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View Full Version : The 'Great Debate' - Spitfire vs BF109


Sammi79
07-14-2012, 08:18 AM
As suggested by FS~Phat in the performance testing thread, here is a thread to debate the relative merits and failings of these two most famous aircrafts. Hopefully this will allow the performance testing threads to fulfill their function whilst at the same time providing a space for people to post their own opinions regarding this evidently touchy subject.

To get the ball rolling, I will start. :)

All the evidence I have seen, which is mostly anecdotal suggests that; during the Battle of Britain, the early marks of both aircraft were very similar in performance, so similar in fact that victory was nearly always the result of things not related to the aircraft themselves, like pilot skill, numbers of aircrafts and tactical advantages (altitude, fuel, etc.) In terms of their relative performances however, I think it is safe to say a few things.

The Spit turns slightly better (smaller radius) than the 109 at all altitudes, particularly at lower speeds.

The 109 is slightly faster at all but the very highest altitudes, and certainly dives better.

Climb rates are tricky, I think that at different speeds, each aircraft may outshine the other.

The Spit was an easier aircraft to fly, and had marginally better visibility from the bubble cockpit, however the larger wing obscured the view to below more.

The 109 often had better armament which was easier to aim due to the fact it was more central on the airframe.

Both aircrafts killed more pilots during landing and takeoff than were lost in combat due to the high power/torque engines and the narrow track landing gear, but the 109 is slightly worse in this respect.

That's my opinions on the subject, and they are based on everything I have seen or heard regarding the matter. They are still simply opinions, however, and I do not claim them to be fact in any way at all.

Who's next?

CaptainDoggles
07-14-2012, 10:40 AM
Personally, I feel that debating the merits of each plane is just going to result in certain characters trotting out the same tired pilot anecdotes saying "Plane X out turns Plane Y" but without listing at what speeds and altitudes.

Then, people who don't understand science will extrapolate that statement to mean that Plane X should always win in a turn fight against Plane Y in all circumstances.

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 10:58 AM
Personally, I feel that debating the merits of each plane is just going to result in certain characters trotting out the same tired theories saying "Plane 109 out turns Plane Spitfire" at all speeds and altitudes because it was 'magic' and german.

Then, people who don't understand anything will extrapolate that statement to mean that Plane 109 should always win in a turn fight against Plane Spitfire in all circumstances and history is all a lie.

fruitbat
07-14-2012, 11:03 AM
They were both close enough in performance that tactics and pilot skill were the determining factor.

End of.

Sammi79
07-14-2012, 11:08 AM
@Cpt. Doggles & Bongodriver.

That is exactly what this thread is for, so that these same tired old anecdotes/theories and personal bias/opinions do not get in the way of the performance testing threads whose purpose is to gauge exactly how the simulated aircraft perform. Here in this thread, these things are most welcome.

I have one more opinion to add,

The Spitfire was and is at all altitudes, speeds, air densities, humidity and temperatures; a much more beautiful aircraft than the 109!

:grin:

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 11:18 AM
[QUOTE=Sammi79;444695The Spitfire was and is at all altitudes, speeds, air densities, humidity and temperatures; a much more beautiful aircraft than the 109!
:grin:[/QUOTE]

Beauitfull yes..'much more'?......No

Sry about the size...great detail though
http://img2.hebus.com/hebus_2006/06/29/preview/060629143041_37.jpg
http://www.bundesheer.at/archiv/a2005/airpower/galerie/vollbild/ap05_messerschmitt_001_wg.jpg

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 11:19 AM
Actually yes thats a point, I think it was a mods suggestion a thread like this was started, basically a 'boxing ring' for for people to batter each other with their fantasies.........I'm out.

Robo.
07-14-2012, 11:24 AM
Sammi79 - LOL nice one. I like them both, they're beautiful in their own way. Blonde and Brunette, Lidl and Aldi.. you know

I am always amused to see ppl flying only one side complaining and commenting on the other. :D

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 11:26 AM
Actually yes thats a point, I think it was a mods suggestion a thread like this was started, basically a 'boxing ring' for for people to batter each other with their fantasies.........I'm out.

Can we have that in writing..

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 11:27 AM
@Jamz

For me the spit is more gracious and the 109 more viril (obvious seeing that nose). Just like comparing a dolphin and a shark.

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 11:31 AM
@Jamz

For me the spit is more gracious and the 109 more viril (obvious seeing that nose). Just like comparing a dolphin and a shark.

:cool: yeap

Sammi79
07-14-2012, 11:41 AM
Lovely shots there ZeJamz, cheers!

Spit is still more beautiful than that warty looking thing though! :-P

TBH though, I agree with Robo, they both have their charm.

Spit more elegant, 109 more brutal.

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 11:42 AM
Sorry Jamz but the 109 'is' beautifull but only beautifull like 'Zena warrior princess'....you would but it's far too Amazonian.

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 11:46 AM
Its Beautiful, the Spit more so, granted

41Sqn_Stormcrow
07-14-2012, 12:52 PM
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

I like 'em both but my all time favorite plane esthetically-wise is the Hawker Sea Fury. Fell in love with it when I first saw it roaring by. It is a perfect melt between a Spit and a Focke ...

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 01:01 PM
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

I like 'em both but my all time favorite plane esthetically-wise is the Hawker Sea Fury. Fell in love with it when I first saw it roaring by. It is a perfect melt between a Spit and a Focke ...

Prob the best sound you can get...

Love listening to that bird at airshows

If youve got headphones on..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlxtZSxF3pE

fruitbat
07-14-2012, 01:11 PM
agree with the fury, it sounds and looks awesome, best display at flying legends this year as well,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yB8-IyLDIy8

Its the pinnacle of prop fighters development in my eyes (although best looking goes to the DeHavilland Hornet, wish there was still one around:( )

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 01:22 PM
The Ash62 (a derived engine from the Wright Cyclone and older brother of the Ash 82) is also delightful to ear.

I was in Varradero/Cuba three weeks ago and every morning I was woke up by a low flying An2 skimming the roof top of this flat city built all in length on a finger like narrow peninsula. I don't know what those guys where doing but I did ear them 3 day in a row. My room was in a small building at the 3rd floor and the last day I had the time to jump out of the bed and run to the balcony just to see it nearly in profile and fully hear that beautiful grave tone that reveal nearly each stroke of its engine.

The girl that day might hve been really confused to see me getting exited that way oooops ;)

fruitbat
07-14-2012, 01:26 PM
one of the best if not very usual sounds i've ever heard was an i16 at Duxford 2 years ago.

kinda sounds like its chewing itself apart!

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 01:27 PM
one of the best if not very usual sounds i've ever heard was an i16 at Duxford 2 years ago.

kinda sounds like its chewing itself apart!

Haha..yea i was there and heard that...

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 01:27 PM
one of the best if not very usual sounds i've ever heard was an i16 at Duxford 2 years ago.

kinda sounds like its chewing itself apart!

Ash62 = M25 ;)

ATAG_Snapper
07-14-2012, 01:31 PM
A little-known fact about the Real Life Mark I & II Spitfires of 1940 Battle of Britain fame is that the pilots could slide the canopy back at any speed to listen for enemy a/c sneaking up from behind. The 109's couldn't do this because of their inferior side-opening canopy design. The Cliffs of Dover sim models this perfectly. I can't put my hands on any documentation of this, but I read it on the Internet, so it must be true.

Sammi79
07-14-2012, 01:41 PM
A little-known fact about the Real Life Mark I & II Spitfires of 1940 Battle of Britain fame is that the pilots could slide the canopy back at any speed to listen for enemy a/c sneaking up from behind. The 109's couldn't do this because of their inferior side-opening canopy design. The Cliffs of Dover sim models this perfectly. I can't put my hands on any documentation of this, but I read it on the Internet, so it must be true.

Undoubtably. This would prove an adequate defense even against the Sea Furies, whose characteristic loud motors would give them away from about 2 kilometers.

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 01:49 PM
This thread will be locked in time, I garentee it!

However whilst its still open, I'd like to point out the following:

THere is a difference to what a pilot wrote in a book years after an event and science fact. Im not saying any of the pilots were lying! I am saying somethings that they remembered as a first hand witness might not have been actually what was happening. Fear, adrenaline, perspective, where it was viewed from and many other things go into a memory. So without actual figures from instrument recorded flights then unfortunatley all pilot accounts are "hearsay". :(

Sammi79
07-14-2012, 01:59 PM
This thread will be locked in time, I garentee it!

I hope not, so far it has remained light hearted, for more than 20 replies! this seems to me to be quite unusual at the moment!

THere is a difference to what a pilot wrote in a book years after an event and science fact. Im not saying any of the pilots were lying! I am saying somethings that they remembered as a first hand witness might not have been actually what was happening. Fear, adrenaline, perspective, where it was viewed from and many other things go into a memory. So without actual figures from instrument recorded flights then unfortunatley all pilot accounts are "hearsay". :(

I see your valid point and raise you a further consideration:

In the absence of the scientific information (which can also be flawed depending on the controls of the tests etc.) the best that can be done is a meta analysis of these first hand anecdotal accounts. the mean results of the combined whole of these accounts will be more accurate than any individual account, and if that is all that there is to go on, then we should go with that IMHO.

Regards,
Sam.

fruitbat
07-14-2012, 02:03 PM
So without actual figures from instrument recorded flights then unfortunatley all pilot accounts are "hearsay". :(

Rubbish, although what you said has to be taken into account, to ignore first hand evidence as hearsay completely is ridiculous imo.

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 02:04 PM
This thread will be locked in time, I garentee it!

However whilst its still open, I'd like to point out the following:

THere is a difference to what a pilot wrote in a book years after an event and science fact. Im not saying any of the pilots were lying! I am saying somethings that they remembered as a first hand witness might not have been actually what was happening. Fear, adrenaline, perspective, where it was viewed from and many other things go into a memory. So without actual figures from instrument recorded flights then unfortunatley all pilot accounts are "hearsay". :(

Ver very weak argument, the recall of these guys is way more than just skewed perspectives, these are memories forged from life or death scenarios, they would have analysed and recounted them over and over as young men and would have remained as lucid as their menory of a first love.

Seadog
07-14-2012, 02:53 PM
http://www.spitfireperformance.com/spit1-109espeed.jpg


No wonder Galland asked for a squadron of Spitfires...

bugmenot
07-14-2012, 03:34 PM
4, Again in connection, he 'forgot' to mention the fact that the DB 601 had an option to overrev the engine above FTH and increase engine power, a practice used and described by Steinhilper in his book, who he as usual selectively qoutes enthusiastically to prove that the Emils propeller was 'troublesome'
overrev option: +15km/h above FTH
http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/attachment.php?attachmentid=9542&d=1336899153

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 03:37 PM
@Seadog : this graph is highly controversial... but you know that alrdy

Ze-Jamz
07-14-2012, 03:42 PM
Corr blimey...

