaddle, since, due to Mitchell's genius in his design of the wing, the root would stall, first, but the ailerons remained fully functional, and, even from the first flights of K5054 (the prototype,) pilots remark on how gentle the stall was, and how easy it was to recover, since it did not spin.
Edgar
I asked someone on Il-2 to post some of the original documents of the TsaGI tests, and it showed clearly the A-5 at 21 seconds flaps down to right, G-4 the same, and the G-2 was a little more...
Yes 23-24s for the A-4 flaps up from soviet guenine docs, if you want to compare it with the 109.The A-4, ONE second slower than the A-5, at 22-23 sec, as quoted elsewhere:
No problemAs for the notion that the Me-109G can out-turn the P-47D in sustained turns, except maybe very briefly in a very hard high speed and high G turn (possible with tail-heavy trim, and probably risking pulling the wings off), that notion is so pathetic it defies belief... Even on IL-2, at least a few people who read the combat accounts saw just how silly this notion is...
I've issued the challenge many times on this very thread: Find me one example of the Me-109 out-turning the P-47D in combat in sustained turns, ESPECIALLY TO THE LEFT: The one that was posted against me was very high speed and the Me-109G lost its wings, illustrating my point nicely... Please try to do better than that...
As for the wingloading theory, it is quite complex to explain: I am writing it long hand right now, and completing it into computer graphics will take a bit more time than I expected: Two-three weeks at least...
It will be accompanied by the full complement of math to explains the results this time; It will be interesting to see "experts" argue why grad-school level math is not saying exactly what it is saying (which is agreeing exactly with combat accounts)...
then I would think a downthrottled FW-190A-8 with broad ailerons and broad wood prop can do at least 17.5 seconds to the right...
QUOTE=Gaston;814930]Here is the "Fana de l'Aviation" #496 issue in question: February 2011...: It mentions Russian pilots having to shift their tactics from their usual horizontal turns to the vertical plane after a noticeable lack of success using their usual tactics of horizontal turns. The Spitfire was considered comparatively excelled on the vertical...
Fana de l'Aviation : Le
As for the P-47 not being 50% heavier in wingloading to the Me-109G, here are the figures in Kg: 7900 KG on 27.87 sq M= 284 KG/sq M
Me-109G-6: 6940 lbs on 16.05 sq M: OR 196 KG/ sq M
So 50% more for the Me-109G-6 would be 294 KG/ sq M.
So I exaggerated by 10 KG/ sq M... Is that what you call being informative?
Please improve the quality of your arguments against what I say if you don't mind...
But Gaston, if you want to compare planes, it takes the same condition; both of them flaps up or both of them flaps down. Have you got flaps down values for the Bf-109G?
Yes 23-24s for the A-4 flaps up from soviet guenine docs, if you want to compare it with the 109.
Note that the later TsAGI report give the benefit of 0.5s to the FW-190 A-4, for some fair reasons (supposal that plane was not in brand new condition, not perfectly regulated and flown).
No problem
Axis History Forum • View topic - P-51 and P-47 in USSR: pilot opinions
I would say there's others P-47 tests, with 27.4 even more than 28 the turn. So the 26s it's for the best (R or L?) one.
Gaston, i don't want to be unkind but, before discussing about complex and unknown flight theories, just learn them, and try to unserstand.
If you downthrottle the engine, you loose power, and so total lift....That mean you're just decreasing your AoA, speed and so ToT! Or i dont understand what did you mean...
Regards
And if you knew how the Spitfire was designed, you'd know that the tailplane was set at zero incidence, and had a symmetrical aerofoil section, so imparted neither lift, nor downforce, to the tail. Visit the RAF Museum, who have around 45,000 drawings; they will enlighten you.Quote: "First, this talk of raising the "centre of lift" is a total smokescreen, since said centre must coincide with the centre of gravity"
-First of all, if you actually knew how aircrafts were designed, you would know the Center of Gravity is always AHEAD of the Center of Lift, precisely for stability reasons, which is why the tailplanes are designed to always provide some downforce to compensate, even when the elevators are in a neutral position... This is how ALL conventional aircrafts are designed, except for some of the canard-types among other oditites, which can have up to three lifting surfaces instead of just one... Visit aircraft design sites, they will enlighten you...
In conventional designs (which covers basically all of WWII) the tailplanes ALWAYS compensates (downward) for the untruth of what you just said... This is why tailplanes do not contribute to lowering the wingloading, and the Main wing area alone is all that is counted in estimating wingloading.
Gaston