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Talisman 06-22-2012 02:32 PM

LW aircraft speed specifications
 
http://lend-lease.airforce.ru/englis...ikov/part3.htm

The above is a link to an interesting article named

Conversations with N. G. Golodnikov

Part Three. P-39 Airacobra and Yaks

Towards the end of the conversation there is talk about the book specification speed of LW fighters, which I do not fully understand. I am no expert, but should we take the book speed of LW fighters with a pinch of salt as a result of this information?

A. S. Nikolay Gerasimovich, if you look at any reference book, the superiority in speed of German aircraft—the Bf-109G and FW-190—is indisputable. Minimum 20—25 kilometers at low altitudes and up to 80—100 kilometers at high altitudes. And you say ours did not lag behind?

N. G. No, some difference in speed always exists. At low altitudes we were a bit faster, at high altitudes they were. The difference was on the order of 10—20 km. But this difference was not so great that it ensured overwhelming superiority. In combat it was practically not discernible.

A. S. Nikolay Gerasimovich, sometime relatively long ago I was speaking with a pilot—a frontline veteran. Right after the war they flew in captured aircraft. And no matter how hard they tried, they were unable to attain the speeds the Germans had written in their specifications. The shortfall in speed was significant. In the end, they prevailed upon a German, a high-level specialist, and asked him, “Why this shortfall in speed? Are we using the engine’s capability incorrectly?” His response was that they would never achieve the target speed, because the German specifications showed the theoretical speed, and they were attempting to attain that speed on their instruments.

Nikolay Gerasimovich, in your view, is this possible?

N. G. Of course. We had a group of specialists with us from NII VVS. They were examining specifications and were looking at speed. “What speed is indicated at 7,000 meters? 780? Take away 100. And what about 3,000 meters? 700? Reduce it 70 km.” This is how they calculated the instrumented speed and, characteristically, almost always hit their target. Perhaps they knew something about our focus on speed.

Text © AndreySukhorukov
Translation © James F. Gebhardt

zipper 06-22-2012 03:51 PM

... the difference between true and indicated?

csThor 06-22-2012 05:33 PM

[Tongue-in-cheek] Don't worry. Soviet frontline pilots also never got the performance their aviation industry promised. [/Tongue-in-cheek]

Seriously: One interview done decades after the war is neither indicative of any trend or fact not an authority on anything but a veteran's personal recollections. It's just a tiny part of a very long and very complicated equation.

Crumpp 06-22-2012 06:50 PM

Quote:

... the difference between true and indicated?
;)

ACE-OF-ACES 06-23-2012 01:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Talisman (Post 436864)
A. S. Nikolay Gerasimovich, sometime relatively long ago I was speaking with a pilot—a frontline veteran. Right after the war they flew in captured aircraft. And no matter how hard they tried, they were unable to attain the speeds the Germans had written in their specifications. The shortfall in speed was significant. In the end, they prevailed upon a German, a high-level specialist, and asked him, “Why this shortfall in speed? Are we using the engine’s capability incorrectly?” His response was that they would never achieve the target speed, because the German specifications showed the theoretical speed, and they were attempting to attain that speed on their instruments.

Not supirsed at all

robtek 06-23-2012 07:46 AM

This is so unspecified that it is absolutely worthless besides the anecdotical value.

What german fighters in which version and what equipment? No Information.

Were they trying to reach the 190 A8 speeds with a F8 or so?

And then hearsay from a german specialist, who might say anything to please his new masters.

Worthless for any real value deductions, i'd say.

6S.Manu 06-23-2012 08:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zipper (Post 436931)
... the difference between true and indicated?

;)

Flanker35M 06-23-2012 10:06 AM

S!

I wonder why AoA took it as a "truth" when certain criteria was met ;) For me that interview was nothing but an interesting study of viewsets, nothing more.

Osprey 06-23-2012 01:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robtek (Post 437221)
This is so unspecified that it is absolutely worthless besides the anecdotical value.

What german fighters in which version and what equipment? No Information.

Were they trying to reach the 190 A8 speeds with a F8 or so?

And then hearsay from a german specialist, who might say anything to please his new masters.

Worthless for any real value deductions, i'd say.


I think you need to prove that. :rolleyes:

Kurfürst 06-23-2012 01:27 PM

Well TsaGi actually measured their Bf 109G-2 a bit faster than the German 'official' specs... ;)


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