If i had a pound........

6S.Manu
07-14-2012, 03:43 PM
No wonder Galland asked for a squadron of Spitfires...
Are you serious?

Seadog
07-14-2012, 04:03 PM
@Seadog : this graph is highly controversial... but you know that alrdy

Anything that shows Luftwaffe aircraft trailing RAF aircraft in performance is automatically deemed "controversial" by the 100 Octane Deniers club.

Seadog
07-14-2012, 04:06 PM
bugmenot.


Do you know of any Me109e pilot accounts of using the 1min rating in the BofB during combat?

arthursmedley
07-14-2012, 04:10 PM
To get the ball rolling, I will start. :)

All the evidence I have seen, which is mostly anecdotal suggests that; during the Battle of Britain, the early marks of both aircraft were very similar in performance, so similar in fact that victory was nearly always the result of things not related to the aircraft themselves, like pilot skill, numbers of aircrafts and tactical advantages (altitude, fuel, etc.)

Who's next?

That's all you need to say really. Everything else argued about in terms of relative performance and handling characteristics on these boards between the Spitfire and '109 (or the reds v the blues) is because we sit in the comfort of our own homes chasing pixels around a screen with a refly button.

The dicta Boelcke was valid from 1915 until the advent of the guided air to air missile. Everything discussed here must be considered within the context of historical reality. That reality was make sure you see your opponent first. Manoeuvre into a position of tactical advantage. Fire and then manoeuvre to retain the tactical advantage.

All successful fighter pilots were able to creep up behind their victims, blew their brains out and run away to do it again.

6S.Manu
07-14-2012, 04:14 PM
The dicta Boelcke was valid from 1915 until the advent of the guided air to air missile. Everything discussed here must be considered within the context of historical reality. That reality was make sure you see your opponent first. Manoeuvre into a position of tactical advantage. Fire and then manoeuvre to retain the tactical advantage.

All successful fighter pilots were able to creep up behind their victims, blew their brains out and run away to do it again.

It's true in real life, but ingame the things are a little different... because of this there are so many threads about aircraft's raw performance. Aircraft skills are far more important here than in real life.

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 04:16 PM
Anything that shows Luftwaffe aircraft trailing RAF aircraft in performance is automatically deemed "controversial" by the 100 Octane Deniers club.

That's not true. I don't have any preferences for the LuftW. I fly red as much as I fly on blue side. The only thing I am battling is the Fantasies of some Spit's illusionists. So I am a non-believer of the theories some are putting frwrd. And once more, this is legitimate in a forum (read it in the ancient roman sense).

Seadog
07-14-2012, 04:19 PM
That's not true. I don't have any preferences for the LuftW. I fly red as much as I fly on blue side. The only thing I am battling is the Fantasies of some Spit's illusionists. So I am a non-believer of the theories some are putting frwrd. And once more, this is legitimate in a forum (read it in the ancient roman sense).

Which "fantasies" are you referring to?

6S.Manu
07-14-2012, 04:22 PM
Which "fantasies" are you referring to?

Fantasies like this one? :-)

No wonder Galland asked for a squadron of Spitfires...

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 04:22 PM
Which "fantasies" are you referring to?

I think he means the ones where the Spitfire is credited with 'any' comparative ability against the 109.

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 04:27 PM
blablabla... nobody care Bongo. Keep concentrate on the subject today for once

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 04:28 PM
blablabla... nobody care Bongo. Keep concentrate on the subject today for once


Oh and which subject would that be then?

arthursmedley
07-14-2012, 04:29 PM
It's true in real life, but ingame the things are a little different... because of this there are so many threads about aircraft's raw performance. Aircraft skills are far more important here than in real life.

Then we would be better off discussing the response time of the human synaptic system or even which popular joystick on the market has a better response curve. We seem to want historically accuate flight models so we can turn them into some online ego travesty.

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 04:36 PM
I see your valid point and raise you a further consideration:

In the absence of the scientific information (which can also be flawed depending on the controls of the tests etc.) the best that can be done is a meta analysis of these first hand anecdotal accounts. the mean results of the combined whole of these accounts will be more accurate than any individual account, and if that is all that there is to go on, then we should go with that IMHO.

Regards,
Sam.

Agreed, like the port wing dropping in the stall first on the 109.

RoF has no data like we do for WW2 aircraft. As such their flight models are based upon this kind of info. ;)


Sorry Sammi, but the graphs are out now and that only means one thing...

Regards.


Rubbish, although what you said has to be taken into account, to ignore first hand evidence as hearsay completely is ridiculous imo.

I didnt mean totally ignore first hand accounts. I ment the graphs are data are pretty concrete. The memories - not so much.



Ver very weak argument, the recall of these guys is way more than just skewed perspectives, these are memories forged from life or death scenarios, they would have analysed and recounted them over and over as young men and would have remained as lucid as their menory of a first love.

Two things that make certain its not nessicarly a accurate! - indeed.



Its the same as police witness statements. You can have ten witnesses all saying something different...

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 04:43 PM
Farber...does your rule apply to the LW veterans annecdotes too?

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 04:47 PM
Farber...does your rule apply to the LW veterans annecdotes too?

Of course... :-P


What about the BoB pilot reports where both Spitfire and 109 pilots claimed the other NEVER turned inside of the other and vice versa? Its circumstancial to that pilots experience and perspective, place and time, air speeds and energy and the perspective of those from thier own judgement and perspective... This doesnt mean it is not true! However as there are so many conflicting reports we can only resign such reports to "folklore" and use the factually evidence of air speed climb rate etc... Only when many pilots agree on something can we consider to use it. - For example the port wing dropping near landing aproaching the stall and other such minor things.

Seadog
07-14-2012, 04:47 PM
Fantasies like this one? :-)

No wonder Galland asked for a squadron of Spitfires...

OK, Galland states in his memoirs, The First and the Last, that he asked for an "...outfit of Spitfires, for his group..."

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 04:50 PM
OK, Galland states in his memoirs, The First and the Last, that he asked for an "...outfit of Spitfires, for his group..."


Inadmissible using Farbers logic, Galland wen't on to say it was out of frustration and had no bearing on how he rated the Spitfire but of course being a human recounting a tale from the past he obviously didn't know what he was speaking about and he probably really did wan't a squadron of Spitfires.

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 04:55 PM
OK, Galland states in his memoirs, The First and the Last, that he asked for an "...outfit of Spitfires, for his group..."

Understand that Galland was a dignitary of the Nazi regime and as such might have needed to pleased the ear of the winners. Have yuou seen the vid when he did say that ? Hve a look, you'll understand what I mean.

This anecdote was debated by historian and among prime witnesses of that "scene" when asked the question replied that they don't remember G. saying that to RMG.

But once again and blablabla...

arthursmedley
07-14-2012, 04:55 PM
I didnt mean totally ignore first hand accounts. I ment the graphs are data are pretty concrete. The memories - not so much.


As we have seen, graphs and the interpretation of any data can be challenged because of the number of variables involved and whether the people producing these graphs were even aware of these variables.

Pilot, sorry, eyewitness accounts and memoirs are very often contemporaeneous to the events themselves and most were written if not during the war years then in their fairly immediate aftermath with logbooks and combat reports to back it up. Both RAF and LW accounts share a remarkable commonality in their fear of the bounce, the acceptance that most pilots shot down never saw their opponents and the acceptance that following an opponent round and round and round in a dogfight would invite a hail of lead from an unseen opportunist.

Arguments on every flight sim forum I've ever visited about aeroplane performance always degenerate into some "expert" denying the veracity of pilot accounts that differ from their own dearly held views because they know their graphs hold the real truth.

Seadog
07-14-2012, 04:57 PM
Inadmissible using Farbers logic, Galland wen't on to say it was out of frustration and had no bearing on how he rated the Spitfire but of course being a human recounting a tale from the past he obviously didn't know what he was speaking about and he probably really did wan't a squadron of Spitfires.

Hmm so we can also discount Gallands assement of the 109e/Spitfire as being "...not so suitable for purely defensive purposes as the Spitfire, which, although a little slower, was much more manoeuvrable..."

Since we all know that the Spitfire was somewhat faster...;)

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 05:01 PM
As we have seen, graphs and the interpretation of any data can be challenged because of the number of variables involved and whether the people producing these graphs were even aware of these variables.

Pilot, sorry, eyewitness accounts and memoirs are very often contemporaeneous to the events themselves and most were written if not during the war years then in their fairly immediate aftermath with logbooks and combat reports to back it up. Both RAF and LW accounts share a remarkable commonality in their fear of the bounce, the acceptance that most pilots shot down never saw their opponents and the acceptance that following an opponent round and round and round in a dogfight would invite a hail of lead from an unseen opportunist.

Arguments on every flight sim forum I've ever visited about aeroplane performance always degenerate into some "expert" denying the veracity of pilot accounts that differ from their own dearly held views because they know their graphs hold the real truth.

+1

However the graph like the memories applied sensibly in the correct ratio should be good enough. You can never please everyone.

We cant have it 100% accurate. Afterall we are all aces in the virtual world...

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 05:05 PM
Arguments on every flight sim forum I've ever visited about aeroplane performance always degenerate into some "expert" denying the veracity of pilot accounts that differ from their own dearly held views because they know their graphs hold the real truth.
+1!

Seadog
07-14-2012, 05:09 PM
. Both RAF and LW accounts share a remarkable commonality in their fear of the bounce, the acceptance that most pilots shot down never saw their opponents and the acceptance that following an opponent round and round and round in a dogfight would invite a hail of lead from an unseen opportunist.



Very true, and the vast majority of RAF fighters were lost this way, as their primary task was to attack the bombers, thus leaving themselves open to being bounced, however this doesn't excuse Clod from poorly modelling the performance of RAF fighters.

6S.Manu
07-14-2012, 05:11 PM
OK, Galland states in his memoirs, The First and the Last, that he asked for an "...outfit of Spitfires, for his group..."

And what does he say after that paragraph? How does he end the issue?

Seadog
07-14-2012, 05:17 PM
And what does he say after that paragraph? How does he end the issue?

"...Such brazen-faced impudence made even Goering speechless. He stamped off, growling as he went..."

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 05:19 PM
"...Such brazen-faced impudence made even Goering speechless. He stamped off, growling as he went..."

Cue Bongodriver using my statement against it even though its not what I ment. :-P

6S.Manu
07-14-2012, 05:23 PM
Very true, and the vast majority of RAF fighters were lost this way, as their primary task was to attack the bombers, thus leaving themselves open to being bounced, however this doesn't excuse Clod from poorly modelling the performance of RAF fighters.

