Author Topic: 190A5 vs 190A8  (Read 65488 times)

Offline Stoney

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #210 on: April 09, 2010, 07:27:35 AM »

EDIT : i wonder if the quality and quantity of captured types for testing led to the differences between the
tendency for the very favorable RAF/VVS opinions of the 190s to be so much better in general than the USAAF/USN opinions ??? 

Or, it could just be evidence that 8 different test pilots could fly the same plane and get out with 8 different opinions.
"Can we be incorrect at times, absolutely, but I do believe 15 years of experience does deserve a little more credence and respect than you have given from your very first post."

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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #211 on: April 09, 2010, 07:54:31 AM »
i was paraphrasing a personal attack directed at me from someone else surrounding his misidentification of the plane type in one of the sources you posted here ...

nothing at all was directed at you sir you were only quoted in order to show the data in question which you introduced to this discussion.

i am surprised and sorry at any confusion that may have offended you sir ...

being misquoted and or misrepresented and then insulted about those misquotes is pretty common on these boards and i was at an "i've had enough" point last night.  

i'm sorry you felt caught up in things sir, imo you are a contributer just as you described ...

+S+

t

Please do not resort to making personnel attacks on me, when I have not even came close to writing something that could offend you! when people start to resort to personnel attacks during discussions it shows nothing but a lack of respect and immaturity who do not hold any communication skills. The links I posted held way more information and data on the 190 flight tests than your link to a documentry.

The reason why I did not post much on the subject; is because my lack of knowledge on the topic..I just thought I would do some reaserch on an intersteting subject and to share my results with the rest of the community..I was fully aware that one of the reports was for the dora, but posted it anyway for gerneral interest.
« Last Edit: April 09, 2010, 07:58:57 AM by thorsim »
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Offline jdbecks

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #212 on: April 09, 2010, 07:59:09 AM »
i was paraphrasing a personal attack directed at me from someone else surrounding his misidentification of the plane type in one of the sources you posted here ...

nothing at all was directed at you sir you were quoted in order to show the data in question which yo introduced to this discussion.

 i am surprised and sorry at any confusion that may have offended you sir ...

being misquoted and or misrepresented and then insulted about those misquotes is pretty common on these boards and i was at an "i've had enough" point last night. 

i'm sorry you felt caught up in things sir, imo you are a contributer just as you described ...

+S+



t

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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #213 on: April 09, 2010, 08:04:09 AM »
The Fw190 vs Spit V article you just posted has been discredited as a source for your claims on this very board in the past.

i am curious as to why?
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Offline PJ_Godzilla

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #214 on: April 09, 2010, 08:14:01 AM »
    Since we now both agree that overcoming the prop's passive resistance to longitudinal twisting is a heavy burden, then it is not much of a stretch from now on to accept that overcoming it requires taxing the wing's available lift with a leverage force coming from the tail?

   Which does mean that lowering power will reduce the depressing force on the wing all by itself, not just as an aerodynamic byproduct of lowering the speed (this is why in combat accounts the turn rate benefit seems INSTANTANEOUS rather than delayed by the time it would take a heavy airplane to slow down), which is what is being tirelessly argued against me...

    Well I am glad I finally did not type all this for nothing! That we don't agree on the FW-190A's relative turn performance is not important: pilot accounts of the day all agree on its superiority to at least the Me-109, barring a handful of test pilots running things at full power...

    I'll add a few links for your perusal about the FW-190A issue:

...

 I would think you might be an engineer of some sort?

    Gaston

 

I do accept this disk issue and, after going through my vector-based prop-alpha argument, as I'll coin it, I still cannot conclude that this is a "heavy burden". While I believe it would be entirely correct to conclude it as an incremental burden, barring test data, it is difficult to know the relative scale of torque due to this minor incremental angular deflection of the disk relative to the other forces resisting the turn. Testing it would be relatively easy using simply the spinning disk itself, sans other aero elemetns of the a/c, and rotating it with respect to freestream, then measuring the torque required to hold that angular deflection.

Where you had me thinking you bananas, briefly, was in your statement about the wingloading. While this effect will incrementally affect the instantaneous load on the wing, it does not affect W/A - the weight to unit area ratio and what we commonly call wingloading. After reading that, I was guilty of prejudiced dismissal.

