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Personally its this kind of comment which I find at best borderline. There is no evidence that Shores is either pro or anti anybody. There is an overwhelming body of evidence that he is a very detailed researcher, proven across many books and highly respected in his field. Is he or anyone perfect, of course not, but because he doesn't tally with something you like or agree with he suddenly doesn't like Americans.
Because I disagree with a number of your posting you have at times implied that I am a hater of the P40. Never directly of course but its there. Does it worry me, no, your wrong in that and I only mention this as you have a repeating patter of behaviour.
If I had to put money on who is the more accurate researcher, you or Shores I know where my money will go.
While off-topic, I figured I'd respond to this first because when I attempted to reply to everything it said that I went over the 20,000 character limit (that and Fubar57 would be sure to go apoplectic...)
The P-38's roll rate was either poor or average depending on speed until the P-38J came along.
BiffF15 ,
1. F-15 vs F-18: Honestly I was surprised that the F-15 would out-accelerate and out-sustain the F-18 in turns. What variant of F-15 and F-18 out of curiosity?
2. G-Loads: I remember hearing somewhere that the normal rated loads for the F-15 were 7.33 or so and later increased to 9g. It wouldn't be the first time I was wrong, but there was a documentary in which a pilot said he pulled 12g and managed to avoid coming unglued (his name was Larry Pitts if I recall), which is within the 9g normal load-factor.
Totally disagree. Rolling and turning are different things. You can roll without losing speed. Rolling (and turning, slightly) allows the attacking fighter to keep targets lined up.
Think of the good (i.e. successful) BnZ fighters:
Fw 190 - fastest roll rate in the war basically
P-51 - excellent roll rate
P-47 - good roll rate
F4U Corsair - excellent roll rate
Ki-44 - (I just learned this) excellent roll rate
and in the early war -I-16 (excellent roll rate)
Without boosted ailerons, the P-38 had a poor roll rate but even with boosted aileron, although the roll rate was high, the response was very slow; There was a relatively long lag between control input and aircraft's response.
No idea. It was mentioned in a show on History Channel called "Dogfights".BiffF15 said:Was Larry a Tyndall AFB IP and what was his call sign?
CERTAINLY better than a P-40FSo what do you think about the Typhoon? Good or bad Roll? Good or bad at BnZ? As a fighter in general
CERTAINLY better than a P-40F
Without boosted ailerons, the P-38 had a poor roll rate but even with boosted aileron, although the roll rate was high, the response was very slow; There was a relatively long lag between control input and aircraft's response.
Actually the roll-rate was kind of an interesting thing on the Hawker Hurricane."The Hurricane could turn very sharply but it couldn't roll and it couldn't dive. That is why it couldn't compete after 1941. " The Hurricane could only compete over its own island in 1940 with the help of RADAR.
I've heard very little about these two aircraft. Supposedly the Maryland could dive to high speeds.The Maryland and the Baltimore - critical to the English war effort in the early years of the war in the Med
It doesn't, you don't have enough lift to be able to pull those loads.Wow that is interesting and a bit counter-intuitive. Do you know why thinner air or higher altitude made G more risky / damaging for the airframe? Is that just a matter of the TAS?
You are over complicating things. especially #3I don't know how to calculate climb-performance as it requires the ability to calculate thrust based on
- The propeller thrust at specific RPM, propeller pitch settings, and speed
- The exhaust stack thrust based on engine boost, altitude, and both TAS/IAS
- Cooling drag, which is likely based on mach number, IAS (ie AoA which is a function of weight), engine temperature/air-temperature (AoA is a function of weight and speed).
Wartime the British tuned the Allison P51 and P40 using their 100/130 octane.
They tuned the planes for more boost and performance.
So what do you think about the Typhoon? Good or bad Roll? Good or bad at BnZ? As a fighter in general
I thought the P-47 was good at rolling at high altitude though I could be wrong.
I only make provisional conclusions based on the available data. Everything we can say about a war from 70 years ago is an educated guess at best. But you can describe what you know at a given point. I don't think your implicit contention about the Air Force journal is compelling for reasons I have already stated several times. If you really thought there was an issue worth exploring there, I would think that you would go try to find more data, such as day by day loss records or loss records by aircraft subtype. But perhaps it's better to keep it vague?
This has nothing to do with the record of the Typhoon by the way, it has to do with the record of the Luftwaffe and JG 27 and so on.