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What does the science say about pushing on the stick permanently in low speed turns? Since he describes it as a "trim issue" whose 220 knot border is detectable only in turns and only below 220 knots, it cannot be temporary as long as you are turning below that speed.
I want to put a penny in
So right turning and getting slowed down yes?
Because that a turn fight.
Now. Either you shot the other slow one or didnt.
But.
You is slowww. Burned of your energy.
One thing in ww2 you did not want on any front is that. Being slow ~ low energy. Because you will be dead.
That i think a good reason how ever good your plane is in turning, if it can not get its energy up .. you dead.
Its not ww1. Its number 2 with vicious guns and cannons. In every nations fighter. Potent guns
The slow are the near future dead.
Have you ever flown an aircraft?
I mean an actual, physical, piston-powered airplane, sitting in the left seat?
What's puzzling, is how someone who's never flown an aircraft, let alone studied how an airplane actually functions, believes and promotes impossible physics.
What's puzzling, is how someone who's never flown an aircraft, let alone studied how an airplane actually functions, believes and promotes impossible physics.
Didn't Vejtasa get two of those?Yep...
View attachment 808419
There is a pount where fantasy has it's limits versus reality.
At this point, your "argument" is full of shit, but by all means, please carry on - it's rather entertaining.
No he was forced out.Didn't Vejtasa get two of those?
No, but I understand that Leppla got one.Didn't Vejtasa get two of those?
At lower altitudes, the Fw190A was a beast.What am I missing here? It seems that our OP is arguing that the Fw 190 can out-turn anything.
Now I'm no physicist, but I can read, and I just don't see how an aircraft with a higher stall speed can maintain a turn fight with an aircraft with a lower stall speed. Since stall speed dictates the minimum speed you can maintain controlled flight, if you are pulling Gs your stall speed increases. The more Gs you pull, the higher the stall speed. Adding power decreases your stall speed a little, but does the Fw 190 have enough power to overcome its higher wing loading compared to other fighters?
What am I missing here? It seems that our OP is arguing that the Fw 190 can out-turn anything.
Now I'm no physicist, but I can read, and I just don't see how an aircraft with a higher stall speed can maintain a turn fight with an aircraft with a lower stall speed. Since stall speed dictates the minimum speed you can maintain controlled flight, if you are pulling Gs your stall speed increases. The more Gs you pull, the higher the stall speed. Adding power decreases your stall speed a little, but does the Fw 190 have enough power to overcome its higher wing loading compared to other fighters?
I must apologize to forum veterans for posting this for the 92nd time, but the subject does continually resurface ...
The following is a 'manoeuvrability anecdote' that I feel can help put all 'manoeuvrability anecdotes' in perspective.
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From (then Flight Lieutenant) Wing Commander Hugh Godefroy DSO, DFC and Bar, Croix de Guerre with Gold Star (Fr), shortly before Dieppe.
At Duxford one day a US Army Captain arrived unexpectedly with a P-38. Like the other Air Corps pilots, he had no battle experience and asked if he could get somebody to dogfight with him in a Spitfire IXb. Flight Lieutenant Clive, implying that he was in charge, said he would be glad to cooperate. He would fly the Spitfire himself. We were all a witness to the P-38 outmanoeuvre Clive, even turning inside him. When they landed, Clive came into Dispersal sweating profusely and stated the P-38 could outmanoeuvre the IXb. The Captain asked if he could have that in writing to show his Commanding Officer.
'Certainly,' said Clive, 'I'll have it ready for you by lunchtime.'
Now, imagine if the story ended here, as it easily could have. Think of how us internet nerds would pour over this controlled, seemingly decisive 'combat'. How those that have some strange, personal investment in the performance of seventy-year old aircraft would either swoon or gnash their teeth at the outcome of this impromptu contest. It would have been 'ammunition' on forums and bulletin boards (2025 edit: and these days, YouTube videos) for decades.
However, it doesn't end there. Godefroy continues ...
I was convinced this was wrong, and pleaded with Campbell-Orr to let me fly against him before issuing any report. The Captain supported me in my request, and off we went. I was able to show that there was no way he could come anywhere near me in the Spitfire. To demonstrate the turning ability, I let him get on my tail. In two complete circles from this position, I was able to get in firing position behind him. The Captain was not a bit upset, he had come to learn the truth. I told him I thought a good pilot in a 109F would give him a lot of trouble.
Now here we have two mock combats with everything remaining constant except for the pilot of one of the aircraft - and we get completely opposite results. Something to keep in mind next time you're reading anecdotes on things like turn performance.
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Now, I'm not saying you or anyone else should throw out all anecdotes not drawn from a testing/scientific setting, they're wonderful for adding to the great mosaic of our understanding of those men and machines.
But it's important to try to take them all in. It seems to me that you're starting from a conclusion you favour and working backwards, selectively sampling to support that conclusion. If you were to start a second collection that included anecdotes (and test establishment papers) that suggest the opposite of what you're claiming -- how much larger would that collection be?
A hint from someone who's read his fair share of WWII aviation books: substantially larger.