All that said (I do go on - tiresome, isn't it?), I think your conclusion that the Wright-Pat testing was conducted at higher speed was likely correct. As for your assertions regarding the low-speed handling of the 190a - we're still left with an evidentiary deficit. The Russian accounts are anecdotal and of mixed assertion. While they claim HO's and turnfights are typically offered, they also assert that the LA-5 is a better turner. The time data is, as you stated, cryptic, since the flight condition is not stated. The Spit account is anecdotal and occurs in RW conditions. I can easily see how a pilot might think he's being outturned even if the machine so attributed actually doesn't possess a better turn rate or lower turn radius. Incidentally, when I first started flying AH, I always got the impression that the slowest aircraft in the sky was the one I was flying.

Finally, there are at least two things that I think bear follow-up:

1. while we have data regarding, and frequently discuss sustained turn performance, we tend to neglect instantaneous turn performance. I think that a peak turn rate is qualified by the displacement - we could talk about time to a given heading displacement, right? Do we agree that for such a given change, the faster "displacer" will tend to be the one with a strong combination of off-zero roll and pitch response? This is where, I think, the "close-coupled" assertion may be meaningful since, for a given level of elevator authority (peak force and distance combination - the "moment-producer"), the machine possessed of a lower pitch inertia (and lower pitch damping as we get into rotational pitch velocities that are non-zero, i.e., as displacement increases - this might be significantly different b/w types though I believe it will trend much like the inertial since mass-distribution is likely to be something like aligned to surfaces at distances) will be more responsive. I would LOVE to see quantitative data describing pitch authority for the different AH types - think of how valuable it would be for, for example, deciding on how much roll to use in your (generic pull vert and roll - not classical) immel against a given yank-and-bank banana - even if you can't see him. Of course, we already know the FW will get to the banked condition very quickly.

2. We know the AH FW is overweight, right?

3. It'd be very interesting to see if there was any low-speed eval done.

And yes, guilty as charged, though I now live on the dark side - PD Process Development. My academics in Eng were all Aero though I haven't been in that field since the early 90's. I'm automotive these days.
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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #215 on: April 09, 2010, 08:15:29 AM »
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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #216 on: April 09, 2010, 08:17:56 AM »
Or, it could just be evidence that 8 different test pilots could fly the same plane and get out with 8 different opinions.

yea, that is why i tend to go with opinions that have more than 6 hours of flight time in type behind them.
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Offline Stoney

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #217 on: April 09, 2010, 09:37:07 AM »
yea, that is why i tend to go with opinions that have more than 6 hours of flight time in type behind them.

Fair enough, but my point was to highlight the imprecision of these flight tests.  They rarely had any instrumentation beyond the normal instruments, and rarely resulted in any quantitative data.  Therefore, they always should be taken with a grain of salt...
"Can we be incorrect at times, absolutely, but I do believe 15 years of experience does deserve a little more credence and respect than you have given from your very first post."

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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #218 on: April 09, 2010, 10:07:34 AM »
Fair enough, but my point was to highlight the imprecision of these flight tests.  They rarely had any instrumentation beyond the normal instruments, and rarely resulted in any quantitative data.  Therefore, they always should be taken with a grain of salt...


pretty much my point to, one set of opinions should not define a FM ...

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Offline Stoney

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #219 on: April 09, 2010, 01:17:19 PM »
pretty much my point to, one set of opinions should not define a FM ...

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They don't--not in this game.  The math does.  I'm working on some stuff that I'll post up for everyone to take a look at.  It will explain, aerodynamically, why the FW-190 performance is the way it is in-game.  Maybe by the end of the weekend.
"Can we be incorrect at times, absolutely, but I do believe 15 years of experience does deserve a little more credence and respect than you have given from your very first post."

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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #220 on: April 09, 2010, 01:34:56 PM »
They don't--not in this game.  The math does.  I'm working on some stuff that I'll post up for everyone to take a look at.  It will explain, aerodynamically, why the FW-190 performance is the way it is in-game.  Maybe by the end of the weekend.

