KraziKanuK said:[
Flying Limitations of the Spitfire IX (from Pilot's Notes)
Maximum speeds in m.p.h I.A.S.
Diving (without external stores), corresponding to a Mach No. of -85:
Between S.L. and 20,000 ft. - 450 (724kph)
20,000 and 25,000 ft - 430 (692kph)
25,000 and 30,000 ft. - 390 (628kph)
30,000 and 35,000 ft. - 340 (724kph)
Above ..................35,000 ft. - 310 (499kph)
It should be remembered that the Spitfire was dived at Mach 0.89.
Further from the link,
[i]Dive limitations from: Bf 109 G-2, G-4, G-6 Bedienungsvorschrift, June 1943 edition
.......Dive: Adjust trim in such a way that the airplane can be held in a dive. The elevator forces and tailplane loads become great at high speeds. The tailplane adjustment must work perfectly; otherwise shifting of the tailplane is possible.
Sturzflug: Trimming so einstellen daß das Flugzeug durch Drücken im Sturzflug gehalten werden kann. Die Höhenruderkräfte und Flossenbelastungen werden bei hoher Fahrt sehr groß. Hemmung der Flossen verstellung muß einwandfrei arbeiten; sonst ist Selbst verstellung der Flosse möglich.
.......Maximum diving speed 750 km/h. Hard aileron manipulation while diving leads to failure, particularly when pulling out. Höchstzulässige Sturzfluggeschwindigkeit 750 km/h. Harte querruder betätigung im Sturz und besonders beim Abfangen führt zum Bruch. [/i]
Yes, reading is a terrible thing to waste.
One thing you might read Krazee Kunuckistani are the accounts of how exasperated the Spit Pilots were with 109's. They could not catch them unless the 109's chose to turn with them. They couldn't catch them in dives and they couldn't catch them in zoom climbs. And thats the way it was from the first day of the war to the last.
Its gotta hurt to be so fully off base. This Experten died in a collision with debris per his wingman. The British say something else, but who believes them. One pass two 109's. Two downed Spitfires and a mistake in the egress path. This is the way the war went:
http://www.luftwaffe.cz/muncheberg.html