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-   -   Stability and Control characteristics of the Early Mark Spitfires (http://forum.fulqrumpublishing.com/showthread.php?t=33245)

IvanK 08-07-2012 12:10 AM

I have a set of Orange covered Spitfire MKIIA notes (Paper reprint) that bear little resemblance to the ones in SCRIBD.

As was discussed in this "Thread that never ends" in the set I have Spinning was permitted if pilots were authorised by the CO or CFI at the OTU level. The Scribd ones say deliberate spinning was prohibited.

So two references with opposed statements.

IvanK 08-07-2012 12:13 AM

Originally Posted by Crumpp http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/images/...s/viewpost.gif
The aircraft's reaction to gun recoil could also be modeled. As an unstable platform, the arm is shorter which means less resistance to motion.


Cough If you actually flew the sim you would see it is modelled !


ATAG_Dutch 08-07-2012 12:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by IvanK (Post 452232)
Cough If you actually flew the sim you would see it is modelled !

And there's the rub. ;)

NZtyphoon 08-07-2012 01:04 AM

Reading the bibliography to the text of a lecture delivered in 1970 and referred to by Crumpp as definitive proof of Britain's lack of control and stability standards: Development of Airplane Safety and Control Courtland D. Perkins
(http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpos...&postcount=837)

http://i91.photobucket.com/albums/k3...e-page-012.jpg

http://i91.photobucket.com/albums/k3...e-page-001.jpg

The references stop at an ARC paper PUBLISHED IN 1913 - NOT ONCE does the author refer to the ARC papers from 1937 through to 1939-48, nor does he have any references concerning British research during the war years, instead concentrating almost exclusively on American aeronautical research - he had no idea of what sort of development the British had put in after 1913: this one is busted.

I wonder what we would see if we looked at the bibliograpies of most of the books referenced by Crumpp - how many of them concentrate on American research, ignoring Britain?

Crumpp 08-07-2012 02:58 AM

Quote:

Reading the bibliography
NzTyphoon,
Why do you keep confusing individual research with an established standard for all????

You obviously cannot differentiate between the two.

It is a fact, there was not an established standard for stability and control in the United Kingdom during WWII.

Glider,

You have constructed so many fantasies and misconception about this I don't even know where to begin.

Read the report. It is measured and defined.

What do you have an issue with?

You really don't need much to understand it. You can read the plain English text for the warnings in the Operating Notes, right??

You seem to deny they exist and keep accusing me of making something up?

As for spin recovery, is it so difficult to understand recovery ends in a dive?

Read the Operating Note warnings!!!

Quote:

Although the POH is the primary reference for recovery from a spin, the following can be used as a general procedure:

P - Retard the throttle to idle. In most aircraft, power hampers the recovery.

A - Ailerons neutral. Many pilots will attempt to recover from the spin using the ailerons. This may actually make the problem worse.

R - Apply full opposite rudder. Apply rudder opposite the rotation of the spin. If you have trouble determining which way the airplane is spinning, look at your turn coordinator or turn needle. It will indicate the direction of rotation.

E - Apply forward elevator. Immediately after applying opposite rudder, apply a quick forward motion on the control yoke and hold anti-spin controls until the aircraft starts to recover.

D - Recover from the dive. Once you have completed the four previous steps, and the rotation stops, recover from the dive. The descent rate may be over 5000 feet per minute and the airspeed will rapidly exceed redline. Remember to neutralize the rudder after the rotation stops.

http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications...tall_spin.html

Go out and do some spins in the an airplane, please!!

Make sure it is not approved to spin and leave the chutes on the ground. <joking>

:grin:

Crumpp 08-07-2012 03:29 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

NOT ONCE does the author refer to the ARC papers from 1937 through to 1939-48, nor does he have any references concerning British research during the war years, instead concentrating almost exclusively on American aeronautical research - he had no idea of what sort of development the British had put in after 1913: this one is busted.
Why don't you post the ARC standards.

Here is the NACA standards adopted during WWII. The USAAF and USN used these as the basis to define their own standards by 1944.

Until those individual service standards were adopted, they used the NACA's.

Quote:

One impor-tant contribution made by the NACA in this area was its famous technical report, No. 755, "Requirements for Satisfactory Flying Qualities of Airplanes." Representing a decade of work, the NACA introduced to the industry a new set of quantitative measures to characterize the stability, control and handling qualities of an airplane. The military readily adopted the NACA findings and for the first time issued specific design standards to its aircraft manufacturers. It is a classic example of the partnership between the military, air-craft industry and the NACA.
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/...s/WWII_prt.htm

End the speculation and just post the standards during the war for the ARC.

Thanks!!

:grin:

Crumpp 08-07-2012 03:36 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Here is the USAAF and USN standards adopted in 1944.

Quote:

During October 1944, the National Advisory Committee conducted a series of conferences with the”Army, Navy, and representatives of the aircraft industry for the purpose of discussing the flight-test procedures used in measuring the stability and control characteristics of airplanes. The conferences were initiated by the Army Air Forces, Air Technical Service Command, to acquaint the flight organizations of the industry with the flight
test methods employed by the NACA and to standardize the techniques insofar as possible as they are employed by the various manufacturers and agencies engaged in determining the flying qualities of airplanes
NzTyphoon will share the ARC standards with us shortly! :cool:

Crumpp 08-07-2012 03:47 AM

Quote:

I have Spinning was permitted if pilots were authorised by the CO or CFI at the OTU level.

What is the date on your Operating Notes that reference the spinning permission thru special training?

IvanK 08-07-2012 04:32 AM

Not special training just authorisation.

Issue Date July 1940 Revised Dec 1941 and Amended up to Al No 25K which was added according to the AL sign off sheet as Aug 1942.

Crumpp 08-07-2012 04:42 AM

Quote:

Aug 1942
Ok, that is after the inertial elevator was added to the design.


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