special ed
2nd Lieutenant
- 5,680
- May 13, 2018
Somewhere in one of my books on the AVG, one pilot describes his disregarding Chennault's orders about not climbing after the Ki-43 in a tail attack. Remember, the AVG were using the 99 Tomahawks from the scheduled British shipment with the engines assembled by Allison supervisors, so their performance was slightly better than the average P-40B. The AVG pilot remembered opening fire on the tail of the Ki-43 when the Oscar pulled straight up and out of sight in a loop. The AVG pilot also pulled hard up, but soon realised the Ki-43 was about to be on his tail, and he quickly spun out and dived away. I no longer remember which book or which AVG pilot, however if there is enough years left in my life, I plan to reread all my books when I am to old to come out and play.A good point (I summarise it) is made in summary No 85 on page 3, para 2, item 3, Never follow a Zero into a climb at low speeds, as you slow and stall (or have to reduce climb rate), the Zero can complete a "loop" to position for a rear quarter attack.
So this "loop" would probably be a continued and tightened pull up and back in a normal looping manoeuvre, back onto the tail of the (previous) pursuer wallowing below. This is quite a thing, and remember the Zero was being flown by a test pilot with relatively little experience of the type.
Eng