It's probably true, but only for the Hurricanes... since the main role of Spitfires was to engage the fighters, leaving the bombers to more stable and armed Hurricanes.

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 05:28 PM
Cue Bongodriver using my statement against it even though its not what I ment. :-P

Hello...

6S.Manu
07-14-2012, 05:31 PM
"...Such brazen-faced impudence made even Goering speechless. He stamped off, growling as he went..."

I don't want to search in the book for the exact quote... I thought you would be honest to report the right part, but probably I was wrong...

Anyway he states that he did it only to piss Goering off and he still preferred the 109...

Honestly, are you posting here in a serious way or really do you like to manipulate facts?


Bah.. I'm out...

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 05:34 PM
Hello...

I knew you wouldnt do it if I wrote that. Now you hurt my feelings :( :-P


Bah.. I'm out...

+1

Me too. ;)

41Sqn_Stormcrow
07-14-2012, 05:39 PM
Actually incredible. 70 years have past and people still debate this thing ...

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 05:44 PM
I knew you wouldnt do it if I wrote that. Now you hurt my feelings :( :-P

I knew you knew that if I knew you knew that I knew, then I knew I would.......wait......I knew that if you knew....no.....you...no....gimme a sec.....carry on chaps.

arthursmedley
07-14-2012, 05:51 PM
It's probably true, but only for the Hurricanes... since the main role of Spitfires was to engage the fighters, leaving the bombers to more stable and armed Hurricanes.

Very popular but historically inaccurate misconception. Squadrons were ordered to scramble and engage in accordance with their availability and their proximity to approaching enemy formations. Type of aircraft flown counted for nought in the summer of 1940.

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 05:51 PM
I knew you knew that if I knew you knew that I knew, then I knew I would.......wait......I knew that if you knew....no.....you...no....gimme a sec.....carry on chaps.

Of course you knew, your clever like that. ;)

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 05:55 PM
Of course you knew, your clever like that. ;)

as cunning as a fox who's just been appointed Professor of Cunning at Oxford University.

Seadog
07-14-2012, 05:57 PM
I don't want to search in the book for the exact quote... I thought you would be honest to report the right part, but probably I was wrong...

Anyway he states that he did it only to piss Goering off and he still preferred the 109...

Honestly, are you posting here in a serious way or really do you like to manipulate facts?


Bah.. I'm out...

I hope you were wearing your parachute...;)

Here's a longer quote:


The theme of fighter protection was chewed over again and again. Goering clearly represented the point of view of the bombers and demanded close and rigid protection. The bomber, he said, was more important than record bag figures. I tried to point out that the Me109 was superior in the attack and not so suitable for purely defensive purposes as the Spitfire, which, although a little slower, was much more manoeuvrable. He rejected my objection. We received many more harsh words. Finally, as his time ran short, he grew more amiable and asked what were the requirements for our squadrons. Moelders asked for a series of Me109's with more powerful engines. The request was granted. 'And you ?' Goering turned to me. I did not hesitate long. 'I should like an outfit of Spitfires for my group.' After blurting this out, I had rather a shock, for it was not really meant that way. Of course, fundamentally I preferred our Me109 to the Spitfire, but I was unbelievably vexed at the lack of understanding and the stubbornness with which the command gave us orders we could not execute - or only incompletely - as a result of many shortcomings for which we were not to blame. Such brazen-faced impudence made even Goering speechless. He stamped off, growling as he went."

Note that "group" implies that he actually asked for more than one squadron...:grin:

I actually posted this to show how any realistic assessment of Spitfire is always disputed by a select few, even when it comes from the Luftwaffe side.

TomcatViP
07-14-2012, 06:11 PM
Do yo know that among the pilots present that day, nobody recall that story as it was found latter ?

As I already said above :


Understand that Galland was a dignitary of the Nazi regime and as such might have needed to pleased the ear of the Allied public. Have you seen the vid when he did say that ? Hve a look, you'll understand what I mean.

This anecdote was debated by historian and among prime witnesses of that "scene" when asked the question replied that they don't remember G. saying that to RMG.

But once again and blablabla...

If you are able to do this with an enormous sense of relativity try to imagine the Raptor's pilots stating in front of the camera that they would ask Panetta to buy Flankers in China (J-11). ;)

http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/fighter-pilots-claim-intimidation-22-raptor-jet-concerns/story?id=16294011

Crumpp
07-14-2012, 09:01 PM
Me109 was superior in the attack and not so suitable for purely defensive purposes

IIRC, he was talking about OKL requirement the 109's fly alongside the bombers in visual range and the bombers cruise speeds.

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 09:36 PM
as cunning as a fox who's just been appointed Professor of Cunning at Oxford University.

Isnt it, "as cunning as fox thats just graduated in cunning at oxford univeristy and recently been apointed professor of cunning at said university"?

But you know, thats eyewitness statements... :-P

bongodriver
07-14-2012, 09:37 PM
Isnt it, "as cunning as fox thats just graduated in cunning at oxford univeristy and recently been apointed professor of cunning at said university"?

But you know, thats eyewitness statements... :-P

No thats pure plagiarism....

5./JG27.Farber
07-14-2012, 11:45 PM
No thats pure plagiarism....

Is it? How come were not discussing the OP? :rolleyes:

TomcatViP
07-17-2012, 04:36 PM
Regarding the stall and to add material to what I was describing when Bf109 and Supermarine Spitfire are in a turn fight, here come an extract of the doc available here : http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19930092582_1993092582.pdf

As you can see, Stall manoeuvring require a lot of power and degrade the ability to turn tight (Cl reduced).

Note :
- "Average" as it was hard to precisely control the amount of G you wished (see Crumpp thread)
- The violent stall buffet was characterized by an abrupt unloading from 5G to 1G

This is inherent to elliptial wings that, ideally (means theoretically), are stalling at once (no tip stalling like with a tapered planform or at the wing roots like a rectangular one).

As I hve said it many times, a turning fight with a SPit Vs 109 hve many similarities with that of a Mirage200 vs an F16 all proportion guarded. You might be interested to document yourself on the latter example to get an idea of what I am trying to describe.

EDIT: click here to see what I was writing http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpost.php?p=442976&postcount=107

Fenrir
07-17-2012, 10:59 PM
This is inherent to elliptial wings that, ideally (means theoretically), are stalling at once (no tip stalling like with a tapered planform or at the wing roots like a rectangular one).



This is where extra research is your friend Tomcat. Lookup 'washout' in terms of Spitfire wings. You could be surprised.

The Spitfire buffet that so many Spitfire pilots talked about was dure to this washout. The wing stalled at the root first, providing the rumbling feedback that so many Spitfire pilots have quoted as riding - the outer wing and the ailerons were still flying giving until the stalled airflow moved outwards if the turn was tightned or speed decreased or both.

So, wrong on that one I'm afraid.

TomcatViP
07-18-2012, 06:39 AM
did you read the doc ?
1. graph is stated with "no washout"
2. the test describe a real flight test

I am not professoring Fenhir. I give explanation. Stall description -> theorized phenomena.

The goal is to make more players aware and immune to evangelist of one side or another.

But I cloud hve completed with more: look af the Re along the wing. You'll understand why ell wing are an illusion.

Or with the wing spar.

Geo Wash out is to prevent stall eh yeah and prevent aileron loss of ctrl. But in the case of that wing planform it's a draggy configuration. And drag and lift I was talking about little Jedy.

but buffet is due to the aero washout (the turbulence hitting the elevator) not the geometrical washout on the wing.

If you had take the time to read the doc linked in my post, you'd see this point. I gave plenty of info for the reader to make his own mind and to draw the same conclusion. You'd see, it's an honest behaviour far far away from a post that pick parts of the info and mud it with sarcasms.

Hve fun

Glider
07-18-2012, 01:01 PM
Taking a look at it a different way the Difference between the Spit and the 109 tended to flow as different types came into service.

From a personal point of view this is how I see it.

BOB
I go for the Me109 as I prefer its weapons and also because by simply pushing the stick into a neg G the 109 has a very effective escape option that is very quick and very easy to do even by the rawest of recruits.

Me109 F2 vs Spit IIb
I go with the SPit as the weapons on the F2 were too light, something quickly resolved

Me109 F4 vs Spit V
For fighter vs fighter the Me109 had the edge, but it has to be said that the SPit was more flexible as a GA aircraft.

Spit IX ve Me109 G
The SPit IX had the advantage. It was a better HA fighter, the increased speeds of both aircraft also played into the hands of the SPit. Both were affected but the Spit was less impacted and finally the GA was becoming more important for both sides and the SPit was a better GA aircraft, Not a great one but better than the Me109.
Early 109G's had a serious problem with wing failures again resolved but its a factor.

Spit XIV vx 109 G
just magnified the difference

Summary
For the first half of the war the difference was close but the SPit was more flexible and this showed in the second half of the war. Finally in the often forgotten but vital PR role the difference was huge in the Spits favour.

Glider
07-18-2012, 02:23 PM
Topcat
You keep posting this as if its undeniably right but I believeit t have some serious items missed so have posted my comments. I do not pretend be an expert in areodynamics but was taught the basics a long time ago.

Feel free to correct my memory

Well once again you are picking extract here and there to build an argument. I only wonder if you did build yourself that way (I speak rudely tht way because I don't like your tone and especially the way you behave as ever tht look like to say: hummph, if you can't answer to this right now then you fail).

I thought it was my aruements that upset you not tone

At first, did you notice that we are talking rather differently of slow speed turns ? All the argumentation is based on physics and pilot accounts and turn around the stall characteristic of the Spit wing.

I had noticed and I also noticed that in the flight tests the Spitfire could stay with the Me109 when the Me 109 stalled. This I believe to be clear evidence that the Spit was better at slow speed.

if you take the both the 109 and the Spit at constant turning speed the SPit will always have an inferior radius as the Hurri will have with the Spit.

You do have examples of this don’t you.? If so I invite you to post them remembering that the RAF and Luftwaffe test establishments both agreed that the Spit would easily turn inside the Me109, as did the pilots both German and RAF who flew the Spitfire
The prob with the SPitfire is her configuration : the thin wing, the wide chord, the low span ratio and the elliptical shape. In the order of appearance it will increase the AoA, aggravate the drag generated by the turbulence around the airfoil and aggravate the stall characteristic and makes the airflow around the wing tips unpredictable (hence the exaggerated washout).

Wrong I am afraid. In the order of appearance
The thin wing - reduces drag, I am not aware of it increasing the AoA,

The chord - the elliptical wing may not differ as much as you think from the Me109. As I remember it it’s the Mean Aerodynamic chord that matters. On a wing such as the Spit the Mean Chord is some way out from the fuselage as there is a significant difference from the root of the wing and the tip. The Me109 wing doesn’t at first glance change much and will be closer to the root of the wing. There will be a difference but not as much as at first glance.

