Originally posted by F4UDOA
Most of the information I have read on the problems with slats have been accounts of 109's having them open at bad times during dogfights causing them momentarily loose control (for lack of a better term) in a dogfight. Clearly the technology existed at the time but the Germans and the Russians seemed to prefer them on their fighters where the Brits and Americans did not.
Most of such information is based on the single RAE report on that 109E the french had captured after it belly landed, had a bent fusalage, and then passed over to the Brits who seen the thing for the first time and didn`t like the slats they never seen before on the fighters they trained with. I don`t know if they had trouble with the particular, damaged and badly maintained aircraft, but it can`t be ruled out.
What is appearant though, that the same problems was not felt on the 109G, which would mean it`d be hardly a problem on the similiar F and K:
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One interesting feature is the leading edge slats. When these deploy at low speeds or in a turn, a 'clunk' can be heard and felt, but there is no disturbance to the aircraft about any axis. I understand that the Bf109E rolled violently as the slats deployed, and I am curious to know the difference to the Gustav that caused this."
Besides, the slats open only if one of the wings begin to stall. On an aircraft with no slats, when this happens the wing will drop and the firing solution is gone to hell; on aircraft with slats the slats will open, restore the airflow over the wing, and instead of a violent roll, there may be some disturbance - or no disturbance at all, as the qoute shows. Another good thing about slats is that they enable the pilot to fire very high deflection shots - normal wings simply can`t support so high AoA that is required for those !
As for why the Soviet/German designs employed it, and US/UK ones not, it`s fairly simple, all the latter relied on wing mounted guns, not having an fighter engine I can think of that would enable them to mount fuselage weapons, being normal Vee ones, with rear mounted compressors.. and so the wing guns took the space away in the leading edge required for slats. And BTW, if the slats would be bad, they wouldn`t be on 95% of the modern Mach 2 jet fighters today...