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Schweik, in dive speed anecdotes I would assume the pilot--for the benefit of the reader/layman--does a bit of math and give an approximate TAS figure. Do they specifically mention IAS?
Well, according to Erwin Leykauf, that was not the case...
"During what was later called the 'Battle of Britain', we flew the Messerschmitt Bf109E. The essential difference from the Spitfire Mark I flown at that time by the RAF was that the Spitfire was less manoeuvrable in the rolling plane. With its shorter wings (2 metres less wingspan) and its square-tipped wings, the Bf 109 was more manoeuvrable and slightly faster. (It is of interest that the English later on clipped the wings of the Spitfire.) For us, the more experienced pilots, real manoeuvring only started when the slats were out. For this reason it is possible to find pilots from that period (1940) who will tell you that the Spitfire turned better than the Bf 109. That is not true. I myself had many dogfights with Spitfires and I could always out-turn them. This is how I shot down six of them."
- Erwin Leykauf, German fighter pilot, 33 victories. Source: Messerschmitt Bf109 ja Saksan Sotatalous by Hannu Valtonen; Hurricane & Messerschmitt, Chaz Bowyer and Armand Van Ishoven.
This is getting tiresome, as glider who flies a glider has posted a glider can out turn a combat aircraft and I have seen gliders turning with the inner wing describing a 20 -30 mtr diameter circle. When the RAF were issued with Mk IX spitfires and pilots encountered FW 190s they first engaged in a climbing fight, when they could beat the FW190 in a climb they knew they could also in a turn, they are essentially the same thing in different planes.Your sentences get harder to read as you continue to write. Please show me anything that says a Fw 190 can out turn a Spit V. That was the first comparison I could find, but I think it's very well known that a Spit V could out turn a Fw 190.
Of course turning is not as abrupt at higher speeds, that is where you get the G load blackouts you were mentioning upthread. Turning at very high speed will quickly lead to heavy G loads which will begin to exceed what the pilot can take in a more or less vertical seat with no G-suit. But it's also true that as you start turning at higher speeds in a propeller aircraft, your speed decreases steadily.
Also they aren't going 400 mph in a Fw unless they are at a very high engine setting and flying strait and level (or down) for some time and at the right altitude. The Spit V top level speed was 360-375 mph.
- This is getting tiresome,
- as glider who flies a glider has posted a glider
- in a climb they knew they could also in a turn, they are essentially the same thing in different planes.
Well I would too if the pilot knew what they were doing right up to the limit. On a race circuit I have seen a rider brake earlier than me, but not as hard as I was breaking, let the brakes off too early and fly off the circuit in a blaze of crap, With the 109 it depended how much you were prepared to push things once the LE slats deployed, as I understand it, for the aces in the LW that was when the "fun" started for others it induced a sense of panic.So I would be unsurprised that many Spitfires were lost to 109s in the BoB because they were out-turned.
The RAE tested the 109E against the Spitfire, flown by service pilots, and found they could out-turn the Spitfire.
However, when an experienced test pilot flew the Spitfire, the roles were reversed. It seems that the service pilots were reluctant or incapable of taking the Spitfire to its limits, either because of lack of skill or experience.
So I would be unsurprised that many Spitfires were lost to 109s in the BoB because they were out-turned.
at what speed? The evidence is this, the Mk IX, tell me what speed your combat is when the circle is 370ft? The evidence, if you want more, is the tragic loss rate of Spitfire MkVs over France. You see turn rate didn't matter a damn, it just allows you to circle until you run out of fuel or hit the ground.I know I'm not drunk because I haven't had a beer yet even though it's Friday on the weekend before Christmas, which is probably a mistake and I shall soon rectify it.
I say again - (and I agree it's tiresome) show me some evidence that a Fw 190 could out turn a Spit V. If you can I'll learn something and all your creepy malice will be worth enduring.
at what speed? The evidence is this, the Mk IX, tell me what speed your combat is when the circle is 370ft? The evidence, if you want more, is the tragic loss rate of Spitfire MkVs over France. You see turn rate didn't matter a damn, it just allows you to circle until you run out of fuel or hit the ground.
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If you were over France in a Mk V and you met a FW 190 you had a small chance of getting home. If the MkV slowed the turning fight down to where he had the advantage he was treated to a glorious changing view of the French landscape, but he couldn't get home, because that involves flying in a straight line, which is why, many posts ago I said speed and rate of climb were decisive.Ok but which is it? One argument at a time right? Is it that the Fw 190 could out turn the Spit V or that turn rate didn't matter a damn? Or both?
As for the NASA roll chart , it is cut off at 380 IAS, and at that point you see many planes roll rates drastically falling , but the Typhoon's is still fairly level. Remember ADFU testing showed the Typhoon still with an acceptable roll rate at 460 IAS, a speed at which the P-40 ailerons are " locked solid" and it must be heavily trimmed nose down. " Testing also demonstrated that " at 440-450 the the pilot was unable to exert enough force on the controls to prevent it from coming out of the dive and yawing to the right". Also " At speeds above 400 IAS the , elevator and rudder forces needed to hold it in a dive were very heavy" Kittyhawk I
In high speed dives it is the Typhoon that has the advantage in control and maneuverability over the Kittyhawk.