Hi Shorty,
>I don’t think I follow what you are saying. When you say “gear,” are you referring to blower gear? As in Neutral, Low and High?
Yes. In my above post, I tried to use the same terminology as found in the Corky Meyer quote, which was a bit different than the one I was used to.
The superchanger sequence "Neutral Gear, Low Gear, High Gear" you pointed out is what I'm familiar with, too, and the Corky Meyer quote seems to use "Low Gear, Main Stage, High Gear" instead. (Maybe I misunderstood that.)
>Neutral blower was used from sea level up its critical altitude where power then began to drop. ...
Yes that's the normal sequence. However, it seems that this is not what happens in the BuAer data set for the F6F-5:
http://www.history.navy.mil/branches/hist-ac/fighter.htm>I’m not saying it’s impossible, but I find it hard to believe that flying in lower blower in the Hellcat at sea level would produce enough ram effect to more than compensate for the power it took to run the supercharger in low blower.
The problems I have with the BuAer graph can maybe explained best using the climb graph.
You can see that at MIL, the full throttle height of Neutral Gear is just below 2000 ft. At the higher boost at Combat Power, full throttle height would be about -500 ft, so Neutral Gear is not used in climb at Combat Power.
However, the rest of the Combat Power climb graph appears to be about 800 ft depressed compared to the MIL graph, and I have no explanation for that. This would indicate lower rpm, but it would be unusual to lower rpm at a higher power setting. Sometimes, a power loss is experienced when rpm is increased at a higher power setting due to propeller tip Mach losses, but that should not result in a lower throttle height, but rather in a higher one. Anyway, the rpm for MIL and Combat Power is given as 2800 rpm alike, so what's happening there?
Both my attempts fail to provide a satisfactory explanation for that curve (and the speed curve does not make it any clearer).
Note that the F6F speed curve F4UDOA has provided from HTC's overviews does not shows these problems. High Gear and Low gear speeds are exactly what I'd expect.
There is one peculiarity in the HTC graph, too, and that's that in Neutral Gear, there seems to be too much boost available. Extending the MIL curve section from 6000 ft to 3000 ft down to 0 ft, it seems that the sea level speed of roughly 330 mph would be achieved at Neutral Gear full throttle height, and speed would remain about constant up to 3000 ft when switch over to Low Gear should occur.
(The BuAer curve according to my "old" interpretation does not show use of Neutral Gear at Combat Power at all, which makes a visible difference to the HTC graph.)
So I have a qualitative problem with understanding the sequence of gear changes here. I'd like to solve that before taking on the quantitative aspect of the analysis :-)
>If someone has a climb or speed chart for the F6F or F4U that takes into account ram, I’d love to see it.
Hm, do you mean a power chart? Ram would be automatically taken into account for flight test data.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)