ThomasP
Senior Master Sergeant
AFIK The metal ailerons for the Spitfire were introduced on the Mk V production during the second half of 1941. But I am not sure how quickly or completely the metal ailerons replaced the fabric covered ones.
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I think it was Winkle Brown who said the seating position and cramped cockpit of the 109 limited how much force could be placed on the stick, there wasn't enough elbow room.FWIW the Hurricane and Bf109G were considered (by pilots that flew both) to have about the same roll rates at the same stick forces, but the Hurricane's maximum roll rate occurred at about 30 mph IAS less than the Bf109G's.
Lots of improvements were made just before the BoB like metal control surfaces, CS props, additional pilot armor, what made the biggest difference to high speed control was changing the aileron profile.Perhaps I am misremembering, but I thought the fabric control surfaces were found to "balloon" at high speeds, and were quickly retrofitted with metal skinned versions during the BOB. Maybe the Mk.V was the first to have them as standard from the factory?
re the high roll rate(s) attributed to the P-40
As mentioned in the excerpt from 'America's Hundred Thousand', the 135°/sec roll rate is for the pre-war P-40(ie either no suffix or maybe A as suffix, as in the model 81A). It is unlikely that any P-40(any suffix) airframe that saw combat was capable of this roll rate.
The P-40(no suffix) had only 2x .50 cal guns (along with the ammo) in the nose (ie no wing guns or ammo) and no armour or SSFT. The nose guns and ammo were located only about 1.5' to 2' off of aerodynamic centerline, resulting in a relatively low rolling moment of inertia that was in large part responsible for the high 135°/sec achievable roll rate.
The P-40F had 6x .50 cal in the wings (no nose guns) plus armour and SSFT. Since the 6x .50 cal guns were located about 6' (innermost guns) to about 8 ft (outermost guns) off of aerodynamic centerline (with all of the ammo in the wings outboard of the outermost guns) there was a much greater rolling moment of inertia - hence the significantly lower achievable roll rate of 95°/sec.
There may have been directional stability issues as well, although I do not know if this was the case. If there were cg or unbalanced dynamic force issues that could contribute to loss of directional control during the roll then there may have been practical restrictions on the usable safe rolling velocity. An example of this was the A-4 Skyhawk. I was told by an A-4 pilot that the Skyhawk had a max roll rate of ~720°/sec, but if you did more than 2 complete rolls at the max roll rate there was a good chance the aircraft would depart from controlled flight.