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Concern? it's actually reasonably typical behaviour for most aircraft, thats why you always get the opposite rudder in first in a 'standard' spin recovery. This is just getting silly now, analysing the finite points of the Spitfire spin qualities, but I guess some of you have gone too far in the debate to back down. p.s. nicely edited post once you someone posted some great evidence against your original comment. |
An account of a deliberate spin, in a Spitfire, during the BoB..
The pilot was later KIA. http://i822.photobucket.com/albums/z...e/8d26db76.jpg Good job he was KIA because he did something that was forbidden! Tut tut... |
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As I said alrdy this thread turned down to paranoia and maniacal behavior. Let's get out of that spin |
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I haven't got any sense of paranoia here but maniacal behaviour is becoming very evident among the Spit critics who are taking this thread down some very desparate avenues. Yes, lets get out of the Spin (with correct technique) and push for the much awaited 109 thread, this one has run it's course. |
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Sure! Spins there used as defensive manouvres: it was a tactic used by many pilots in many different planes...
Anyway it's clearly a defensive manouvre that sometimes saved the life of that pilot leaving your squad with one less unit in combat, resting with the enemy's decision to follow you. It keep the pilot alive, but don't make you win the battles. |
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Serously, whats the difference between an aircraft that is out of combat because it evaded an opponent and an aircraft that is out of combat because it was shot down?.....that's right, the one that got away will fight again, just like the account winny posted. |
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Sure that Vc was heavier (6900 lbs against 6200 lbs), but the Merlin 46 was more powerful than the Merlin XII. The V climbed better at those altitudes. Of course the stall speed was higher. |
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