Originally posted by 38ruk
I just did some tests in a 47N 50% fuel no ord , mine has no problems dipping its left wing and doing a complete stall. do ya all have the stall limiter turned off?? LOL
38ruk, maybe I was a little of on my comments about the 47. What I mean was that even though the p47 does perform something that could by someone with great benevolence be seen as a stall, it nowhere near perform an actual stall nor spin.
What p47 D 25% without ord. does: U give full flaps and take off, when speed approaches 90 mphs u pull hard, but just enough to keep the wing from dropping (ending in app 50 - 60 %).
U wait until the stall horn stops yelling (50 mph-ish) and wait for the thing to stall. When the stall comes u keep that wing (most propably the left wing if ur controls are straight at the stall) from dropping by applying right aileron.
At this point the nose starts to gently come down from the sky, and the plane is still most definatively out of air, but you still have full use of your controls. If the wing continues to trouble you, aply some right rudder as well. In real life from this point on, at this altitude u would without a doubt go in to a spin and end up in a flat mark on the deck (the rudder being still in one piece is a possibility). But since this is AH and not even the Spit is able to perform the spin, what the heck, lets do it!
U apply the right rudder and your p47 enters in a sideslip (while your left wing is stalling, this is fun) and loses altitude very fast, but your wing still keeps up, which was the idea. Then u just wait until the nose approaches the horizon and the plane gathers some speed (u dont need much to let the rudder go), and voila! U have just done a manouver no aircraft (I know this is an overstatement but, maybe some extra 300 or somthin...) in the whole wide world is able to do and survive. U have actually stalled and done a sideslip during the stall under 300 ft (95 meters), yey!
If u call this a normal stall performance and lowspeed manouvering ability for the p47, I would like to see to what plane were the pilots referring to when they thought p47 has poor performance low and slow.