The elliptical wing - is particularly good for low drag. and while the washout will have an impact on the lift, it does give the ideal warning before the aircraft stalls. It should be noted that the washout on the Spitfire is not exaggerated. Indeed the washout on an elliptical wing is far less than the washout needed for a tapered wing to have the same impact
The more you turn, the more E you loose. This E deficit is only compensated by your engine. The more excess of power you have the more time you will stay in that configuration. The Spitfire had less P/W ratio than the 109 (except perhaps in your 12lb+ dreams and what will come next in your request) and thicker wings.

Partly right but you have forgotten the impact of drag which is at least as important. I do not know the figures for these two aircraft. The 12lb boost was in common use in the BOB and the PW ratio was very close even without the extra boost.
It should be noted that in the flight tests by both the German and RAF test establishments the spit always turned better whilst maintaining height. Which would indicate that the impact of Drag vs PW was if anything in favour of the Spitfire
You think you are a pilot so you know what come next..
Of Gliders where PW ratios are not a real issue.

The Spit will have to turn slightly nose down to compensate for the E loss generated from her draggier turn characteristic and inferior P/W and stay away from the low speed/high AoA/Split angle and bank dangerous situation. Invariably the plane with better stall behavior and superior P/W will stay longer in a turn where the speed decrease hence will loose less alt.

So either the Spit pilot will have to unleash the G before his opponent or will he start to spiral down.

In a turn fight, alt his G (you add the Gravity force to what your plane can do).
I believe this to based on a false assumption as outlined above. You also ignore the lift available, there is lift in a turn and that should be considered
Talking about the 109 and Spits models alternatively taking the leads in the perf race is all about this: the aerodynamics and the P/W ratio. Once one get the upper hands, it felt more dynamics in a dogfight and keep that ounce of extra E to get the advantage in a high G engagement.

the fact is that the Emil model had the advantage during BoB.

As mentioned before if you can find more than one German orf RAF pilot who believes that then again I invite you to post it.

Just like The FW190 enjoyed before the IX was launched. (yeah I know you also believe that the 190 was the tank Oleg sold to us with the first opus of IL2)
As mentioned before can you tell me where I ever said that the Fw 190 was less than exceptional? You do have a habit of making statements like this which are wrong I invite you again to support your statement or withdraw it

Crumpp
07-18-2012, 03:24 PM
In the turn, the violent buffet is a double edged sword. There is no such thing as a free lunch especially in physics. In the NACA measured results, encountering the buffet represents a change in available angle of bank. The airplane goes from 78.5 degrees of bank to 60 degrees of bank in one second.

****5G @ 147.73KIAS:

ROT = 1091*tan(78.5) divided by 147.73 KIAS = 36.2 degrees a second

****2G @ 141.647 KIAS:

ROT = 1091*tan(60) divided by 141.647 = 13.34 degrees a second

As a quick ballpark using IAS to get an idea of the scope of the effect on turn performance, we see the rate of turn drop from 36.2 degrees a second to 13.34 degrees a second. That means our time to complete a 360 degree turn changes from 10 seconds to 27 seconds!!!

As the Operating Notes relate, you do not want to turn any airplane in the buffet. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, all the energy that was being used to achieve an instantaneous performance rate of turn of 36.2 degrees a second from our ballpark went to warn the pilot of an impending stall, taking the aircraft right down well inside its sustainable performance envelope of 13.34 degrees a second.

Igo kyu
07-18-2012, 03:27 PM
@ glider: Eugh. Please learn to quote.

Eg:

First quote.

Enclosed quote.

Crumpp
07-18-2012, 03:41 PM
buffet is due to the aero washout (the turbulence hitting the elevator)

I agree the elevator is going to be hard to control from the buffet moments and disturbed flow off the wings.

The buffet itself is caused by flow reversal in the stall portion of the wing. As the flow reverses, it creates suction which creates drag, as our drag goes up, so does our lift. On the thrust axis, weight and engine thrust have to oppose that drag and the airplane will move to a new equilibrium point.

The large ample stall warning buffet comes from high energy flow reversal.

taildraggernut
07-18-2012, 03:44 PM
I agree the elevator is going to be hard to control from the buffet moments and disturbed flow off the wings.

Pretty sure the buffet is caused by flow reversal in the stall portion of the wing. As the flow reverses, it creates suction which creates drag, as our drag goes up, so does our lift. Something has to oppose that drag and the airplane will move to a new equilibrium point.

Something doesn't sound right here, the suction you are talking about is lift....how can there be lift if it is stalled....no lift = no induced drag.

Crumpp
07-18-2012, 03:50 PM
the suction you are talking about is lift

No, suction is what happens when the boundary layer seperates.

Watch the tufts, they reverse direction at the stall point for the section. That is a vacuum over that part of the wing creating suction. You can see the tips of the wing over the ailerion is still flying nicely while the inboard portion of the wing is stalled.

Buffet comes from a portion of the wing stalling. It does not mean the entire wing is stalled or the airplane is not in controlled flight.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxqaQLVZFHg

taildraggernut
07-18-2012, 04:10 PM
No when the boundary layer separates the center of lift moves aft and flow on the undeside of the wing is allowed to curl up over the trailing edge, this simly causes turbulence behind the wing.

Light buffet comes from the separation but for most aircraft the significant stall buffet is from the turbulent air impinging on the tailplane.

Washout is what prevents the tips of the wing stalling before the inboard.

as our drag goes up, so does our lift

This is the part I'm most curious about, sounds counter intuitive, increased lift increases induced drag, past the stall then form drag increases but I have never heard of an increase in drag inceasing lift?..

Fenrir
07-18-2012, 06:15 PM
did you read the doc ?
1. graph is stated with "no washout"
2. the test describe a real flight test

I am not professoring Fenhir. I give explanation. Stall description -> theorized phenomena.

The goal is to make more players aware and immune to evangelist of one side or another.

But I cloud hve completed with more: look af the Re along the wing. You'll understand why ell wing are an illusion.

Or with the wing spar.

Geo Wash out is to prevent stall eh yeah and prevent aileron loss of ctrl. But in the case of that wing planform it's a draggy configuration. And drag and lift I was talking about little Jedy.

but buffet is due to the aero washout (the turbulence hitting the elevator) not the geometrical washout on the wing.

If you had take the time to read the doc linked in my post, you'd see this point. I gave plenty of info for the reader to make his own mind and to draw the same conclusion. You'd see, it's an honest behaviour far far away from a post that pick parts of the info and mud it with sarcasms.

Hve fun

Okay tomcat, my bad, you have my apologies. I only scan read the links and didn't get what you actually communicating. It was late and I was tired but still, should have made sure I understood your post before replying. Interesting stuff, now that I've read it properly.

Sorry again for the flippant response.

Glider
07-18-2012, 09:03 PM
In the turn, the violent buffet is a double edged sword. There is no such thing as a free lunch especially in physics. In the NACA measured results, encountering the buffet represents a change in available angle of bank. The airplane goes from 78.5 degrees of bank to 60 degrees of bank in one second.

****5G @ 147.73KIAS:

ROT = 1091*tan(78.5) divided by 147.73 KIAS = 36.2 degrees a second

****2G @ 141.647 KIAS:

ROT = 1091*tan(60) divided by 141.647 = 13.34 degrees a second

As a quick ballpark using IAS to get an idea of the scope of the effect on turn performance, we see the rate of turn drop from 36.2 degrees a second to 13.34 degrees a second. That means our time to complete a 360 degree turn changes from 10 seconds to 27 seconds!!!

As the Operating Notes relate, you do not want to turn any airplane in the buffet. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, all the energy that was being used to achieve an instantaneous performance rate of turn of 36.2 degrees a second from our ballpark went to warn the pilot of an impending stall, taking the aircraft right down well inside its sustainable performance envelope of 13.34 degrees a second.

The Buffet is not a double edged sword. It is easily and immediately recognisable and resolving the issue is equally easy and immediately effective, all you do is ease off the stick until the buffet goes. It is easy to fly on the edge, you 'feel' for the start of the buffet and ease off as applicable, the normal process is to hold it on the edge with gentle movements once you have found the buffet. You don't fly in the buffet, you can fly to the buffet and then its easy to stay outside the vibration

To pull through the buffet would be dangerous, stupid and also difficult to do, the vibration would rattle your teeth and its impossible to miss it. One benefit of using the buffet is that you do this with your head looking out of the cockpit, you don't need to look at any instruments and because it is something you feel it doesn't matter how noisy it is.

I once got caught in a thunder cloud in a strong thermal. Water got into my instruments, the only one I had working was an audio vario that told me by sound if I was climbing and an indication as to how fast I was climbing. To stay in the thermal in the cloud, I had to rely totally on the audio vario and the buffet giving me warning of the stall as I had no idea how fast I was going. By staying on the edge of the stall, flying outside the buffet just feeling for it every now and then, I was able to say in the thermal and ensure that I didn't exceed the Vne.

I say this as it proves that its effective in the most difficult situations

Crumpp
07-19-2012, 01:48 AM
The Buffet is not a double edged sword.

Sure it is and you understand you don't fly in it for maximum turn performance.

It is easily and immediately recognisable and resolving the issue is equally easy and immediately effective, all you do is ease off the stick until the buffet goes. It is easy to fly on the edge, you 'feel' for the start of the buffet and ease off as applicable, the normal process is to hold it on the edge with gentle movements once you have found the buffet. You don't fly in the buffet, you can fly to the buffet

Absolute 110% agree. You are absolute right.

It is easy to do in a stable airplane.

To pull through the buffet would be dangerous, stupid and also difficult to do, the vibration would rattle your teeth and its impossible to miss it.

Not really, In fact accelerated stalls are a testable maneuver for a Commercial rating, now.

The amount and energy of the buffet depends on the airplane design too. Some airplanes don't even buffet before the stall. You get just a nibble and its gone!

Crumpp
07-19-2012, 02:39 AM
No when the boundary layer separates the center of lift moves aft and flow on the undeside of the wing is allowed to curl up over the trailing edge, this simly causes turbulence behind the wing.


Not sure what you mean here. The aerodynamic center does not change with AoA.

The Center of Pressure moves forward with increased angle of attack and disapates at the stall.

Is that what you mean? The CP moves forward, the AC is stationary and when the CP is gone, down the wing comes about the AC.

Cause otherwise you have it backwards, the CP moves backwards in infinity as we approach zero lift AoA.

One of the reason's why CP is obsolete.


Light buffet comes from the separation but for most aircraft the significant stall buffet is from the turbulent air impinging on the tailplane.

Washout is what prevents the tips of the wing stalling before the inboard.


All true. Some airplanes the turbulence is the predominate factor. As a general rule though, it is the buffet.

