Originally posted by MiloMorai
There was problems jettising the canopy and the Radinger/Otto book reports on this.
How does one get out of the a/c when upside down if the canopy will not open. Don't forget there is a 400l gas tank right above.
Uhum. Radinger Ottos book in fact gives details of canopy jettison test with the
later Erla Haube. Jettisoning was w/o problem when jettison levers operated in
the right order, the tests were specifically about what
if the pilot operates the levers in wrong, exact reverse order than he should... during the tests the canopy would open in many cases, but would remain attached to fuselage etc.
And as a result of the test the jettisoning trials, the canopy could be jettisoned reliably
even if the levers were operated against prescribed instructions...
In other words, Milo is represanting a *very special version* of the original source - as always.
Otherwise... I have read Spitfires had a crowbar in the cocpit as standard equipment (you may guess the reason), and the book 'Fighters' also mentions that several RAF pilots during BoB carried a pistol with themselves, in case the Spit catches fire, to be used as a 'painkiller'... the movie Dark Blue world has also a nice scene of what happens if a Spitfire`s tank, 85 gallons mounted
right in front of the cocpit, gets holed.. you`d literally swim in the petrol.
-cramped cockpit both in width and in height True, as on other WW2 fighters.
-canopy swings to side And? So does on Me 262.
-wide canopy framing obstructs visibility greatly Stiegler, Hanna didn`t find it very restrictive otoh.
-lack of in flight adjustable rudder and aileron trim tabs what niklas said. Other 109 pilots didn`t complain about it.
-unretractable tailwheel Tailwheel
WAS retractable on F-1, F-2, F-3, F-4, G-1, G-2, G-3 and G-4. If Kokko flew a plane that was w/o one, it comes as an atypical special case, or a very late production a/c.
-blind flying instrumentation poor Considering we speak of a daylight fighter, what`s the surprise ? Otherwise it had the same thing as other fighters of the time for blind flying - artifical horizon etc. 109s built as bad weather variants had full instrumentation for nightflying, as well as autopilot, and from 1943 extra electrical navigation equipment, DF radio, and the Y-system that was used to navigate LW bombers over English nights w. hundred meter accuracy.. I am not aware if similiar was ever mounted on allied planes.
btw, Kokko`s report also mentions the G-2 climbs at 4900 fpm with 1.3ata, 30 min rating.