GL with that
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Offline Karnak

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #221 on: April 09, 2010, 01:57:44 PM »
i am curious as to why?
Because unlike a flight test to determine envelopes the E states of both aircraft are not known, nor is it known that Johnson's evaluation of what the enemy fighter could do or was about to do is accurate.  We have no comments on this from the Fw190 pilot's side.

It is never a good thing to be relying on in combat testimony as a source for performance information.  There are too many distortions caused by misunderstanding the situation.
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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #222 on: April 09, 2010, 02:08:42 PM »
i agree there to a point, but as an account i think it is a quality pice of data in so far as it goes ...

i.e. i am not saying the article says the 190 should flat turn better than a spit, but it does raise some interesting consequences to the roll rate initial turn rate problem a 190 could be for a spit ...

as a pice of the puzzle imo it has value and should not be dismissed totally, obviously nor should it define the FM.

since we can determine by math that we know the 190 should not out flat turn the spit we should be looking for why that pilot had that impression when we are trying to figure out what an FM should be.  that is very much to my point about the multiple source approach for the defined FM.  

Because unlike a flight test to determine envelopes the E states of both aircraft are not known, nor is it known that Johnson's evaluation of what the enemy fighter could do or was about to do is accurate.  We have no comments on this from the Fw190 pilot's side.

It is never a good thing to be relying on in combat testimony as a source for performance information.  There are too many distortions caused by misunderstanding the situation.
« Last Edit: April 09, 2010, 02:11:59 PM by thorsim »
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Offline Stoney

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #223 on: April 09, 2010, 02:45:29 PM »
since we can determine by math that we know the 190 should not out flat turn the spit we should be looking for why that pilot had that impression when we are trying to figure out what an FM should be.  that is very much to my point about the multiple source approach for the defined FM.  


Its easy if you consider that from the pilots perspectives, they see another plane gaining angles on them and so they casually use the term "out turn" when it isn't exactly the most precise term to use.  We don't know what "out-turn" means in any of these reports, because they don't use quantitative descriptions.  You never see something like "I was turning 25 dps at 230 mph in a 4G sustained turn".  There's no codified flight regime they use when they go up.  Its like a scientist putting together an experiment for a journal.  He says "I just invented cold fusion".  The first thing his peers are going to ask for is the method he used to achieve his results.  Even if he achieves his result legitimately, but can't describe the method, his results will be trash. 

Eric Brown is famous for having said a P-47D had a critical mach of .73, when in fact, after the war, there was a huge amount of test flying done with the Jug in the transonic range.  The data they put together showed the plane had a critical mach of .82.  This was the difference between one pilots single flight versus a standard series of tests, using instrumented aircraft, and a team of pilots and scientists.  Who knows, maybe Brown's Jug had a poorly calibrated airspeed indicator, or maybe he just read the speed wrong.  Maybe the acceleration of the Jug in the dive scared him enough that he got scatter-brained and forgot something.  The bottom line is that he's a human, and therefore fallible, subject to prejudices, and individual taste.  I've seen two reports on the FW-190 canopy and one said the visibility was excellent, and another that said it was horrible.  Which one is correct?  I've seen the cockpit characterized as "too cramped".  Well, if you're a P-47 pilot and you get out of that aircraft, with its enormous cockpit and extra room, and slip into the FW-190, its obviously going to feel cramped.  German pilots that flew 109s probably felt that the 190s bigger cockpit was a nice improvement.  Robert Johnson said that his P-47, after being fitted with a paddle-blade prop, could outclimb a Spit 9.  Doesn't mean he wasn't a great fighter pilot, or that I shouldn't value his experience, if I don't believe that statement.

Those reports are important to understand context.  But they have to be considered carefully.
 
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Offline thorsim

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Re: 190A5 vs 190A8
« Reply #224 on: April 09, 2010, 02:59:58 PM »

Those reports are important to understand context.  But they have to be considered carefully.
 


i agree completely, and would extend that to all data we do not know for certain, like we know the weight of a gallon of fuel and how many gallons a aircraft carries ...

all values for which we have conflicting data we should vet to exclude anomalies and then average the rest ...

from there we do the same with all our subjective data and use that for the final adjustments ...

that is how i would do things to get the final goal data for the FMs

 
« Last Edit: April 09, 2010, 03:17:57 PM by thorsim »
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