In fact, it is really not good design to put the tail in the wings wake. It can lead to an unrecoverable stall condition. That is the big issue with T-tails.

Near the stall incidence, in most airplanes, the tail by design is in clean air.

I have never heard of an increase in drag inceasing lift

Well it is the co-efficients not the forces. In level flight we are lucky our lift force remains constant.

The co-efficients have a direct relationship. So as the airplane's co-efficient of lift increases, the co-efficient of drag increases.

Drag, unlike lift does not remain constant. So when our CL increases lift force stays the same but our drag force goes up.

gimpy117
07-19-2012, 06:44 AM
@Jamz

For me the spit is more gracious and the 109 more viril (obvious seeing that nose). Just like comparing a dolphin and a shark.


to be honest, I'm used to BnZ tactics from Rise Of flight with the spad and other aircraft, so I tend to not really fly the spit as well as I could. I turn with it too much

Glider
07-19-2012, 07:43 AM
Sure it is and you understand you don't fly in it for maximum turn performance.



Absolute 110% agree. You are absolute right.

It is easy to do in a stable airplane.


Clearly I have no experience in a Spit but I do have some in aerobatic gliders which are close to the edge. The best are borderline unstable as are fighters, it isn't difficult to recover and they also have very light controls. All you have to do is ease off the stick a touch and you will immediatly recover. Its an almost instinctive reaction.

Stable gliders and I assume fighters are hard work, the physical effort involved can be very tiring and that in itself can make flying close to the edge of the envelope difficult. Some of my first aerobatic lessons were done in a Twin Astir and you had to really haul it around, she was too stable. Close to the edge the lighter touch gives you a better 'feel' for what is going on with the aircraft.

Crumpp
07-19-2012, 11:52 AM
The best are borderline unstable as are fighters,


It is a complete fallacy that manueverability and stability are linked by an inverse relationship.

"Just statically stable" has nothing in common with "borderline unstable".

taildraggernut
07-19-2012, 12:06 PM
Not sure what you mean here. The aerodynamic center does not change with AoA.

The Center of Pressure moves forward with increased angle of attack and disapates at the stall.

Is that what you mean? The CP moves forward, the AC is stationary and when the CP is gone, down the wing comes about the AC.

Cause otherwise you have it backwards, the CP moves backwards in infinity as we approach zero lift AoA.

One of the reason's why CP is obsolete.

I assure you I have nothing 'backward', I said nothing about Aerodynamic centre.
as the AoA increases the CP moves forward until the departure, the CP then moves to the back of the wing and doesn't dissapear, CP may be an obsolete mathematical model but the real world low pressure we know as the CP behaves as I describe, again I'm wondering where all the aerodynamic lessons are taking us?

All true. Some airplanes the turbulence is the predominate factor. As a general rule though, it is the buffet.

In fact, it is really not good design to put the tail in the wings wake. It can lead to an unrecoverable stall condition. That is the big issue with T-tails.

Near the stall incidence, in most airplanes, the tail by design is in clean air.

as you said all true, not sure where T-tails bear relevance here.

Well it is the co-efficients not the forces. In level flight we are lucky our lift force remains constant.

The co-efficients have a direct relationship. So as the airplane's co-efficient of lift increases, the co-efficient of drag increases.

Drag, unlike lift does not remain constant. So when our CL increases lift force stays the same but our drag force goes up.

How does this answer my question? you didn't explain how drag inceases lift.

Crumpp
07-19-2012, 02:19 PM
CP may be an obsolete mathematical model

Yes it is because it does NOT accurately describe what happens in the real world.


As a general rule though, it is the buffet.

It is not good design to put the tail in the wings wake.

you didn't explain how drag inceases lift.

I certainly did explain it. What part did you not understand? Exam these graphs and maybe you will understand.

Crumpp
07-19-2012, 02:22 PM
drag inceases lift.


Look at the AoA chart. If the wings AoA increases, then our lift co-efficient increases and so does our drag coefficient.

If we add drag, then our wing will change angle of attack to compensate because it requires more power. Our lift coefficient will increase.

The relationship of lift to drag is fixed by design.

TomcatViP
07-19-2012, 02:47 PM
Okay tomcat, my bad, you have my apologies. I only scan read the links and didn't get what you actually communicating. It was late and I was tired but still, should have made sure I understood your post before replying. Interesting stuff, now that I've read it properly.

Sorry again for the flippant response.

Thumb up M8 ;) 8-)

taildraggernut
07-19-2012, 03:07 PM
Yes it is because it does NOT accurately describe what happens in the real world.

But is 'does'

As a general rule though, it is the buffet.

It is not good design to put the tail in the wings wake.

the buffet as a result of the turbulence impinging on the tailplane yes, we are talking about conventional aircraft here, you know the ones with the tail at the back like almost every aircraft flying even today has it, where the empennage is very much in the wake of the wings.

I certainly did explain it. What part did you not understand? Exam these graphs and maybe you will understand.

I see a Cd curve which continues on a smooth path and seems unaffected by anything, a Cl curve falling off at the stall and a standard L/D arc that also seems pretty unremarkeable but nothing showing how drag increases lift.

If we add drag, then our wing will change angle of attack to compensate because it requires more power. Our lift coefficient will increase.

the wing changes AoA all by itself? where does the 'more power' come from, these things don't happen unless demanded by the pilot and you certainly don't seem to be suggesting that.

The relationship of lift to drag is fixed by design.

yes it is, the L/D curve is the combined effect of Cd and Cl, in all your little graphs all I can see is the drag continually rising but lift dropping off at the stall, where exactly am I supposed to be looking if I want to see drag increasing lift.....am I being too litteral? I am only asking because you said verbatim 'drag increases lift'

CaptainDoggles
07-19-2012, 03:38 PM
the buffet as a result of the turbulence impinging on the tailplane yes, we are talking about conventional aircraft here, you know the ones with the tail at the back like almost every aircraft flying even today has it, where the empennage is very much in the wake of the wings.Do you actually even read what gets posted or do you just pick out bits and pieces? It's blatantly obvious that "putting the tail in the wake" was referring to the wake of a wing at high AoA, where the elevators won't be able to get you out of a stall. :rolleyes:

Same with your post in the other thread. "Are you equating combat flying with flying a circuit pattern?" Ummm... NO. Read all the sentences that are posted, not just bits and pieces, and then maybe you won't get so worked up about it.

taildraggernut
07-19-2012, 03:49 PM
Do you actually even read what gets posted

Very much so.....do you?

It's blatantly obvious that "putting the tail in the wake" was referring to the wake of a wing at high AoA, where the elevators won't be able to get you out of a stall

is that so?.......why are we discussing a condition that does not relate to the Spitfire then? Crumpp said it himself 'deep stall' (that's what it's called) is a condition relating to T-tails......name me a common T-tailed WWII fighter, either way the tailplanes on conventional aircraft feel the turbulence from the stalled wing and that is the heavy buffet, this will vary according to aircraft but it's the more common situation.

Same with your post in the other thread. "Are you equating combat flying with flying a circuit pattern?" Ummm... NO

Then why did he say anything about flying a pattern?......oooohh sarcasm of course....well in which case I had the right to treat it with contempt.

NO. Read all the sentences that are posted, not just bits and pieces, and then maybe you won't get so worked up about it.

Don't tell me what to do, I read everything I need to, what is your excuse for getting worked up?....now back on topic please.

:rolleyes:

Glider
07-19-2012, 06:37 PM
It is a complete fallacy that manueverability and stability are linked by an inverse relationship.

"Just statically stable" has nothing in common with "borderline unstable".

Sorry Crumpp but this statement is totally wrong. A Ground Attack aircraft is normally very stable as it spends a lot of time at very low altitude where the air is rougher. However it is normally less responsive to inputs from the controls as the wing is designed to soak up rough air.

A fighter has a lighter touch and the reponse times are more immediate.

To use the Glider examples the Twin Astir was used to teach basic aerobatics but it was hard work. Most of the training was done on a K21 a very popular glider which incidently was almost impossible to spin. When I did an advanced course we used a Fox glider, a dedicated aerobatic glider. This was very sensitive and needed a gentle touch.

I have no doubt that all three were technically stable but the dedicated aerobatic Fox was far more sensitive, and responded to any input.

I work on the basis that the SPitfire was like other fighters the equal of the Fox.

TomcatViP
07-19-2012, 10:47 PM
Glider, if they wanted to make it unstable or even neutraly stable, they would hve taken great care that the ailerons had the same sensitivity. It's quite unpleasant to have to make wide move in the roll axis when you've got a narrow travel range longitudinally.

The fact is that many bi-plans were marginally stable (inherent to their shape and short fuselage). Perhaps that experienced professional military pilots with years of flying the biplans in the 30's didn't bother that much that Spit annoying characteristic in regard of the general perfs improvement.

Glider
07-19-2012, 11:19 PM
Tomcat
Find any pilot of any nation including German ones, who found the Spitfire difficult or unpleasent to fly. If it was as difficult as people are making out you should be able to find someone.

Just remember that Molders described the SPitfire as being faultless in a turn and childishly easy to take off and land. He found it much easier that the Me109.

Stability depends on what you want out of the aircraft. As I tried to show with the different Gliders, the dedicated aerobatic Fox was far more sensitive than the others. A Fighter needs to be more sensative than any other type of fighting machine because of what it does.
This goes back to the first air combats in WW1. Generally speaking the first RFC fighting aircraft were too stable and couldn't mix it with the German fighters. This trend was broken with later fighters until the Camel which was probably too far the other way. Even here the establishment SE5a was more stable than the Camel. Stability is't one measurement, there are degrees of stability. Many bi-plans were marginally stable as you say, but many were very stable it depended what you wanted out of the design.

I admit that I don't understand your statement they would hve taken great care that the ailerons had the same sensitivity The ailerons are the same in each wing, but its late and I might be missing something obvious.

gimpy117
07-20-2012, 05:40 AM
I dunno, those graphs before, are nice...but lets face it...the Graph for the Spit, the one that shows blazing speed is on 12 pound boost. And that would Cook your engine. So really unless you are in emergency go for broke mode you won't beat an ME-109. And heck In real life emergency power was for just that, not chasing an ME-109 when he's extending all kill crazy. :rolleyes:

Glider
07-20-2012, 09:35 AM
I dunno, those graphs before, are nice...but lets face it...the Graph for the Spit, the one that shows blazing speed is on 12 pound boost. And that would Cook your engine. So really unless you are in emergency go for broke mode you won't beat an ME-109. And heck In real life emergency power was for just that, not chasing an ME-109 when he's extending all kill crazy. :rolleyes:

Five minutes was more than sufficient for most combats and you could normally go for longer than that should the need arise. You would be very unlucky if everything went very quiet after 6 mins

taildraggernut
07-20-2012, 09:41 AM
Five minutes was more than sufficient for most combats and you could normally go for longer than that should the need arise. You would be very unlucky if everything went very quiet after 6 mins

Quite, 5 minutes was a guaranteed time, a failure was 'possible' after 5 minutes.

