Hello everyone,
From a series of British and American tests (most available on the Mike Williams WWII aircraft performance site), I made the following correlations in turn rates, all using the same A6M5 Zero as the "link" benchmark between many of the various tests:
If the A6M5 Zero turns 2000°:
-The F6F-5 turns 1550° (A6M5 gains 360° in 3.5 X 360°)
-The F4U-1D turns 1550° (same as F6F-5)
-The P-38L turns 1330° (A6M5 gains 360° in 2 X 360°)
-The P-51D turns 1100°-1190° (A6M5 gains 360° in LESS than 2 X 360°)
-The P-47D Bubbletop turns 997° (A6M5 gains 360° in 1.5 X 360°)
-The FW-190A-5 turns 1162° (F6F-5 gains 360° in 3 X 360°): Despite this being roughly equal to the P-51D, it is made using a fully disassembled and re-built captured machine, whose aileron performance in this US Navy test was then contested by British evaluators in an official wartime document: Aileron performance DID affect low-speed sustained turn performance on the FW-190A...
Official British test have the FW-190A-4 pegged as "equal" in sustained turn rate to the P-38G, and the FW-190A-4 could also out-turn the Spitfire Mk V in sustained horizontal turns, as seen in this combat account:
http://img30.imageshack.us/img30/4716/jjohnsononfw190.jpg The P-38G was pitted against a Spitfire Mk XIV in mock combat, which failed to shake it from its tail in repeated attempts, so a turn rate of 1300°-1400° (vs 2000° on the A6M5) does not seem implausible for both the early-mid FW-190A's and the P-38G.
The newly-built FW-190A-8Ns flying today are also confirmed by their pilots as being superior in turns to the P-51D, but inferior to the Yak-3.
At least one FW-190A-8 Western ace claims to have regularly observed a gain of 360° in 2 X 360° against a P-51D at low speed and very low altitude (on the deck), but that would result in a turn rate of 1650°, which means the A6M5 Zero would require almost 5 X 360° to gain 360° on the FW-190A-8, which seems a bit much to me: The FW-190A-8 is described as a large advance in turn performance on the earlier models, but even then a turn rate of 1450°-1500° versus the A6M5's 2000° seems more reasonable.
The P-47D Razorback could beat another, not rebuilt, FW-190A-5 in turns above 250 MPH indicated, but was soundly beaten by the FW-190A-5 below that speed. This still suggests a much better performance than what is displayed by the 1000 lbs heavier Bubbletop above. The Me-109G was very close in turn rate to the P-51D in many combat accounts, yet the 109G was much inferior-turning to a Needle-prop P-47D Razorback in Luftwaffe captured tests (On Special Missions: KG 200). The Needle-prop P-47D Razorback probably ranges from 900° or less below 250 MPH to 1300° above, but to what extent it can sustain this turn rate at higher speeds is hard to say. See the test here:
http://img105.imageshack.us/img105/3950/pag20pl.jpg Note that the use of flaps may be a temporary help against a wider tuning radius aircraft like the Me-109G (for a P-38 for instance), but against a smaller turning radius aircraft, the use of flaps actually ACCELERATES the gain of the smaller-radius opponent... I doubt flaps are a panacea that would significantly jumble the above hierarchy, since what they gain you in radius you lose, and more, in speed, unless the speed is so low that the engine has enough reserve power to keep speed constant. (But then torque becomes troublesome...)
What does remain unresolved in the above tests is how the P-47D Razorback, especially with a Paddle-blade prop, would actually do in turns against a P-51D. Correlating their performance against the Me-109G in 1200 combat reports on the Mike Williams site absolutely confirms the turn superiority of the P-47D Razorback to both the Me-109G and the Merlin P-51, especially to left, as does the German captured test evaluations of the Needle-prop P-47D Razorback against both of them (but a P-51B or C in this instance).
The Navy tests unfortunately pegs the FW-190A-5 and the P-51D as equals in sustained turns, but the mass of evidence elsewhere does favor even the earlier FW-190As at low speeds and low altitudes at least... Later FW-190A-8s were much improved.
Note that all the data correlated here is from many repeated tests by many different pilots, except for the benchmark A6M5 Zero, which was always flown by the same pilot. The use of flaps was also widely tried in many different tests on all US fighters, and was found to make little or no difference against the tighter-turning A6M5...
Gaston
P.S. A link to the Mike Williams site:
http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.org/ G.