TomcatViP
07-20-2012, 10:21 AM
Tomcat
Find any pilot of any nation including German ones, who found the Spitfire difficult or unpleasent to fly. If it was as difficult as people are making out you should be able to find someone.


Naca & RAE curves describe instrumented flights were the test pilot had to follow a predetermined trajectory. Nothing like what most of the fighter pilot will try to do.

Still it is interesting that it give us an indication that the ctrls were not the one we have in the sim where the Spitfire act like an F18.

Attention to details and imperfections are what makes a great sim.


Molders described the SPitfire as being faultless in a turn and childishly easy to take off and land. He found it much easier that the Me109.


I hve always said that I do believe that the 109 was more difficult to master than the Spit. It's an evidence for me.

What you told us about your experience in gliders is interesting. Thank you for the feed-back.



I admit that I don't understand your statement they would hve taken great care that the ailerons had the same sensitivity The ailerons are the same in each wing, but its late and I might be missing something obvious.

I was talking of the travel range in roll that shld be more or less the same as the one in pitch -ie control harmonization - sry for my bad English

It would be interesting (and relatively easy) to hve it implemented in the Spit model.

TomcatViP
07-20-2012, 10:26 AM
Quite, 5 minutes was a guaranteed time, a failure was 'possible' after 5 minutes.

Hve you seen that in the MkII manual they are talking abt 1min at T.O for the 12lb boost rate ? And did you notice that the MKII had also a new eng fitted ?

taildraggernut
07-20-2012, 10:32 AM
Hve you seen that in the MkII manual they are talking abt 1min at T.O for the 12lb boost rate ? And did you notice that the MKII had also a new eng fitted ?

I'm saying that if it says 5 minutes in the notes it means you are guaranteed 5 minutes, just like 1 minute = 1 minute guaranteed

I'm not disputing the actual limitations, sorry for the confusion.

TomcatViP
07-20-2012, 10:36 AM
Sry myself. I am too sensitive on that file :rolleyes:

Kwiatek
07-20-2012, 10:52 AM
Hve you seen that in the MkII manual they are talking abt 1min at T.O for the 12lb boost rate ? And did you notice that the MKII had also a new eng fitted ?

You miss Spitfire with 109.

1 minute TO emergency power was allowed for 109 E at 1.4 ( 1.45) Ata,

and 5 minutes was for Emergency power at 1.3 ( 1.35 Ata) - which in CLOD you could used for all day until your fuel is gone.

For Spitfire MK1 100 Octan +12 lbs was definitly 5-minutes emergency power and for SPitfire MK II +12 lbs was probably initialy 3-minutes emergency then also 5 minutes time limit. I see no reason why Merlin XII could not stand 5-minutes emergency power if Merlin III could do it without problem expecially if MErlin XII was designated for 100 Octan fuel more then MErlin III ( which was adopted only).

Robo.
07-20-2012, 02:25 PM
For Spitfire MK1 100 Octan +12 lbs was definitly 5-minutes emergency power and for SPitfire MK II +12 lbs was probably initialy 3-minutes emergency then also 5 minutes time limit. I see no reason why Merlin XII could not stand 5-minutes emergency power if Merlin III could do it without problem expecially if MErlin XII was designated for 100 Octan fuel more then MErlin III ( which was adopted only).

Exactly - the Merln XII was further developement of the III and with all mods standardised and more robust components it was certainly more durable than the earlier version (Merlin III). Plus the more effective cooling... We must stick to the pilot's notes and I should be noted that the boost cut-out was working on a different principle on the Spitfire Mk.II (throttle gate) than on the Spitfire Mk.I (bowden cable). This has been well discussed in the other threads.

I agree on the 109s raping the 'Afterburner' button with no penalty whereby you will cook your Merlin even if flown by the book at some occasions. :o

The main problem I see in this kind of discussions on a sim forums is that either side (red or blue) simply can't appreciate what the other side is saying or what they are facing in the game. The reason is that majority of the pilots fly exclusively RAF or Luftwaffe (there is absolutely nothing wrong with that) and they simply have got no idea what is going on in the 'others' cockpits or about the game balance, yet they still like to comment on that very topics. As a keen fighter pilot on any side of the Channel, I am often astonished with what some people say in here, e.g. Spitfire is just a faster Hurricane or that Spitfire acts like F-18 :o :o Similar views about the 109s from the red-only perspective.

I know this thread is probably to discuss real life aircraft and not how they're represented in this sim, but still. The FMs and DMs are still very rough and imperfect, game is still fun, even this forum is fun sometimes. But honestly guys, get real, some of you ;)

ATAG_Snapper
07-20-2012, 02:46 PM
Ah, but I'm sure those 109 pilots who complain about RAF pilots opening their canopies to use their "sonar" are NEVER the ones "raping" their afterburner buttons! ;)

TomcatViP
07-20-2012, 03:48 PM
Hey guys I am flying AS MUCH my beloved Hurri than the 109. It's perfectly even. I was flying on ATAG so you might have an interested look at my stats.

I will fly the Spit when it will eventually fit my expectations. That's it.

And I think that using the 1min boost repeatedly on the 109 is despicable. I am not doing that myself for the same raison that I keep my hood closed right after Take Off in the Hurri.

fruitbat
07-20-2012, 03:59 PM
I will fly the Spit when it will eventually fit my expectations. That's it.



lol

Robo.
07-20-2012, 04:01 PM
Hey guys I am flying AS MUCH my beloved Hurri than the 109. It's perfectly even. I was flying on ATAG so you might have an interested look at my stats.

I will fly the Spit when it will eventually fit my expectations. That's it.

And I think that using the 1min boost repeatedly on the 109 is despicable. I am not doing that myself for the same raison that I keep my hood closed right after Take Off in the Hurri.

I was speaking in general, I know that you used to fly the Hurricane quite a lot in the last official patch ;) You wouldn't be that impressed with it in the 1.07 though I guess. :grin:

TomcatViP
07-20-2012, 04:04 PM
If you want to get an idea how horrendous it will be, fire up Jane's WWII and have a try.

That was the last time I saw a good FM for that plane.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8Uq_dhWIB0

TomcatViP
07-20-2012, 04:12 PM
You wouldn't be that impressed with it in the 1.07 though I guess. :grin:
yeah I still hve got to test the new patch. perfectly true.

You switch yourself to the Spit ?

Robo.
07-20-2012, 04:20 PM
yeah I still hve got to test the new patch. perfectly true.

You switch yourself to the Spit ?

I fly anything as you know, but as a Squad we fly Hurricanes. I do fly Spitfires too (always did, mainly Ia in the old patch), mainly because you can't start the new Hurricanes on the ground - it takes some 10 minutes of intensive 'I' button hammering. :o

How much time did you spend in the Spitfires then?

II./JG1_Wilcke
07-20-2012, 06:48 PM
Naca & RAE curves describe instrumented flights were the test pilot had to follow a predetermined trajectory. Nothing like what most of the fighter pilot will try to do.

Still it is interesting that it give us an indication that the ctrls were not the one we have in the sim where the Spitfire act like an F18.

Attention to details and imperfections are what makes a great sim.



I hve always said that I do believe that the 109 was more difficult to master than the Spit. It's an evidence for me.

What you told us about your experience in gliders is interesting. Thank you for the feed-back.



I was talking of the travel range in roll that shld be more or less the same as the one in pitch -ie control harmonization - sry for my bad English

It would be interesting (and relatively easy) to hve it implemented in the Spit model.

That is my biggest take away from all this work and research. The fact being that these sims allow us a sneak peak into 'what it must have been like', and thats about it really. To really simulate the inate virtues and foibles of all these airframes along with all the other vagaries inherent in driving a wing in atmosphere is I think at this point in time asking to much from any sim developer.

Cannot wait to read the 109 information!

Well done!

BRIGGBOY
07-20-2012, 08:09 PM
They were both close enough in performance that tactics and pilot skill were the determining factor.

End of.

+1

fruitbat
07-20-2012, 08:22 PM
Cannot wait to read the 109 information!

Well done!

don't bank on it.

winny
07-20-2012, 08:51 PM
There's a famous account by Brian lane of a turning dogfight with a 109 during the BoB. For me it sums up the Spit vs 109 debate.

Lane found himself on the tail of a 109, which was obviously being flown by an expert, he found it hard, but possible, to stay with the 109 whilst it's pilot 'threw it all over he sky'. The chase progressed and the German pilot started circling to try and get on Lanes tail, and was gaining. Lane then describes 'riding the buffet' and in turn gaining on the 109. He then describes seeing the slats deploy on the 109 and the ailerons starting to snatch. The German pilot knew his situation was getting worse and rolled out and dived away. Lane couldn't catch him.

The reason it sums it up for me is that when 2 pilot's dogfight there's a certain ammount of weighing up of the opponent that goes on, they knew when they were up against someone good, and they knew when they were up against someone bad.

The dogfight starts with the German throwing moves that would have probably shaken off average pilots, that didn't work so he tries to get on the Spit's 6. That makes sense. It's well known that a lot of Spitfire pilot's would back off at the first sign of the buffet, when in fact you could fly through it.

At the point the German realised he was being caught he used the mechanical advantage he had and dived away.

Skill and experience didn't work so at that point he used the plane.

109 and Spit were so close, both had faults, both had pilots that knew how to work round them.

Al Schlageter
07-20-2012, 09:16 PM
Supposedly Marseille's last combat lasted 15 minutes. 109F vs Spit V Trop.

That Spit should have augured in at the first defensive move it made, at least according to an aviation expert..

CaptainDoggles
07-20-2012, 09:18 PM
Supposedly Marseille's last combat lasted 15 minutes. 109F vs Spit V Trop.

I think that's been de-bunked as a myth.

Edit: Let me elaborate: Not sure if you're a member on butch2k's board, but Henning posted a thread not too long ago about an article in the July 2012 edition of Flugzeug Classic, talking about a 15-minute dogfight against a spitfire that Marseille eventually shot down on 29 Sept 1942 and that the pilot of the spitfire was "the best he'd ever met."

The consensus over there is that it's a myth because Marseille's last recorded kill was on the 26th of that month, and his squadron was put on rest leave (or whatever the term is) for the next three days.

CaptainDoggles
07-20-2012, 09:37 PM
Forgot to include the link.

http://www.allaboutwarfare.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=1992

I think the board is set up so that members are required to be sponsored by an existing member. If you don't have an account, send me a PM and I'll sponsor you for one.

Cheers.

Al Schlageter
07-20-2012, 10:40 PM
"After his last combat on the 26 September, Marseille was reportedly on the verge of collapse after a 15-minute battle with a formation of Spitfires, during which he scored his seventh victory of that day."

Glider
07-20-2012, 11:07 PM
One small observation, riding the Buffet doesn't mean flying through it. Its flying on the edge of the buffet, touching it and easing off a fraction.

If you fly in buffet your wing loses its effectiveness and you lose performance. Try to pull through the buffet i.e. tighten further and you will spin out. Riding it is riding the edge

41Sqn_Stormcrow
07-20-2012, 11:17 PM
My guess is that what they mean with "riding the buffet" is that they fly along the state when the inner wing sections were basically stalled (or maybe oscillating between stalled and unstalled air flow) creating the famous buffeting sound and vibrations that was used as an indicator by experienced pilots.

CaptainDoggles
07-20-2012, 11:26 PM
"After his last combat on the 26 September, Marseille was reportedly on the verge of collapse after a 15-minute battle with a formation of Spitfires, during which he scored his seventh victory of that day."

Oh okay, we're talking about different things, I guess.

winny
07-20-2012, 11:50 PM
Here's what Geoff Wellum says about it (BoB veteran).

However, in a Spitfire, just before the stall, the whole aircraft judders, it’s a stall warning, if you like. With practice and experience you can hold the plane on this judder in a very tight turn. You never actually stall the aircraft and you don’t need to struggle to regain control because you never lose it.

Crumpp
07-20-2012, 11:59 PM
However, in a Spitfire, just before the stall, the whole aircraft judders, it’s a stall warning, if you like. With practice and experience you can hold the plane on this judder in a very tight turn. You never actually stall the aircraft and you don’t need to struggle to regain control because you never lose it.


Forget physics....

You have disproved it right here!!

:rolleyes:

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 12:09 AM
Tomcat
Find any pilot of any nation including German ones, who found the Spitfire difficult or unpleasent to fly. If it was as difficult as people are making out you should be able to find someone.

Just remember that Molders described the SPitfire as being faultless in a turn and childishly easy to take off and land. He found it much easier that the Me109.

Stability depends on what you want out of the aircraft. As I tried to show with the different Gliders, the dedicated aerobatic Fox was far more sensitive than the others. A Fighter needs to be more sensative than any other type of fighting machine because of what it does.
This goes back to the first air combats in WW1. Generally speaking the first RFC fighting aircraft were too stable and couldn't mix it with the German fighters. This trend was broken with later fighters until the Camel which was probably too far the other way. Even here the establishment SE5a was more stable than the Camel. Stability is't one measurement, there are degrees of stability. Many bi-plans were marginally stable as you say, but many were very stable it depended what you wanted out of the design.

I admit that I don't understand your statement they would hve taken great care that the ailerons had the same sensitivity The ailerons are the same in each wing, but its late and I might be missing something obvious.

The German report also notes the longitudinal instability. It does NOT note the CG position of the aircraft.

Quick changes of the trajectory along the vertical axis cause especially with the Spitfire load changes around the cranial axis, coming from high longitudinal thrust momemtum, and significantly disturb the aiming.


http://kurfurst.org/Tactical_trials/109E_vergleich110SpitHurCurtiss/109E_vergleichsflg_Aug1940.html

Glider
07-21-2012, 06:14 AM
All that proves is that you can have some longitudinal instability and still be faultless in a turn as well as easy to take off and land.

It also says that the Spit wasn't a very steady gun platform

Robo.
07-21-2012, 06:36 AM
Forget physics....

You have disproved it right here!!

:rolleyes:

By 'you', do you mean Mr. Wellum, actual Spitfire pilot during actual Battle of Britain? :o:o:o

lane
07-21-2012, 10:18 AM
Here's what Geoff Wellum says about it (BoB veteran).

However, in a Spitfire, just before the stall, the whole aircraft judders, it’s a stall warning, if you like. With practice and experience you can hold the plane on this judder in a very tight turn. You never actually stall the aircraft and you don’t need to struggle to regain control because you never lose it.

Forget physics....

You have disproved it right here!!

:rolleyes:


That's disrespectful and outrageous. Mr. Wellum is still with us, last I heard. He flew Spitfires during the Battle of Britain and as One of the Few did his bit, to borrow from Churchill, to save the world from sinking "into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science." Perhaps that's the source of the disrespect?

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 12:35 PM
By 'you', do you mean Mr. Wellum

Let's not turn it into something it is not. Apply some common sense please.

Winny posted that single remark out of context is the subject. Winny, who quoted Mr Wellum, does not understand that CG's move and aircraft change condition of flight.

I am sure Mr Wellum was absolutely right for the condition he is referring too. Just as I am sure the RAE, Operating Notes, NACA, and test pilots are correct for the conditions they measured.


All that proves is that you can have some longitudinal instability and still be faultless in a turn as well as easy to take off and land.

It also says that the Spit wasn't a very steady gun platform

Well the Germans did not take any measurements so it is just opinion.

IIRC, at normal and aft CG the aircraft is longitudinally unstable. Depending on the speed and by careful application, neutral stability could also produce "faultless turns" by careful flying.

Glider
07-21-2012, 03:38 PM
Well the Germans did not take any measurements so it is just opinion.



Yes it is an opinion, but its the opinion of one of the best German pilots of the time, someone who clearly doesn't have any pro RAF bias.
The German and British test establishments do not disagree with him and neither does as far as I am aware, any of the thousands of pilots of many nations who also flew it, including newly and at times poorly trained pilots.

I have asked a number of times for any examples from you of pilots who thought it difficult or unpleasent aircraft to fly, with no response.

Without any support your theory is just that, an unsupported theory.

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 04:51 PM
Without any support your theory is just that, an unsupported theory.


What theory??

You mean the measured results? The Operating Note warnings? The Test Pilot confirmation?

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 05:01 PM
http://www.spitfireperformance.com/k9788-stability.jpg

taildraggernut
07-21-2012, 05:10 PM
http://www.spitfireperformance.com/k9788-stability.jpg

http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpost.php?p=447236&postcount=303

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 05:27 PM
The graphs show a slight instability, if you cant cope with that level of divergence in 3 minutes then my guess is you'd either be paralysed or in a coma.


Wow....

In 10 seconds the aircraft changed speed by 40 mph.....

After 3 minutes, left to its own devices, the aircraft was changing speed 110 mph and on it way to self destruction.

The oscillation grew larger by 20mph to 40mph each cycle.

taildraggernut
07-21-2012, 05:29 PM
Wow....

In 10 seconds the aircraft changed speed by 40 mph.....

After 3 minutes, left to its own devices, the aircraft was changing speed 110 mph and on it way to self destruction.

The oscillation grew larger by 20mph to 40mph each cycle.

A cessna 152 will change that much in about as much time, luckily most people wouldn't be doing 'nothing' after 3 minutes.

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 06:11 PM
A cessna 152 will change that much in about as much time, luckily most people wouldn't be doing 'nothing' after 3 minutes.


BALONEY.

It will dampen the oscillation and the speed change will be non-existent in ~ ONE MINUTE.

taildraggernut
07-21-2012, 06:26 PM
BALONEY.

It will dampen the oscillation and the speed change will be non-existent in ~ ONE MINUTE.

Yes a cessna will stabilise quick, you missed my point, we are talking about the Spitfire here, the oscilations that your graphs show are really not vicious, while the cessna is in the process of stabilising I have seen speed fliuctuations of a similar magnitude, of course they are decreasing but a 40mph change in 10 seconds is miniscule, a half dead monkey with no flying training could catch it even if the amplitude was increasing.

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 07:00 PM
Yes a cessna will stabilise quick, you missed my point,

You missed the point.

The Spitfire will not stabilize, it will get worse.

That means constant correction and pilot attention is required to fly the plane.

As for the other contention, only the paraniod pointy tin foil hat crowd see this as some kind of attempt to "pork" their favorite gameshape.

The results are measured. I find it very amusing that and quite telling the individuals who cannot accept the results for what they are but insist upon some sort of reassurance to calm their fears.

taildraggernut
07-21-2012, 07:04 PM
You missed the point.

The Spitfire will not stabilize, it will get worse.

That means constant correction and pilot attention is required to fly the plane.

As for the other contention, only the paraniod pointy tin foil hat crowd see this as some kind of attempt to "pork" their favorite gameshape.

The results are measured. I find it very amusing that and quite telling the individuals who cannot accept the results for what they are but insist upon some sort of reassurance to calm their fears.

You missed the point again, I already said I know the amplitude is divergent, I'm saying that the rates of divergence on the graphs you gave are miniscule, mild instability is easy to catch and correct, in terms of emotional reaction I think it is you who seems to react the worst to a difference of oppinion with all these bizarre accusations you keep throwing around.

Crumpp
07-21-2012, 07:11 PM
I'm saying that the rates of divergence on the graphs you gave are miniscule

Again, Argue with the NACA, RAE, and Operating Notes....

The rates were significant enough to prompt a narrowing of the CG limits unless a bob-weight was installed.

Must not have been so insignificant, huh???

:rolleyes:

taildraggernut
07-21-2012, 07:17 PM
Again, Argue with the NACA, RAE, and Operating Notes....

The rates were significant enough to prompt a narrowing of the CG limits unless a bob-weight was installed.

Must not have been so insignificant, huh???

:rolleyes:

Nothing to argue, the RAE NACA and notes say it's slightly unstable and the graphs show it, and slight instability is just plain and simly 'no big deal'.

MkI's and MkII's did 'not' have the bob weight or a CoG revision, why they bothered in the MkV is debateable.

:rolleyes:

winny
07-21-2012, 07:31 PM
Let's not turn it into something it is not. Apply some common sense please.

Winny posted that single remark out of context is the subject. Winny, who quoted Mr Wellum, does not understand that CG's move and aircraft change condition of flight.

I am sure Mr Wellum was absolutely right for the condition he is referring too. Just as I am sure the RAE, Operating Notes, NACA, and test pilots are correct for the conditions they measured.




Well the Germans did not take any measurements so it is just opinion.

IIRC, at normal and aft CG the aircraft is longitudinally unstable. Depending on the speed and by careful application, neutral stability could also produce "faultless turns" by careful flying.

How the hell is it 'out of context'?
It's a standalone quote from a Spitfire pilot.

Are you saying Wellum is wrong?

And I do understand CG, I also understand that all your NACA data relates to a MK V. Which had a different CG, modified wings, different engine, different AUW and over 300 modifications from a Mk I.

I could also provide quotes from Brian Lane where he intentionally spins a Spitfire, or intentionally stalls one. Both things you have repeatedly said were forbidden. I'm sick of your by the book attitude, for someone who claims to be ex special forces you seem to fail to grasp the context of young men fighting for their lives and what they will do in order not to die.

Anybody who ignores pilot accounts is an idiot. As far as I know they are the only record of what happened when these aircraft were used for what they were designed for, combat.

Your dismissal of Wellum is offensive to me, and disrespectfully to him. Who the hell are you? Nobody.

Edit: I'll give you some more 'context' the preceding 2 sentences and the one after the quote I used...

If you want to shake someone off your tail you have to fly your Spitfire to its limits. In a tight turn you increase the G loading to such an extent that the wings can no longer support the weight and the plane stalls, with momentary loss of control...
...A 109 can't stay with you.

Crumpp
07-22-2012, 01:30 AM
Your dismissal of Wellum

:rolleyes:

Save your indignity for somebody that cares.

I dismissed you not Mr. Wellum.

Crumpp
07-22-2012, 01:33 AM
NACA data relates to a MK V.

They measured a Mk V but the issue existed in all the Spitfire Marks up to the Mk V. It was fixed with the addition of bob weights.

Here is the Mk I and the instructions for the bob-weights to fix the longitudinal instability.

lane
07-22-2012, 02:00 AM
They measured a Mk V but the issue existed in all the Spitfire Marks up to the Mk V. It was fixed with the addition of bob weights.

Here is the Mk I and the instructions for the bob-weights to fix the longitudinal instability.

Get a clue. That document is a hack. It is not a Spitfire I loading and C.G. diagram. A.P. 1565E corresponds to Spitfire V documentation. A cursory examination of the text will confirm that to anyone who knows what they are looking at. The 'IA' and 'IB' in the title block are obviously photo-shopped. You should be ashamed, but won’t be I’m certain.

Crumpp
07-22-2012, 03:42 AM
A.P. 1565E corresponds to Spitfire V documentation

You are absolutely right!!! AP1565 A & B are the Spitfire Mk I and II.

Here is where I got the document!!

http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpost.php?p=445236&postcount=21

It was presented as evidence the NACA could not do a weight and balance on the Spitfire.

taildraggernut
07-22-2012, 11:07 AM
You are absolutely right!!! AP1565 A & B are the Spitfire Mk I and II.

Here is where I got the document!!

http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpost.php?p=445236&postcount=21

It was presented as evidence the NACA could not do a weight and balance on the Spitfire.

Funny how you still used a suspect document as your own evidence though.

Glider
07-29-2012, 12:07 AM
What theory??

You mean the measured results? The Operating Note warnings? The Test Pilot confirmation?

Still waiting for the test pilot confirmation

NZtyphoon
07-29-2012, 12:16 AM
Still waiting for the test pilot confirmation

Except Jeffrey Quill and Alex Henshaw, who don't count because they did not have Crumpp's vast experience in aerodynamics and engineering.

Al Schlageter
07-29-2012, 01:30 AM
Still waiting for the test pilot confirmation

We are still waiting on the Stability and Control characteristics of the Bf109.

MiG-3U
07-29-2012, 08:43 AM
Get a clue. That document is a hack. It is not a Spitfire I loading and C.G. diagram. A.P. 1565E corresponds to Spitfire V documentation. A cursory examination of the text will confirm that to anyone who knows what they are looking at. The 'IA' and 'IB' in the title block are obviously photo-shopped. You should be ashamed, but won’t be I’m certain.

The only hack there is metric conversions of the moments because it was used to create Spitfire model for Targetware:

http://target4today.com/forum/viewtopic.php?forum=10&showtopic=581

The late war documentation for the early Spitfires (I, II and V) is basicly same.

As usual, Crumpp misinterpret the content of the table. It actually shows that the use of the bob weighs (inertia device) depends on CoG, propeller and tail configuration. Note that his original argument was that Bob-weights have absolutely nothing to do with CG limits:

http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpost.php?p=424903&postcount=245

And it was the RAE report 2535 which proves that the NACA MAC calculation was in error (see dimensions p. 7), just like NACA admited the possibility in the their Spitfire report.

http://aerade.cranfield.ac.uk/ara/dl.php?filename=arc/rm/2535.pdf

Anyway, you can continue to argue with him as long as you will, no matter what evidence you use, he will come back...

Glider
07-29-2012, 03:03 PM
Except Jeffrey Quill and Alex Henshaw, who don't count because they did not have Crumpp's vast experience in aerodynamics and engineering.

Don't forget Molders, Galland and the German test establishment. After all JQ and AH might be seen as biased

Crumpp
I believe the ball as they say is firmly in your court.

Crumpp
07-29-2012, 10:03 PM
I believe the ball as they say is firmly in your court.


Not really...

The game has been over for quite a while. You and some others continue to play on because you do not realize it as you do not understand the information presented.

You don't really want to understand and I am not going to force you either.

NZtyphoon
07-30-2012, 12:05 AM
Not really...

The game has been over for quite a while. You and some others continue to play on because you do not realize it as you do not understand the information presented.

You don't really want to understand and I am not going to force you either.

Ah yes, Crumpp's vast experience in aerodynamics and engineering - I guess it must be so frustrating being the only person who knows all there is to know about these subjects, while the rest of the world is made up of ignoramus'. What a shame that Reginald Mitchell did not have the benefit of Crumpp's vast capabilities - the Spitfire would have been a much better aircraft. And Jeffrey Quill could have done with Crumpp's abilities as a pilot on the Supermarine test pilot's team...*sigh* such might have beens.

TomcatViP
07-30-2012, 12:09 AM
Do you mean like he could hve designed the E-model wing right on the drawing board ?

Crumpp
07-30-2012, 03:31 AM
NzTyphoon,

The longitudinal stability and control characteristics of the early mark Spitfires is very well documented. It is used as an example in many college and university programs.

It is not some emotional based issue or even obscure if you understand stability and control. No amount of fan based wishing will change it. It is what it is and anybody who went to school for it can look at the measurements to tell exactly how the aircraft will behave.

Yes, it is quite obvious you don't understand it. Just as you did not understand percentage MAC, concocting a pointy tin foil hat theory and arguing for pages and pages about a non-dimensional proportion.

It is not my fault you don't care to learn about it.

robtek
07-30-2012, 07:34 AM
Bad loosers always switch to attack the person or the persons reputation instead staying with the facts.

NZtyphoon
07-30-2012, 10:00 AM
Bad loosers always switch to attack the person or the persons reputation instead staying with the facts.

Now, Holtzuage....

I would love to have this conversation with you. Should be a wonderful and refreshing change given your claims to be an engineer.



NzTyphoon,

The longitudinal stability and control characteristics of the early mark Spitfires is very well documented. It is used as an example in many college and university programs.

Yet another unsubstantiated claim; if the Spitfire's longitudinal and stability characteristics are the subject of so many college and university programs then some documented evidence from such programs would be absolutely ideal for a proposed bugtracker report. Examples and documented evidence of such college and university programs please

Crumpp
07-30-2012, 10:58 AM
http://www.cambridge.org/aus/series/sSeries.asp?code=CAES

About the third book down, NzTyphoon, is the one quoted.

[14] Airplane Stability and Control

A History of the Technologies that Made Aviation Possible
2nd Edition
Malcolm J. Abzug, E. Eugene Larrabee
Hardback | Published December 2002
Available, despatch within 3-4 weeks | AUD$187.95 | Add to basket


http://img832.imageshack.us/img832/3063/twofamousairplanes.jpg (http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/832/twofamousairplanes.jpg/)

http://img855.imageshack.us/img855/7210/twofamousairplanes2.jpg (http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/855/twofamousairplanes2.jpg/)

http://img825.imageshack.us/img825/4462/twofamousairplanes3.jpg (http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/825/twofamousairplanes3.jpg/)

http://img404.imageshack.us/img404/6078/skittishspitfire.jpg (http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/404/skittishspitfire.jpg/)

NZtyphoon
07-30-2012, 12:25 PM
http://www.cambridge.org/aus/series/sSeries.asp?code=CAES

About the third book down, NzTyphoon, is the one quoted.
http://img404.imageshack.us/img404/6078/skittishspitfire.jpg (http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/404/skittishspitfire.jpg/)

Oh goody, one of "many" - can we see some more of the many? And well done, Crumpp has just contradicted himself - again - with his comments on the DC-3...

The DC-3 was unstable in cruise flight only at it's most rearward CG limit. That limit was moved forward.



Yes, only at the rearward CG limit was the aircraft unstable and only below 120IAS. Above 160IAS, and trimmed out at the rearward CG limit, it was "almost neutral".

And here's another interesting fact; both the Typhoon and Tempest Pilot's Notes say that they were longitudinally unstable, and neither were as manœvreable as the Spitfire, while Alex Henshaw says that the so-called unstable gun platform of the Spitfire was a myth, so Crumpp can quote from as many books as he likes, there are other opinions.

Crumpp
07-30-2012, 12:59 PM
NzTyphoon,

Do you need the DC-3 report from the NACA?

Nothing in the college text, NACA report, or what I have said is contradictory.

NZtyphoon
07-30-2012, 09:35 PM
http://www.cambridge.org/aus/series/sSeries.asp?code=CAES

About the third book down, NzTyphoon, is the one quoted.


What this does show is a second-hand report on tests conducted by NACA, proving that the authors have read the same reports as presented in this, and other threads. In fact, the way Crumpp has quoted extensively from from this one book shows that most of his information on aerodynamics comes from here which can also be found (minus some pages) on googlebooks. (http://books.google.co.nz/books?id=wpYDYLuOix4C&pg=PA44&lpg=PA44&dq=gibson+1995+stability+and+control&source=bl&ots=fO4KTXAfOi&sig=JeeYJyjIXEAb-TMMo1J2PLB1EeU&hl=en&sa=X&ei=KXkWULXrA4eviQeuioGgCg&ved=0CFAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=gibson%201995%20stability%20and%20control&f=false)

Nor is it an unimpeachable source, as witness the comments on the longitudinal stability of the Typhoon and Tempest, both of which have Pilot's Notes stating they were longitudinally unstable.

Glider
07-30-2012, 10:55 PM
NzTyphoon,

The longitudinal stability and control characteristics of the early mark Spitfires is very well documented. It is used as an example in many college and university programs.



I don't suppose you could say which college and university programmes could you?

Crumpp
07-31-2012, 12:57 AM
My Alma Mater.....Go Eagles!!!! :grin:

You know we have a great football team?

Cambridge
Naval Academy
USAF Academy
MIT
GA Tech

Crumpp
07-31-2012, 01:14 AM
which can also be found (minus some pages) on googlebooks.


Read it. You might learn something.

FS~Phat
07-31-2012, 12:56 PM
Locked for 24hrs so you guys might get the message.........

FS~Phat
08-01-2012, 10:00 AM
Thread open again.. gents please stay civil. Next time several of you will incur 5 point general infractions or worse if you cant keep it from getting personal.